Tilman Berger

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Tilman Berger, 2014

Tilman Berger (born July 8, 1956 in Passau ) is a German Slavist and professor at the University of Tübingen .

Tilman Berger studied from 1975 to 1982 at the Universities of Konstanz and Heidelberg compartments Russian Studies and Mathematics and laid in 1982 the state examination for teachers from. From 1983 to 1986 followed a postgraduate course in Slavic Studies at the University of Konstanz. In 1986 he did his doctorate at the University of Konstanz under Werner Lehfeldt with the thesis word formation and accent in Russian . He then worked as a research assistant at the University of Hamburg with Daniel Weiss . From 1988 to 1993 he was a temporary academic advisor at the Institute for Slavic Philology at the University of Munich . In 1993/94 he represented the chair for Slavic Linguistics in Tübingen. In 1994 he received his habilitation in Slavic Philology. Berger has been a full professor of Slavic Linguistics at the University of Tübingen since 1994. One of his main research interests is the history of the written Czech language in the 17th and 18th centuries. He works for the German language Wikipedia .

He is the son of the Indologist Hermann Berger and brother of the Byzantinist Albrecht Berger . The poetry slammer Johannes Berger is his nephew.

Fonts

Books

  • Word formation and accent in Russian. Munich 1986, ISBN 3-87690-346-7 .
  • Studies on the Historical Grammar of Czech: Bohemian Contributions to Contact Linguistics. Munich 2008. ISBN 978-3-89586-047-8 .

Editorships

  • together with Biljana Golubović: Morphology - Orality - Media. Festschrift for Jochen Raecke. Hamburg 2008, ISBN 978-3-8300-3589-3 .
  • together with Jochen Raecke : Slavic Studies in Tübingen. For the 40th anniversary of the founding of the Slavic Seminar at the University of Tübingen in 1962, the 85th birthday of Ludolf Müller and the 65th birthday of Rolf-Dieter Kluge. Tübingen 2003.
  • together with Karl Gutschmidt : Functional description of Slavic languages. Contributions to the XIII. International Slavist Congress in Ljubljana. Munich 2003, ISBN 3-87690-844-2 .

Web links