Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Antanas Baranauskas (1835 m. sausio 17 d. Anykščiuose, Utenos apskritis – 1902 m. lapkričio 26 d. Seinuose) – XIX a. vidurio lietuvių Romantizmo poetas, katalikų dvasininkas, Seinų vyskupas, kalbininkas, matematikas, Biblijos vertėjas. Jo literatūriniais pseudonimais buvo Bangputys, Jurksztas Smalaūsis, Jurkštas, Smalaūsis ir ...

    • Jonas Bernardas Baronas-
  2. Antanas Baranauskas (born Jan. 17, 1835, Anykščiai, Lithuania, Russian Empire—died Nov. 26, 1902, Seinai) was a Roman Catholic bishop and poet who wrote one of the greatest works in Lithuanian literature, Anykyščių šilelis (1858–59; The Forest of Anykščiai ). The 342-line poem, written in East High Lithuanian dialect, describes the ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Antanas Baranauskas (Latin: Antonius Baranovski, Polish: Antoni Baranowski; 17 January 1835 – 26 November 1902) was a Lithuanian poet, mathematician and Catholic bishop of Sejny. Baranauskas is best known as the author of the Lithuanian poem Anykščių šilelis.

  4. People also ask

  5. A. Baranauskas padėjo pagrindus lietuvių dialektologijai. Sukaupė tarminės medžiagos, sudarė pirmąją lietuvių kalbos tarmių klasifikaciją (Pastabos apie lietuvių kalbą ir žodyną / Zametki o litovskom jazyke i slovare 1898).

  6. Antanas Baranauskas was a Lithuanian poet, mathematician and Catholic bishop of Sejny. Baranauskas is best known as the author of the Lithuanian poem Anykščių šilelis. He used various pseudonyms, including A.B., Bangputys, Jurksztas Smalaūsis, Jurkštas Smalaūsis, and Baronas.

  7. Antanas Baranauskas. 1835-1902. Antanas Baranauskas wrote The Anykšèiai Grove at just 24 years old when he was a theology student. It is considered his major poetic work, and is celebrated for its rich, distinctive Lithuanian. Later in his life, Baranauskas became a pioneer in the study of Lithuanian grammar. Towards the end of his life, he ...

  8. The Forest of Anykščiai (Lithuanian: Anykščių šilelis), written by Antanas Baranauskas and published in 1861 by Laurynas Ivinskis, is a landmark poem in the history of the Lithuanian literature. The poem expresses the long-standing connection between the Lithuanian people and their forests.

  1. People also search for