Nicolae Ianovici

{{Short description|Aromanian linguist}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2023}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Nicolae Ianovici

| image =

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| birth_name =

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| birth_place = Moscopole, Ottoman Empire

| death_date =

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| occupation = Linguist

| nationality = Ottoman, Habsburg/Austrian

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| known_for = The publication of a dictionary of five languages, including Aromanian

}}

Nicolae Ianovici (also Ioanovici{{sfn|Capidan|2000|p=88}}) was an Aromanian linguist. He is known for the compilation of a dictionary of five languages, including Aromanian. Ianovici was one of the figures of the early Aromanian national movement in Vienna and Budapest.

Biography

Nicolae Ianovici was from Moscopole, then in the Ottoman Empire and now in Albania.{{sfn|Dumbrăvescu|2014|p=53}} He originated from the Căliva (or Kaliva) family, originally from Moscopole but later settled in Timișoara (in the Habsburg monarchy, now in Romania). To this family also belonged Gheorghe Ioanovici, who became a prominent politician in Hungary.{{sfn|Capidan|2000|p=88}} Nicolae Ianovici left for Timișoara and lived in the city for a short period of time, later moving to Pest (the eastern half of modern Budapest, Hungary). Ianovici was one of the Aromanian figures of the early 19th century in Vienna (Austria) and Budapest who contributed to the effort for the national awakening of the Aromanians. In Budapest, other such figures included Mihail G. Boiagi and Gheorghe Constantin Roja.{{sfn|Dumbrăvescu|2014|pp=52–53}}

His contributions to the Aromanian cause consisted on the compilation of a dictionary in two volumes with 1302 pages in total, titled Diccionariu tru cinci limbe: ellinescu, grecescu, rumanescu, nemcescu shii madsarescu ("Dictionary for Five Languages: Hellenic, Greek, Aromanian, German and Hungarian"). In the preface of the dictionary, Ianovici argued for the importance and necessity of his work, aimed for public use by Aromanians and for the cultural development between the speakers of all the languages compiled in his dictionary. It was also of relevance to merchants in the Habsburg monarchy and in the Balkans.{{sfn|Dumbrăvescu|2014|pp=53–54}} In the preface of the dictionary, Ianovici makes use of the endonym {{lang|rup|ramanu}} for "Aromanian". This is typical of the Farsherot dialect spoken in modern Albania, suggesting that Ianovici belonged to the subgroup of Farsherot Aromanians.{{sfn|Lascu|2017|p=14}}

It is noticed that Ianovici was influenced by the Transylvanian School, a Romanian cultural and intellectual movement active in Habsburg and Austrian Transylvania at the time. Thus, just like the Romanian writer of the Transylvanian School Petru Maior stated that the origin of the Romanians was the Roman Empire and that the Romanian language came from Latin, so did Ianovici note the Roman and Latin origin of the Aromanians and of their language.{{sfn|Dumbrăvescu|2014|p=54}} In the preface, Ianovici also refers to the Aromanians as "Romanians beyond the Danube"; the Transylvanian School held the stance that the Romanians and the Aromanians were part of the same ethnic group.{{sfn|Lascu|2017|p=5}}

Despite its approval for publication by its censor Gheorghe Petrovici in 1821, Ianovici's dictionary was for some reason not printed in the printing house of Buda (most of the western half of modern Budapest).{{sfn|Dumbrăvescu|2014|p=54}} Today, Ianovici's dictionary is in possession of the Romanian Academy.{{sfn|Capidan|2000|p=88}}

References

=Citations=

{{Reflist|30em}}

=Bibliography=

  • {{cite book|url=https://www.vistieria.ro/carti/istoria_romanilor/macedo-romanii.pdf|title=Macedoromânii. Etnografie, istorie, limbă|first=Theodor|last=Capidan|author-link=Theodor Capidan|editor-first=Dan|editor-last=Vidrașcu|publisher=Editura Litera Internațional|year=2000|orig-date=1942|language=ro|isbn=973-9355-52-8}}
  • {{cite journal|url=https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=138187|title=Nicolae Ianovici, un deschizător de conștiință națională la aromânii din Imperiul Habsburgic|first=Nicolae|last=Dumbrăvescu|journal=Astra Salvensis|volume=2|issue=3|pages=52–54|year=2014|language=ro}}
  • {{cite journal|url=https://aos.ro/wp-content/anale/IVol9Nr2Art.2.pdf|title=Intelectuali transilvăneni, moldoveni și "aurelieni" despre românii din Balcani (anii '30-'40 ai secolului al XIX-lea|first=Stoica|last=Lascu|author-link=Stoica Lascu|journal=Annals of the Academy of Romanian Scientists: Series on History and Archaeology Sciences|volume=9|issue=2|pages=5–27|year=2017|language=ro|issn=2067-5682}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Ianovici, Nicolae}}

Category:Date of birth unknown

Category:Date of death unknown

Category:People from Moscopole

Category:Aromanians from the Ottoman Empire

Category:Austrian people of Aromanian descent

Category:Aromanian linguists

Category:Pro-Romanian Aromanians