Julio de Urquijo e Ibarra

Julio de Urquijo
Count of Urquijo
Homenaje al historiador y filólogo Julio de Urquijo (2 de 11) - Fondo Marín-Kutxa Fototeka.jpg
Born
Julio Gabriel de Urquijo e Ibarra

1871
Deusto, Spain
Died1950
NationalitySpanish
Occupationscientist
Known forlinguist
Political partyComunión Tradicionalista

Julio de Urquijo e Ibarra, Count of Urquijo (1871-1950), in Basque self-styled as Julio Urkixokoa,[1] was a Basque linguist, cultural activist, and a Spanish Carlist politician. As a Traditionalist deputy he twice served in the Cortes, during the terms of 1903-1905 and 1931-1933, though the climax of his political activity fell on the late Restoration period. As a scientist he was the moving spirit behind setting up numerous vascologist institutions, especially Revista Internacional de Estudios Vascos (1907) and Sociedad de Estudios Vascos (1918). Himself he specialized in Basque paremiology and bibliography. He opposed academy-driven unification of Basque dialects and preferred to wait until standard Basque emerges naturally.

  1. ^ Jose Luis Lizundia Askondo, Julio Urkixo, a mirror of the variety that exists in the world of the Basque Language, [in:] Revista internacional de los estudios vascos. Ejemplar centenario, Donostia 2007, ISBN 9788484191506, p. 104; in present-day Basque the accepted spelling is "Urkixo"

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