Vikentiy Khvoyka
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Biography
Khvoyka was born on 21 February 1850 in the village of Semín in the Kingdom of Bohemia (then part of the Austrian Empire). After graduating from the Academy of Commerce in Chrudim, he lived in Prague for a time before emigrating to the Russian Empire. From 1876 he lived in Kyiv and worked as a teacher. He turned his attention to archaeology in the 1890s and excavated around Kyiv and the Dnieper region. He was one of the founders of Kyiv's Museum of Antiquities and Art, now the National Historical Museum, and the first curator of its archaeological collection.[1]
Khvoyka discovered the Trypillia culture in Ukraine. The exact year of his discovery is uncertain: 1893,[2] 1896[3] and 1887[4] have been reported. He presented his findings at the 11th Congress of Archaeologists in 1897.[4] The same culture was discovered in Romania around the same time, where it was called the Cucuteni culture.
Khvoyka died in Kyiv on 20 October 1914. He is buried in the Baikove Cemetery.[1]
Legacy
In 1962, Template:Ill in Kyiv, where Khvoyka lived from 1898 to his death in 1914, was renamed in his honour, and a memorial plaque was installed there.[1]
In 2000, the National Bank of Ukraine issued a commemorative two hryvnia coin to mark the 150th anniversary of Khvoyka's birth.[1]
References
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- 1850 births
- 1914 deaths
- People from Pardubice District
- People from the Kingdom of Bohemia
- Emigrants from Austria-Hungary to the Russian Empire
- Czech archaeologists
- Russian archaeologists
- Ukrainian archaeologists
- Cucuteni–Trypillia culture
- History of Kyiv
- Burials at Baikove Cemetery