Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Vladimir Kazimirovich Shileyko (also Shileiko, Shilejko Russian: Владимир Казимирович Шилейко; February 14, 1891 – October 5, 1930) was a Russian orientalist (assyriologist, hebraist) poet and translator.

  2. In 1918, after the epochal October Revolution, Akhmatova officially divorced Gumilyov and married Vladimir Shileyko, a scholar of ancient Assyrian cuneiform script.

  3. Shileyko Vladimir (Woldemar Georg Anna Maria) (1891–1930) – orientalist, specialist in Assyriology and Semitology, translator, poet. He was a disciple of P. C. Kokovtsov, B. A. Turaev, and M. V. Nickolsky.

  4. Dec 6, 2018 · 34) Reisner used her connections to get food, clothing, and medical care for Akhmatova’s second husband, Vladimir Shileyko, and arranged for Akhmatova to get a library job.

  5. Career. He was a second husband of Russian poet Anna Akhmatova. He is known for his Russian translations of the Epic of Gilgamesh. He died in Moscow of tuberculosis. Vladimir Kazimirovich Shileyko was a Russian orientalist poet and translator.

  6. Mar 27, 2024 · Furthermore, she separated from her second husband, Russian orientalist Vladimir Shileyko. The poet herself was not happy in this marriage and compared it to prison. In that difficult moment in life, Anna posed for Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin.

  7. People also ask

  8. Akhmatova was the first to publish the works of her husband, Nikolai Gumilyov. She also helped her second husband, Vladimir Shileyko, with the translation of his scientific works. She went on to help her third husband, Nikolay Punin. Three of her close family members fell victim to the communist regime’s repressive policies.

  1. People also search for