Jules Gilliéron

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Jules Gilliéron (born December 21, 1854 in La Neuveville ; † April 26, 1926 in Schernelz, Ligerz ) was a Swiss-French Romance philologist and dialectologist working in France.

life and work

Gilliéron, brother of Emile Gilliéron , studied in Neuchâtel , Basel and from 1876 to 1880 in Paris at the École pratique des hautes études . There he taught at the chair for Gallo-Roman dialectology as the successor to Arsène Darmesteter for almost 43 years (from February 1883 to January 1926) with great effect. With Edmond Edmont he created the French language atlas (ALF) based on an exploratory speaker survey, which became exemplary and with which he established the Romance language geography. With his pupil Jean-Pierre Rousselot he founded the Revue des patois galloromans (1887-1893).

Fonts

  • Patois de la commune de Vionnaz (Bas-Valais), Paris 1880
  • Petit atlas phonétique du Valais roman (sud du Rhone), Paris 1881
  • Atlas linguistique de la France (with Edmond Edmont ), 10 vols., Paris 1902–1914; Supplement volume 1920
  • Etudes de geographie linguistique, d'après l'Atlas linguistique de la France (with Mario Roques ), Paris 1912
  • Généalogie des mots qui ont désigné l'abeille d'après l'Atlas linguistique de la France, Paris 1918, Geneva 1975
  • La Faillite de l'étymologie phonétique, Neuveville 1919
  • Pathologie et thérapeutique verbales, Paris 1921, Geneva 1977
  • Les étymologies des étymologistes et celles du peuple, Paris 1922
  • Thaumaturgie linguistique, Paris 1923

literature

  • Mario Roques , Bibliography des travaux de Jules Gilliéron, Geneva 1930
  • Sever Pop / Rodica Doina Pop, Jules Gilliéron. Vie, enseignement, élèves, oeuvres, souvenirs, lions 1959
  • Wolfgang Hillen, Sainéans and Gilliérons Method and the Romance Etymology, Bonn 1973
  • Jacques Allières in: Les linguistes suisses et la variation linguistique, ed. by Jakob Wüest, Basel 1997
  • Geographie linguistique et biologie du langage. Autour de Jules Gilliéron, ed. by Peter Lauwers, Marie-Rose Simoni-Aurembou and Pierre Swiggers, Löwen / Paris 2002

Web links