Adolf Dobriansky

Adolf Dobriansky
Адолф Добряньскый
Dobriansky in Vienna, 1883
Born(1817-12-19)December 19, 1817
Died(1901-03-19)March 19, 1901
Innsbruck, Austria-Hungary (now Austria)
EducationBergakademie Schemnitz Banská Štiavnica, Slovakia
Organizations
  • Society of St. John the Baptist, founder
  • Society of St. Basil the Great, founder
  • Matice Slovenska, member
  • Society of Orthodox Bohemians, member
Known forRusyn activism, politics, literature
MovementGalician Russophilia
AwardsOrder of St. Vladimir, 4th degree (1849)

Order of St. Anna, 3rd degree (1849) Order of the Iron Crown, 3rd degree (1857)

Order of St. Anna, 3rd degree (1862)

Adolf Dobriansky (German: Adolf Ritter von Sacsurov Dobrzanski, Rusyn: Адолф Добряньскый, Ukrainian: Добрянський Адольф Іванович; 19 December 1817 – 19 March 1901) was a public figure and leader of the Carpatho-Rusyn movement in Subcarpathian Rus', lawyer and writer.

Dobriansky was a proponent of the return of Greek Catholics to Orthodoxy and author of numerous works devoted to the history, ethnography, religious and political situation of Carpathian Rus'. He was also a recognized leader of the Carpatho-Rusyn movement, and an activist for the cultural, linguistic and ethnic unification of Rusyns of Austria-Hungary with ethnic Russians of Russia.

Dobriansky's grandchildren include linguist G. J. Gerovsky, politician A. J. Gerovsky, and artist I. E. Grabar and lawyer V. E. Grabar.