Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Luca Ion Caragiale (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈluka iˈon karaˈdʒjale]; 3 July 1893 – 7 June 1921), also known as Luki, Luchi or Luky Caragiale, was a Romanian poet, novelist and translator, whose contributions were a synthesis of Symbolism, Parnassianism and modernist literature.
Originally, Ion Luca was known as Ioanne L. Caragiali. [28] [29] His family and friends knew him as Iancu or, rarely, Iancuțu—both being antiquated hypocoristics of Ion. [30] The definitive full version of his name features the syllable ca twice in a row, which is generally avoided in Romanian due to its scatological connotations.
Va tremura privind la ea. Noi te iubim, că tu ai fost al nostru, Și viața pentru tine ne-am fi dat, Dar prin dictatul rușinos și monstru Hortiștii-au reușit de te-au furat. Cor De-aici, din depărtări, privim spre tine Și plângem jalnic chinul tău amar, Când știm că frații cei rămași în tine Sunt torturați de un popor barbar.
Versuri și Proză was a Romanian literary and art magazine edited by Alfred Hefter-Hidalgo and I. M. Rașcu, published in Iași from 1912 to 1916. It published work by Benjamin Fondane and Victor Ion Popa .
Ion Caraion (pen name of Stelian Diaconescu; May 24, 1923 – July 21, 1986) was a Romanian poet, essayist and translator. Born in Rușavăț , Buzău County , he attended primary school at Râmnicu Sărat from 1930 to 1934, followed by Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu High School in Buzău from 1934 to 1942.
Țiganiada is a Romanian epic poem written by the poet and scholar Ion Budai-Deleanu, the first epic poem written in the Romanian language.. Țiganiada treats an allegorical subject with satirical tendencies, antifeudal and anticlerical, being a complex and unexpectedly modern literary work that contains a significant amount of Enlightenment ideas.
Ion Pillat (31 March 1891 – 17 April 1945) was a distinguished Romanian poet. He is best known for his volume Pe Argeș în sus ( Upstream on the Argeș ) and Poeme într-un vers ( One-line poems ), and for his embrionic love for his Moldavian & Muntenian boyar villages Florica & Miorcani, depictured in all his Poetry.
Ion Agârbiceanu (first name also Ioan, last name also Agărbiceanu and Agîrbiceanu; 12 September 1882 – 28 May 1963) was an Austro-Hungarian-born Romanian writer, journalist, politician, theologian and Greek-Catholic priest.