Members of the Centre

blank profile picture
Alevtina Solovyeva
Alevtina Solovyeva specialises in comparative Asian studies, Chinese and Mongolian studies, folkloristics, historical and social anthropology, and social sciences. She obtained her first PhD in Asian studies (2016) and the second in Folkloristics (2021). She undertook her postdoctoral research at the Faculty of Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge (2022). She has been conducting fieldwork research for various projects in Mongolia, China, and other regions of Inner, Central, and East Asia annually since 2006.

Her current research topics look at the transnational relations of peoples in Central and East Asia, Mongolian peoples’ communities in Mongolia, China and Russia, beliefs and practices in urban and rural environments, contesting authorities and forms of influence, contemporary challenges, collective concerns and social imagination.

alevtina.solovyeva@ut.ee
Peeter Espak
Peeter Espak
Since 2010, he has been a Research Fellow at the University of Tartu's Centre for Oriental Studies in Estonia, becoming a Senior Research Fellow in 2013 and specializing in Comparative Religion from 2014 to 2017. Currently, he serves as a Senior Research Fellow and Associate Professor in Ancient Near Eastern and Sumerian Culture. He has been a board member of Estonian Public Broadcasting since 2020 and was part of the Estonian Young Academy of Sciences from 2017 to 2021, as well as serving on the board of the international Melammu Project from 2017 to 2022.

His research primarily focuses on Ancient Near Eastern mythology, the history of religion, and political history, particularly from the third millennium. He also explores comparative religion, creation myths, and ancient military ideologies. Additionally, he teaches courses on Near Eastern history, mythology, and literature at Tartu University and other institutions.

peeter.espak@ut.ee
Vladimir_Sazonov_2021._aastal_Arvamusfestivalil
Vladimir Sazonov
Dr. Vladimir Sazonov works since 2021 as Associate Professor at the University of Tartu. He teaches lectures on politics, (cultural) history and security (Ancient near East, modern Middle East, Russia). 2010-2013 Vladimir Sazonov was Research Fellow n Oriental Studies and 2013-2020 Senior Research Fellow at the University of Tartu. His research fields comprise Ancient Near Eastern history, Middle Eastern, Russian state ideology and information war.

Vladimir Sazonov published big number of scientific and popular-scientific articles, several books and volumes (e.g., Tartu University Press 2010, 2015 and 2017, 2021; Jim Eisenbrauns (Penn State University Press) 2016; Äripäev 2020; 2022; Springer 202, 2023 etc.) on Middle Eastern history, Russian state ideology and propaganda, also about politics and security. Sazonov is member of several academic organizations – e.g., Estonian Academic Oriental Society and others.

vladimir.sazonov@ut.ee
Teet-Toome
Teet Toome
Teet is originally from Pärnu and lives in Tartu, studied Oriental cultures and world literature at the University of Tartu and Buddhism at the University of Delhi, lived for a long time in India and China, and traveled to many parts of Asia. He feels a special connection with Indian culture – he is fascinated by the diverse manifestations of this ancient spirituality both in India and elsewhere in the world. Teet works as a researcher at the Centre for Oriental Studies of the University of Tartu and his main field of research is Buddhist texts. In addition, he has lectured at the Institute of Buddhism and Tartu Folk High School, translated and edited several books related to Oriental cultures - and he is one of the authors of the "Ida mõtteloo leksikoni".

teet.toome@ut.ee
Reina (Iran)
Reyhaneh Ghoroghchian
Reyhaneh Ghoroghchian (Reina) is a specialist in Asian Studies affiliated with the Centre of Oriental Studies. She earned her Master's degree from the University of Tartu in the "Folkloristics and Applied Heritage Studies" MA program within the Department of Estonian and Comparative Folklore. Her thesis, which centred on the Qashqai nomads of the Zagros Mountains, delved deep into their struggles and resilience amidst rapid social and economic changes. Reina's research exposes migration, diaspora, and cultural continuity in the Persian-speaking world. She advocates for cultural preservation, emphasizing the importance of safeguarding intangible cultural heritage and empowering marginalized communities.

reyhaneh.ghoroghchian@ut.ee
Alina Operlianska
Alina Oprelianska
Alina Oprelianska is a Junior Research Fellow and a PhD student at the Department of Estonian and Comparative Folklore at the University of Tartu, Estonia, and a PhD student at the Department of Folkloristics at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine, specializing in the field of Fairy Tale Studies, with a focus on gender aspects, customary law, folk beliefs and narratives. She was also a visiting researcher and Research Assistant at the University of Alberta, the Kule Folklore Center for Ukrainian and Canadian Folklore (2022), and at Jagellonian University , Department of Pragmatics and Translation Theory (2023).

alina.oprelianska@ut.ee
Yanjinlkham Dashtseren
Yanjinlkham Dashtseren
Yanjinlkham Dashtseren is a MA student of Folkloristics and Applied Heritage at the Department of Estonian and Comparative Folklore at the University of Tartu. She is interested in the Buriad, a minority ethnic group in Mongolia. Being Buriad herself, her Master's thesis is likely to address the topic of post-memory of forced migration of the Buriad that took place in the early 20th century. She has a Bachelor's degree in computer sciences from the National University of Mongolia (2008), and extensive work experience as an IT coordinator and general manager at international companies.

yanjinlkham.dashtseren@ut.ee
Rodion Krupin
Rodion Krupin
Rodion Krupin is the research assistant and communication coordinator at the Centre for Oriental Studies. He is currently an MA student at the Johan Skytte Institute and his scholarly interests focus on Japanese studies, international relations and region studies and contemporary politics in the Asia region. At the Centre for Oriental Studies, he promotes Japanese topics both within the centre and externally, while also building and maintaining partnerships with Japanese universities and research institutions.

rodion.krupin@ut.ee
Danila Rygovskiy
Danila Rygovskiy
Danila Rygovskiy specialises in Cultural Anthropology and Folkloristics with a focus on the Russian Old Believer community. He obtained a PhD degree at the University of Tartu in 2023 with a dissertation titled Women in Russian Old Belief: Religious Practices and Public Imagination on

Professional interests: Anthropology of Religion, Gender and Identity, Siberian Studies, Estonia and Baltic Region, Networks of Russian Old Believers Worldwide, Folklore Studies, Anthropology of Technology, History of Print and Media, Industrial Archaeology

danila.rygovskiy@ut.ee

Visiting scholars

Krzysztof Ulanowski
Krzysztof Ulanowski
Krzysztof Ulanowski is an Associate Professor (Ph.D.) in the Faculty of Social Sciences, department of social anthropology (University of Gdańsk). His main scientific interests related not only to anthropology but to Religious Studies, History, Classical and Oriental Studies. This is reflected in both; the research topic, i.e. the study on the influences of the Mesopotamian civilization on the Hellenic (and Hellenistic) ones, the differences between religion, magic and divination in history and contemporary times, the anthropology of ancient cultures, the borders between religions and cultures, the differences between holiness and exclusion in religious sphere and also the problems of religious minorities in Pomerania and magical rites of the contemporary world; and affiliation to scientific organizations Polish Orientalist Society (PTO), Classical Association in London (CA), Society of Biblical Literature (SBL), International Association for Assyriology (IAA), Societas Philologa Polonorum (PTF), General Association of Mediterranean Archeology (GAMA). He is a board member of international Melammu Project, conducted his research both in academic centers Paris, Padua, Athens, and field research in Mexico, Bhutan and Podlasie (Poland). He is an author of more than fifty publications: books, chapters in books and articles.
Did you find the necessary information? *
Thank you for the feedback!