Adolfo Constenla Umaña
Adolfo Constenla Umaña (January 14, 1948, in San José, Costa Rica – November 7, 2013) was a Costa Rican philologist and linguist who specialized in the indigenous languages of Central America. He is especially known as a leading scholar on Chibchan languages, and some sources referred to him as the "father of Chibchan linguistics."
Education
He studied Spanish philology at the University of Costa Rica. In 1981, he graduated with a Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of Pennsylvania with a thesis on the comparative phonology of the Chibchan languages.
Career
Beginning in 1970, he worked as a teacher and researcher at the School of Philology, Linguistics, and Literature at the University of Costa Rica. He was promoted to Professor in 1983.
In 1969 Constenla began a life-long working relationship when, at the recommendation of Arturo Agüero, he visited the Malecu (Guatuso) people of northern Costa Rica. He would study and publish extensively about their language Maleku Lhaíca (also known in Spanish as Guatuso), for the rest of his life:
His work was by no means limited to Maléku, however. By his own accounting, he lists the languages he worked on most as:
Constenla was the founder and coordinator of the Programa de Investigaciones sobre las Lenguas de Costa Rica y Áreas Vecinas (PIL; "Research Program on the Languages of Costa Rica and Neighboring Areas"). From 1985 to 1996, he collected and analyzed linguistic data of many indigenous Central America languages. He published a full-length grammar of Maleku in 1998
From 1988–1989, he was a visiting professor at the State University of New York at Albany. In 1995, he became a full member of the Academia Costarricense de la Lengua.
He advised (as of 2011) 22 degrees, 9 Masters and 12 Licentiate, mostly regarding indigenous languages of Costa Rica and Central America.
For his work, Constenla received the Aquileo J. Echeverría National Award three times, in 1979, 1998, and 2007. In addition, he received the Carlos Gagini Award from the Costa Rican Association of Philology and Linguistics in 1984.
He died from cancer on November 7, 2013, at the age of 65.