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  1. Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen (6 November 1919 – 2 July 2004) was a Portuguese poet and writer. Her remains have been entombed in the National Pantheon since 2014. Life and career. Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen was born on 6 November 1919 in Porto, Portugal.

  2. Sofia Melo Breiner Andresen[ 1] GColSE • GCIH ( Porto, 6 de novembro de 1919 – Lisboa, 2 de Julho de 2004) foi uma das mais importantes poetisas portuguesas do século XX. Foi a primeira mulher portuguesa a receber o mais importante galardão literário da língua portuguesa, o Prémio Camões, em 1999.

  3. Considered one of Portugal’s most important 20th century poets, she was awarded numerous literary prizes and is widely translated. Her poetry, imbued with a rare luminosity and precision, is at once ‘profound’ and ‘superficial’, effectively eliminating the distinction between inner and outer.

  4. Jul 2, 2004 · The sea is probably the most central theme in her poetical works. Other recurring themes are Ancient Greece and ideas of freedom and justice. Besides her work as a writer, she translated Dante and Shakespeare into Portuguese. Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen died in Lisbon on July 2, 2004, aged 84.

  5. Born in 1919, she became a beacon of inspiration with her evocative verses that captured the essence of the city. Explore the poetic legacy of Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen, as her verses weave tales of Lisbon's beauty, culture, and the enduring spirit of its people.

  6. Sophia Andresen was a student of philosophy at the University of Lisbon before she became one of Portugal's most respected poets. She arrived on the literary scene at age 25, with her collection Poesia. Over the next 50 years, Andresen produced 11 more volumes of verse, as well as short stories and children's books.

  7. Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen uses an evolution of meaning in the symbol of paper to express the anxiousness, rejoicing, and eventual disillusionment of the Portuguese people before and after the revolution on 25 April 1974.

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