Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Wanda Wasilewska (Polish pronunciation: [ˈvanda vaɕiˈlɛfska]), also known by her Russian name Vanda Lvovna Vasilevskaya (Russian: Ва́нда Льво́вна Василе́вская) (21 January 1905 – 29 July 1964), was a Polish and Soviet novelist and journalist and a left-wing political activist.

  2. Wanda Wasilewska (ur. 21 stycznia 1905 w Krakowie, zm. 29 lipca 1964 w Kijowie) – polska i radziecka działaczka socjalistyczna i komunistyczna, pisarka i polityczka.

  3. Wasilewska, Wanda (1905–1964) Polish-born Russian politician and writer . Name variations: Vanda L'vovna Vasilievskaia; Wanda Wassilewska. Born on January 21, 1905, in Cracow (Kraków), Poland; died on July 29, 1964, in Kiev, Ukraine; daughter of Leon Wasilewski (a politician); graduated from the University at Kraków, 1927; married a ...

  4. MOSCOW, July 29—Wanda Wasilewska, Soviet‐Polish writer, died in Kiev today at the age of 59. Miss Wasilewska, a leader of pro‐Soviet Polish émigrés in World War II, adopted Soviet citizenship...

  5. Wanda Wasilewska was born on 22 January 1905 in Krakau, Galicia, Austria-Hungary [now Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland]. She was a writer, known for The Rainbow (1944), Veter s vostoka (1940) and Children Must Laugh (1938). She was married to Roman Szymanski, Marian Bogatko and Oleksanr Koniychuk.

  6. Wanda Wasilewska. Writer: The Rainbow. Wanda Wasilewska was born on 22 January 1905 in Krakau, Galicia, Austria-Hungary [now Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland]. She was a writer, known for The Rainbow (1944), Veter s vostoka (1940) and Children Must Laugh (1938).

  7. Wanda Wasilewska, also known by her Russian name Vanda Lvovna Vasilevskaya, was a Polish and Soviet novelist and journalist and a left-wing political activist.

  8. Jun 7, 2024 · Polish Communist politician who fled to the USSR when Germany invaded in September 1939 (see Polish campaign). She was subsequently elected to the Supreme Council of the USSR, became ... From: Wasilewska, Wanda in The Oxford Companion to World War II ».

  9. May 8, 2024 · Janina loved him as well, with an affection and concern that would last her entire life. Her greatest, most undying love, though, was for Wanda Wasilewska, who in the 1920s was a promising young leader of the Polish Socialist Party to which her father had devoted his life.

  10. Wanda Wasilewska (Polish pronunciation: [ˈvanda vaɕiˈlɛfska]), also known by Russian name Vanda Lvovna Vasilevskaya (Russian: Ва́нда Льво́вна Василе́вская) (21 January 1905 – 29 July 1964), was a Polish and Soviet novelist and journalist and a left-wing political activist who became a devoted communist. [1]

  1. People also search for