Konstantin Halafoff

Konstantin Ciryl Halafoff or K. C. Halafoff (19021969) was a Russian white emigre and Australian poet and ornithologist interested in the musicology of bird song.

Halafoff was born in 1902 in Moscow. After the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia he served with the White Army. In 1920 he moved to Yugoslavia where he resumed his interrupted studies and graduated from Belgrade University. After the Second World War he fled to Germany where he lived until moving to Australia in 1949. He published his poetry in various Russian emigre publications in Europe and Australia; one of his contributions being an essay on musical aspects of Boris Pasternak's language, published in a Russian literary review in Munich.[1]

Halafoff studied the complex vocalisations of superb lyrebirds in Australia, especially in Sherbrooke Forest. Articles and notes he wrote about lyrebirds and other birds that were published in the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970 include:[2]

Halafoff died in 1969 in Ferntree Gully a suburb of Melbourne, aged 67.[3]

References

  1. Gloria Victis 1956: The response of poets throughout the world to the Hungarian fight for freedom of 1956
  2. Sherbrooke Forest Bibliography: Lyrebirds
  3. Death Index Victoria 19211985 CD-ROM, (1998), The Crown in the State of Victoria: Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages.
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