J Otto Seibold - meaning and definition. What is J Otto Seibold
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What (who) is J Otto Seibold - definition

AUSTRIAN ACADEMIC, ORIENTALIST AND HISTORIAN (1894-1969)
Otto J. Mänchen Helfen; Otto Mänchen-Helfen; Otto Maenchen-Helfen; Otto J. Manchen Helfen; Otto Manchen-Helfen; Otto J. Mänchen-Helfen; Otto J. Maenchen Helfen; Maenchen-Helfen

Otto Schaden         
AMERICAN EGYPTOLOGIST
Otto James Schaden; Otto J. Schaden; Otto John Schaden
Otto John Schaden (August 26, 1937 – November 23, 2015) was an American Egyptologist. He was the field director of the Amenmesse Tomb Project of the University of Memphis (Tennessee).
Otto Hardwick         
  • From right: [[Barney Bigard]], [[Ben Webster]], Otto Hardwick, [[Harry Carney]], [[Rex Stewart]], [[Sonny Greer]], [[Wallace Jones]] (?), [[Ray Nance]].<br/> Photography by [[William P. Gottlieb]].
AMERICAN MUSICIAN
Otto Hardwicke; Otto harwicke; Toby Hardwick; Otto "Toby" Hardwick
Otto James "Toby" Hardwicke (May 31, 1904 – August 5, 1970) was an American saxophone player associated with Duke Ellington.
Ottó Károlyi         
FRENCH MUSICOLOGIST
Otto Karolyi; Otto Károlyi
Ottó Károlyi (born in Paris, and with a Hungarian background), having studied in Budapest, Vienna, and London, was a musicologist and the Senior Lecturer of Music at the University of Stirling, Scotland, where he founded the Music department and remained employed even after the department's closure.University of Stirling (2016), Class Notes He died in October 2016.

Wikipedia

Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen

Otto John Maenchen-Helfen (German: Otto Mänchen-Helfen; July 26, 1894 – January 29, 1969) was an Austrian academic, sinologist, historian, author, and traveler.

From 1927 to 1930, he worked at the Marx-Engels Institute in Moscow, and from 1930 to 1933 in Berlin. When the Nazi Party came to power in Germany, he returned to Austria, and after the Anschluss in 1938 he emigrated to the United States, eventually becoming a professor at the University of California, Berkeley. He was the author of several oft-cited books, including a history of the Huns.

He was the first non-Russian to travel and report on Tannu Tuva. He obtained permission to travel there and study its inhabitants in 1929. He later published his experiences in a book, Reise ins asiatische Tuwa (Travels in Asiatic Tuva).