Mikhail Dmitriyev: Difference between revisions

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{{picture|file=Mikhail Dmitriev.jpg|caption='''Mikhail Dmitriyev''' (1796-1866)}}
{{picture|file=Mikhail Dmitriyev.jpg|caption='''Mikhail Dmitriyev''' (1796-1866)}}
Russian poet, critic and translator (b. 23 May/3 June 1796 at Bogorodskoye; d. 5/17 September 1866 in [[Moscow]]), born '''''Mikhail Aleksandrovich Dmitriyev''''' (Михаил Александрович Дмитриев).
Russian poet, critic and translator (b. 23 May/3 June 1796 at Bogorodskoye; d. 5/17 September 1866 in [[Moscow]]), born '''''Mikhail Aleksandrovich Dmitriyev''''' (Михаил Александрович Дмитриев).


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==External Links==
==External Links==
* [[wikipedia:ru:Дмитриев, Михаил Александрович|Wikipedia (Russian)]]
* [[wikipedia:ru:Дмитриев, Михаил Александрович|Wikipedia (Russian)]]
* {{viaf|8244779}}


[[Category:People|Dmitriyev, Mikhail]]
[[Category:People|Dmitriyev, Mikhail]]
[[Category:Writers|Dmitriyev, Mikhail]]
[[Category:Writers|Dmitriyev, Mikhail]]
[[Category:Translators|Dmitriyev, Mikhail]]
[[Category:Translators|Dmitriyev, Mikhail]]

Latest revision as of 11:57, 10 August 2023

Mikhail Dmitriyev (1796-1866)

Russian poet, critic and translator (b. 23 May/3 June 1796 at Bogorodskoye; d. 5/17 September 1866 in Moscow), born Mikhail Aleksandrovich Dmitriyev (Михаил Александрович Дмитриев).

Tchaikovsky's Settings of Works by Dmitriyev

A Russian translation of Friedrich Schiller's 1785 German poem An die Freude (To Joy), made in 1843 by Dmitriyev with Konstantin Aksakov (1817-1860) and Vladimir Benediktov (1807-1873), was used by Tchaikovsky in his cantata Ode to Joy (1865).

External Links