Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Taras Șevcenko (în ucraineană Тарас Григорович Шевченко; n. 9 martie 1814 , Morînți , uezdul Zvenigorodski ⁠( d ) , gubernia Kiev ⁠( d ) , Imperiul Rus – d. 10 martie 1861 , Sankt Petersburg , Imperiul Rus ) a fost un pictor și poet romantic ucrainean, considerat poetul național al Ucrainei .

  2. Mar 9, 2024 · Shevchenko was born on March 9, 1814, in the village of Moryntsi, located in Ukraine’s central Cherkasy Oblast. Most of modern-day Ukraine was under the control of the Russian Empire in Shevchenko’s lifetime. Through a series of legislative bans, tsarist authorities went to great lengths to suppress the Ukrainian language, culture, and ...

  3. Poetry. Taras Shevchenko, the national bard of Ukraine, is a founder of modern Ukrainian literature and language. A champion of people’s freedom, with his poetry, he played a leading role in the formation of the Ukrainian national identity and consciousness. Political and revolutionary, his poems which speak to the struggles of all oppressed ...

  4. Taras Hryhorovych Shevchenko (March 9 [ O.S. February 25] 1814 – March 10 [ O.S. February 26] 1861) was a Ukrainian poet, writer, artist, public and political figure, as well as folklorist and ethnographer. His literary heritage is regarded to be the foundation of modern Ukrainian literature and, to a large extent, the modern Ukrainian language.

  5. Taras Hryhorovich Shevchenko (b. Feb. 25 [March 9, New Style], 1814, Morintsy, Ukraine, –d. Feb. 26 [March 10], 1861, St. Petersburg, Russia), is the foremost Ukrainian poet, prose writer, painter and playwright of the 19th century. He was a major figure of the Ukrainian national revival. Taras Shevchenko was a man of universal talent.

  6. May 9, 2018 · Taras Grigorievich Shevchenko was born March 9, 1814 into a family of serfs in the village of Morintsy in Ukraine, then part of the tsarist Russian Empire. The Shevchenkos soon relocated to the village of Kirilivka, where Taras grew up. He led an early life of misery.

  7. The bicentennial of Taras Shevchenko (1814-1861) coincided with a remarkable political and social upheaval—a revolution and a national renewal that as of this writing is still ongoing and still under attack in Ukraine.1 The core, and iconic, presence of Shevchenko in that process, and dramatically and symbolically on the Euromaidan itself, has often been noted and the revolutionary changes ...

  1. People also search for