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  1. Anna Andreyevna Gorenko [Notes 1] (23 June [ O.S. 11 June] 1889 – 5 March 1966), better known by the pen name Anna Akhmatova, [Notes 2] was a Russian poet, one of the most significant of the 20th century. She reappeared as a voice of Russian poetry during World War II.

  2. Anna Akhmatova is regarded as one of Russia’s greatest poets. In addition to poetry, she wrote prose including memoirs, autobiographical pieces, and literary scholarship on Russian writers such as Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin. She also translated Italian, French, Armenian, and Korean poetry. In her lifetime Akhmatova experienced both ...

  3. Born Anna Andreevna Gorenko on June 11, 1889, in Bol'shoi Fontan, Russia; died in Domodedovo, a sanatorium outside Moscow, on March 5, 1966; daughter of Andrei Gorenko and Inna Stogova; married Nikolai Gumilyov, in 1910 (separated 1916; divorced 1918); married Vladimir Shileyko, in 1918 (separated 1921); lived 15 years with Nikolai Punin ...

  4. May 29, 2018 · AKHMATOVA, ANNA ANDREYEVNA. (1889 – 1966), leading Russian poet of the twentieth century; member of the Acmeist group. Anna Akhmatova (Anna Andreyevna Gorenko) was born on June 23, 1889, near Odessa, and grew up in Tsarskoye Selo, the imperial summer residence, where Pushkin had attended the Lyceum.

  5. Anna Akhmatova. Anna Akhmatova ( Russian: А́нна Ахма́това, real name А́нна Андре́евна Горе́нко) (June 23, 1889 (June 11, Old Style) - March 5, 1966) the pen name of Anna Andreevna Gorenko, was the leader and the heart and soul of Saint Petersburg tradition of Russian poetry in the course of the first half of ...

  6. Anna Akhmatova. Anna Akhmatova, orig. Anna Andreyevna Gorenko, (born June 23, 1889, Bolshoy Fontan, near Odessa, Ukraine, Russian Empire—died March 5, 1966, Domodedovo, near Moscow), Russian poet. She won fame with her first poetry collections (1912, 1914). Soon after the Revolution of 1917, Soviet authorities condemned her work for what they ...

  7. Jun 15, 2013 · Akhmatova was officially silenced in 1924, and did not publish again until 1940. “An entire generation has passed through me as if through a shadow,” she wrote.

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