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  1. Dunaújvárosban a Nowa Huta tér melletti Mickiewicz Ádám nevű utcácskát róla nevezték el. Az utcanévben a költő nevét magyar forma (családnév, keresztnév) szerint írták át. Halálának 100. évfordulója inspirálta a krakkói Adam Mickiewicz-emlékmű felállítását, mely Lengyelország egyik legismertebb emlékműve.

  2. Adam Bernard Mickiewicz (December 24, 1798 – November 26, 1855) is considered by many to be Poland 's greatest poet. Like renowned poets, Zygmunt Krasiński and Juliusz Słowacki, he belonged to the school of poetic Romanticism. As a Romantic, Mickiewicz was inspired by nature, and in nature he hoped to find an organic way to the truth, which ...

  3. Adam Mickiewicz is Poland’s most famous poet. The Romantic poet perished in 1855, but his legacy is everlasting. In countries around the world, as different as Poland, Belarus, France, Turkey, and the United States, there are buildings bearing Adam Mickiewicz’s name. Adam Mickiewicz was born on ...

  4. Global & Influential: Adam Mickiewicz in World Literature. As we try to gauge Adam Mickiewicz’s impact on world literature, here’s a look at some truly odd and fascinating cases of Mickiewicz’s posthumous international influence on authors and literature – distant both in space and time. The work and life of Adam Mickiewicz, like that ...

  5. Adomas Bernardas Mickevičius ( lenk. Adam Bernard Mickiewicz, 1798 m. gruodžio 24 d. Zaosėje, netoli Naugarduko – 1855 m. lapkričio 26 d. Konstantinopolyje, Osmanų imperija) – iš istorinės Lietuvos Didžiosios Kunigaikštystės kilęs, lenkų kalba rašęs poetas, dramaturgas, eseistas, publicistas, vertėjas, politinis aktyvistas.

  6. Adam Mickiewicz Gospodin Tadija, 1834. godine. Adam Bernard Mickiewicz [adam bernard mickjevič], (Zaosie kod Nowogródeka, današnja Bjelorusija, 24. prosinca 1798.

  7. Jun 11, 2018 · Adam Mickiewicz was born on 24 December 1798 in or near Nowogródek (Novogrudok), a town in historical Lithuania, with Polish high culture, inhabited by Jews, surrounded by Belarusian peasants, featuring a mosque for Tatars, in the Russian Empire. Although the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth had been partitioned out of existence by Russia ...

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