GENERAL BIOGRAPHICAL SOURCES/GUIDESFOR ALL COUNTRIES

In addition to the sources listed below, one should be aware of various biographical tools that are available online [to UIUC patrons only] as part of the online reference collection at the Reference Department's website such as Biography and Genealogy Master Index and Biography Reference Bank. These sources may contain information/citations about more notable figures from the Slavic and East European regions.
Index
bio-bibliographicus notorum hominum. (IBN) Pars C. Corpus alphabeticus. I. Sectio
generalis.
Osnabruck: Felix Dietrich Verlag, 1976- .
UIUC Call Number: Main Reference 016.92 IN2I
This
is a project emanating from Germany. We like to call it the megalomania project
because it is so grandiose in scale. It lists famous people from all
countries and all historical time periods. It is so large that 116 volumes
have been published and it only covers up through the
letter H. What you can find in the IBN are birth and death dates and places,
a brief statement of occupation and a list of biographical sources in which information
on or portraits of a person are published. Arranged alphabetically by surname,
this set provides citations to entries from over 6000
biographical sources. Each entry begins with name and known pseudonyms,
birth and death dates, places of birth and death, and a brief description of the
occupation of the person. Then there are numerical entries that refer to the biographical
reference book that contains an entry on or portrait of that person.
Vols 1-116 plus several supplemental volumes cover names from A-Hyz. Pars B of the set comprises 2 volumes of bibliographical entries arranged in numerical order for biographical source materials used in the compilation of the IBN. They are shelved at the beginning of the IBN in the Main Reference room. See the entry above on I.A. Bunin. Note that some entries contain numbers in parentheses after the source number such as 5953 (8). This means that the entry on Bunin can be found in the eighth volume of source 5953 which is the Enciclopedia italiana ...

Biographical
dictionaries and related works : an international bibliography of more than 16,000
collective biographies ...
Slocum, Robert B. ed. 2nd ed. Detroit: Gale
Research, 1986. 2 vols.
UIUC Call Number: General Slavic Reference
Q.016.92 Sl5b 1986 v.1, v.2
This next general source is somewhat different in nature from the IBN because it organizes citations and annotations of biographical sources by subject and region without indexing the individual entries of those sources. In other words, it helps you figure out which books you should check for a particular topic. Thus, it is an excellent way to get an overview of what kinds of biographical reference books have been published for a particular country. Volume 1 contains a regional grouping of annotations for biographical sources. Each country section begins with works that index other biographical sources for that country, like a bibliography of bibliographies or a guide to the resources. The next section describes pseudonym dictionaries for that country. The third section is the main section because it lists all of the other biographical sources for the country that the compiler chose to include. Volume 2, on the other hand, contains a discipline or subject organization for the biographical dictionaries. For e.g., under the discipline of Medicine you will find first a listing of general biographical works on medicine and then more narrow subjects such as medicine by region. See the entry below that falls under Medicine - Slovakia. The annotations are in English, but the sources described for the most part are not. Unfortunately, it has not been updated since 1986.


Slavic
studies: A guide to bibliographies, encyclopedias, and handbooks.
Murlin
Croucher, ed. Wilmington, DE: Scholarly Resources, 1993. 2 vols.
UIUC Call
Number: General Slavic Reference Q.016.947 Sl16 v.1, v.2
This set briefly annotates basic reference sources in the field of Slavic studies with some biographical sources covered for most areas.Volume 1 of this set contains entries for Area Studies, Eastern Europe, the Balkans, Czechoslovakia and Poland. Volume 2 contains entries for the Soviet Union, Former Yugoslavia and some general resources. Although the subject arrangement within each area is cumbersome, biographical and bio-bibliographical sources are grouped together. Consult the index at the beginning of each country section for quicker maneuvering. Below is a sample entry from the section on Czechoslovakia. For another annotation of this source click here.
ARBA
guide to biographical dictionaries.
Bohdan S. Wynar, ed. Littleton, CO:
Libraries Unlimited, 1986. 444p.
UIUC Call Number: Lib Sci Reference
016.92 AR16
+
ARBA guide to biographical resources, 1986-1997.
Robert L. Wick and Terry Ann Mood, eds. Englewood, CO: Libraries Unlimited,
1998. 604 p.
UIUC Call Number: Main Reference 016.92 AR161
A
source similar to the Biographical dictionaries
and related works described above is the ARBA guide and its update
volume for 1986-1997. The difference is that ARBA contains references and
annotations to English-language only materials. Slavic related items appear under
many of the various discipline headings. ARBA stands for American Reference Books
Annual and these two volumes contain annotations about English
language sources for biographical information. They are arranged by disciplines
with regional items possibly appearing under any discipline. Because it is restricted
to English-language materials only, this guide is of limited use for Slavic. The
annotations are quite detailed. See the entry above which is located in the 1986-1997
update in the Ethnic Studies section.
Bibliographien zum Schrifttum
aus und uber Osteuropa. Katalog des Bibliographischen Lesesaales der Bibliothek
des Osteuropa-Instituts Berlin.
Peter Bruhn; Volkhard Thiede, eds. Munchen:
Omnia Mikrofilmtechnik GmbH, 1992. 648 p.
UIUC Call Number: General
Slavic Reference Q.015.47 F882b
With
just a little knowledge of German you can use this
source for finding biographical resources. It is divided into several sections,
the first of which is Eastern Europe in general, then Russia/Soviet Union, then
each of the countries in our field including Turkey and Greece. Within each country
section there are subsections for various disciplines such as literature, the
arts, and a subsection important to biographical research - Personalbibliographien.
This section, which contains entries for bibliographies
about individuals, appears for all of the countries. The entries are arranged
alphabetically by the surname of the subject of the bibliography. Access to the
entries in this source is only through the table of contents which points you
to the page where a particular section begins. There are no additional indexes.
See the entry to the right for Julian Marchlewski. For another annotation of this
source click here.