Ivan Borkovský
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8 September 1897
Ivan Borkovský | |
|---|---|
| Born | Ivan Borkovskyy-Dunin 8 September 1897 Chortovec, Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, Austria-Hungary |
| Died | 17 March 1976 (aged 78) Prague, Czechoslovakia |
| Citizenship | Czechoslovak |
| Alma mater | Charles University, Prague |
| Occupation | Archaeologist |
Ivan Borkovský (born Ivan Borkovskyy-Dunin; 8 September 1897 – 17 March 1976) was a Czech-Ukrainian archaeologist.[1] He spent his early career as a soldier fighting for the Austro-Hungarian Army against the Russians in the First World War. He later served in the Ukrainian War of Independence and fought for both the White and Red Armies in the Russian Civil War. Borkovský fled to Czechoslovakia in 1920 and, after a period in internment camps, settled there. He graduated with a degree in archaeology from Prague's Charles University and headed up excavations at Prague Castle as well as at Czernin Palace.
Borkovský's discovery of the Prague Castle skeleton led to conflict with German occupying forces during the Second World War who were keen to find evidence of early German involvement in the region. Under threat of being sent to a concentration camp Borkovský was forced to issue a paper identifying the skeleton as of Germanic origin and to withdraw a book publicising early Slavic pottery from the area. After the war he came under suspicion from Soviet forces for his pro-German interpretation and, after being spared from being sent to a gulag, issued a paper retracting his earlier interpretation and describing the skeleton as a Slav. After the war he carried out further excavations in Prague, including at the Levý Hradec, and served as chairman of the Archaeological Society of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences.
Ivan Borkovský was born on 8 September 1897 at Chortovec, near Horodenka, which was then part of the Austro-Hungarian Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria and since 1991 lies in West Ukraine.[1][2] He was born to a poor Ukrainian noble family and was named Ivan Borkovskyj-Dunin.[2][1] Borkovský attended grammar school at Stanislavov between 1909 and 1913 and afterwards studied to become a teacher.[2]
Borkovský joined the Austro-Hungarian Army in 1915 and fought against Russia during the First World War.[3] Between 1918 and 1920 he fought in the Ukrainian War of Independence and also became involved in the Russian Civil War, first as part of the White Army and then for the opposing Red Army.[2][3] Borkovský was one of a large number of Ukrainians who escaped the war to Czechoslovakia in 1920.[3] He spent the next year interned in a number of camps at Holešov, Liberec and Josefov before being released. Borkovský found that his previous education was not recognised by the Czechoslovak authorities so he had to attend grammar school again at Josefov from which he graduated in 1925.[2]
From 1922 Borkovský attended lecture on the prehistoric era at Charles University in Prague and from 1923 to 1926 was a volunteer scientific assistant at the State Archaeological Institute.[2][1] He later joined a degree course at the university and graduated in 1929.[1] Early in his career he specialised in the Later Stone Age.[1]

