User:Samochód1/sandbox

Early Life and Studies Additions
...Her parents, Zofia Czaplicka (née Zawisza) and Feliks Czaplicka, both came from historically wealthy and well-known families, but were forced to move from their family homes into the city for work due to the growing political unrest in Poland. Feliks Czaplicka eventually went on to work at for the railway department in Warsaw..

...She was the third oldest of her parents' five children, Jadwiga Markowska (née Czaplicka), Stanisław Czaplicka, Gabriela Szaniawski (née Czaplicka), and Marian Czaplicka...

...studying at the Anna Jasieńska Girls' School until 1902 before beginning her higher education at...

... as a teacher at Łabusie-wiczównie Girls' School...

...Feliks Czaplicki found employment in what is now Latvia, where the family lived from 1904-1906 before returning to Warsaw. It was here that Maria Czaplicka was able to take the exam that would allow her to attend university later in life.

She was also known for her lectures at the University for Everyone (1905-1908), and the Society of Polish Culture.

She also wrote poetry... eventually being published in Warsaw's highly Odrodzenie magazine.

While battling an illness, she spent time in Zakopane where she went on to do work for the Pedological Society while writing Olek Niedziela, a novel for children centered around education.

...graduating from the School of Anthropology in 1912.

She was also involved with the British Association for the Advancement of Science, presenting research, centered around the connection between religion and the environment in Siberia, that would go on to be published in 1914.

In 1914, she became a member of the Royal Anthropological Society.

Yenisei Expidetion Addtions
...partly funded by the Mary Ewart Travelling Scholarship granted by Sommerville College ,

...sailing on the Oryol...

It is speculated that recordings of the many languages that they encountered during their expedition were produced on wax cylinders, but this has not been proven and the recordings are not well-known and likely never made it through academic processing if they were brought back to the university.

The overall results of the expedition were modest, something that historians have credited to the nature of the study and the many financial and political struggles faced by the team during the journey.

She was also well-known for her criticisms of the term "Arctic Hysteria" to refer to the Western perspective of the presentation of nervous diseases. She encourages cultural relativism, meaning that aspects of one culture should not be viewed and judged through the lens of a different culture when it comes to this situation. She describes that what Western academics called "hysteria" was viewed through a much different lens in Siberian cultures. This was all a part of her works studying Shamanism in Siberia.