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  1. Vsevolod Fyodorovich Miller ( Russian: Всеволод Фёдорович Миллер; 19 April [ O.S. 7 April] 1848) – 18 November [ O.S. 5 November] 1913) was a Russian philologist, folklorist, linguist, anthropologist, archaeologist, and academician of the Petersburg Academy of Sciences (1911).

  2. But the founder of the historical school, Vsevolod Miller, succeeded in proving that at least six (and perhaps seven) themes are connected with another Vladimir: Vladimir Monomakh, who reigned in Kiev from 1113 to II25, but who played an

  3. The most important of them were the historical school, Formalism, and the so-called Finnish school. The historical school continued the traditions of its leader Vsevolod Miller, whose first concern had been to find reflections of concrete historical reality in Russian byliny (epic songs).

  4. Vsevolod Fyodorovich Miller (Все́волод Фёдорович Ми́ллер) (7 April (N.S. 19 April) 1848, Moscow – 5 November (N.S. 18 November) 1913, Saint Petersburg) was a Russian philologist, folklorist, linguist, anthropologist, archaeologist, and academician of the Petersburg Academy of Sciences (1911).

  5. Vsevolod Fedorovich Miller ( 7 (19) de abril de 1848, Moscú - 5 (18) de noviembre de 1913, San Petersburgo) - científico ruso, folclorista, etnógrafo, lingüista y arqueólogo. Miembro activo de la Academia de Ciencias de San Petersburgo (1911; miembro correspondiente desde diciembre de 1898).

  6. 23 de jun. de 2020 · Vsevolod Miller in the third part of his Ossetic Studies considered the names of the metals both in Iron and Digoron, with particular reference to those of Finno-Ugric origin, in order to determine the way followed by the Alans to reach the Northern Caucasus in the first century A.D.

  7. This theory was advanced by the main representative of the so-called historical school, Vsevolod Miller, at the turn of this century.