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Atanas Dalchev
Bulgarian writer

Atanas Dalchev

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Bulgarian writer
Gender
Male
Star sign
GeminiGemini
Birth
12 June 1904, Thessaloniki, Greece
Death
17 January 1978, Sofia, Bulgaria (aged 73 years)
Age
73 years
Family
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Atanas Hristov Dalchev (also written Dalčev Bulgarian: Атанас Далчев) (June 12, 1904 - January 17, 1978) was a Bulgarian poet, critic and translator. He is an author of poetry that brightly touches some philosophical problems. He translated poetry and fiction from French, Spanish, English, German and Russian authors. Recipient of the Herder Prize in 1972 (for his "...all over literary work...") and order "Znak Pocheta" (or Order of the Badge of Honor) in 1967 (for popularisation of Russian culture in Bulgaria).

He was born in Thessaloniki (Solun) in Salonica Vilayet and graduated from high school in Sofia in 1922.His father Hristo Dalchev was a lawyer and as a MP from People's Federative Party (Bulgarian Section) represеntedBulgarians from Macedonia in the Ottoman parliament.

Atanas Dalchev's Herder Prize, 1972

In 1926, Dalchev published his first collection called Prozorets ("Window") and graduated in pedagogics and philosophy at Sofia University in 1927. Dalchev published the collections of poetry Stihotvorenia ("Poems", 1928) and Paris (1930). From 1945 until 1956, he was under pressure from the communist authorities and was forced to publish only translations.

He died in Sofia in 1978.

His works has been translated in French, Slovak, Czech, Hungarian, Russian, German, Italian, Polish, French, Spanish, and also in English, Turkish, Chinese, Japanese, Arabian, Swedish and some other languages in periodic or in literary medleys.

Short bibliography

  • Prozorets (Window), 1926
  • Stihotvorenia (Poems), 1928
  • Pariž (Paris), 1930
  • Angelat na Shartar (The Angel of Chartres), 1943
  • Stihotvorenia (Poems), 1965; 1969
  • Fragmenti (Fragments; Critical and philosophical reflections), 1967
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 26 Mar 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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Atanas Dalchev
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