-
Hryhorii Fedorovych Kvitka-
Osnovianenko (Ukrainian: Григорій Федорович Квітка-Основ'яненко; 29
November 1778 – 20
August 1843) was a
Ukrainian writer,...
- відьма) is a
satirical fiction story by
Ukrainian writer Hryhorii Kvitka-
Osnovianenko written in 1833 and
published in 1837 in his
second book of "Little Russian...
-
linguist (1908–2002)
Dmytro Bahalii –
Ukrainian historian Hryhorii Kvitka-
Osnovianenko –
Ukrainian writer, journalist, and
playwright (1778–1843)
Arkady Averchenko...
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asked his
father in
detail about Shevchenko, Kulish, Maksymovich, Kvitka-
Osnovianenko, whom he knew personally, as well as
about the Cyril-Methodiev brotherhood...
-
original walls of
Kharkiv enclosed today's streets:
vulytsia Kvitky-
Osnovianenko,
Constitution Square, Rose
Luxemburg Square,
Proletarian Square, and...
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greeting has its
roots in
Taras Shevchenko’s works. In his 1840 poem To
Osnovianenko Shevchenko used the
phrase "Glory of Ukraine": Our thought, our song...
- the Kuban. He died in 1797 and was
buried in Yekaterinodar. H. Kvitka-
Osnovianenko -
Holovatyi in: Zaporozhtsi.
Istoriyi Kozatskoyi kultury Kyiv, 1993....
- Morocco,
Alaouite dynasty member (d. 1859)
November 29 –
Hryhorii Kvitka-
Osnovianenko,
Ukrainian writer, journalist, and
playwright (d. 1843)
November 30 –...
- literature".
Modern Ukrainian prose was
inaugurated by
Hryhorii Kvitka-
Osnovianenko’s novel Marusya (1834).
Since the late 1980s, and
particularly after the...
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evident not only in the
works of his
immediate successors (Hryhorii Kvitka-
Osnovianenko,
Taras Shevchenko,
Yakiv ****harenko, K. Topolia,
Stepan Pysarevsky, and...