Baron Teodor Shteingel | |
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Федір Рудольфович Штейнгель | |
Born | |
Died | April 11, 1946 | (aged 75)
Burial place | Dresden |
Nationality | Baltic German |
Other names | Theodor von Steinheil (German) |
Citizenship | Russian Empire, UNR, Ukrainian State |
Known for | sociopolitical and cultural influence, philanthropy |
Political party | KDP; Society of Ukrainian Successors ; UPSF; Peasant Russia; Workers' Peasant Party |
Signature | |
Baron Fyodor "Teodor" Rudolphovich Shteingel (Russian: Фёдор Рудольфович Штейнгель, German: Theodor von Steinheil, 9 December 1870, Saint Petersburg – 11 April 1946 Dresden) was a Ukrainian archaeologist, philanthropist, and nationalist politician.
After graduating from Kyiv University, he established a school, hospital, co-operative, and reading room in Horodok, Rivne Oblast. Finally, in 1902, he contributed the Horodok Museum, where he deposited his archeological, historical, and ethnographic collections.[1]
In 1906 he was elected as deputy for Kyiv to the First State Duma where he joined the Ukrainian caucus. He became a member of the Society of Ukrainian Progressionists and vice-president of the Ukrainian Scientific Society. Following the February Revolution of 1917 he chaired the executive committee of the Kyiv City Duma, the forerunner of the Central Rada. In 1918 was sent as a diplomatic envoy to Berlin by the Ukrainian Hetmanate. He subsequently returned to Western Ukraine in the twenties but left for Germany in 1939.[1]