.mw-parser-output .hidden-begin{box-sizing:border-box;width:100%;padding:5px;border:none;font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .hidden-title{font-weight:bold;line-height:1.6;text-align:left}.mw-parser-output .hidden-content{text-align:left}You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Ukrainian. (December 2014) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Vovk graduated from Kyiv University in 1871. He was an active member of the Kyiv Hromada. From 1887 to 1905 he lived in Paris to escape tsarist persecution; he earned a Ph.D. in 1900, and won the Godard Prize for his dissertation. In 1905 he returned to Russia, where, along with his position at the Alexander III Museum, he held a lecturership at Saint Petersburg University. He was granted a professorship at Kiev University in 1917 but died before he could take it up.[4]
Vovk's research concerned the anthropological study of the Ukrainian people; in it he argued that the Ukrainians constituted a separate group of Slavs most closely related to the Southern Slavs (Dinaric race).[4]
^Saunders, David (1988), "Britain and the Ukrainian Question (1912-1920)", The English Historical Review, 103 (406): 40–68, doi:10.1093/ehr/ciii.ccccvi.40.
^ abcMushynka, Mykola (1993), "Fedir Vovk", in Husar Struk, Danylo (ed.), Encyclopedia of Ukraine, vol. 5, University of Toronto Press, retrieved 2009-10-23.
Further reading
Antonovych, Marko (1997), Fedir Kindratovych Vovk, 1847-1918: memoirs, studies, bibliography; in commemoration of the 150th anniversary of his birth, Sources of Modern History of the Ukraine (in Ukrainian), vol. 4, New York: Ukrainian Academy of Arts & Sciences, ISBN978-0-916381-11-0.