Hadiya Davletshina

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Icarusgeek (talk | contribs) at 11:45, 24 November 2016 (removed Category:20th-century women writers; added Category:20th-century Russian women writers using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Hadiya Davletshina
Born Hadiya Lutfulovna Davletshina
(1905-03-05)5 March 1905
now Khasanovo village, Bolshechernigovsky District, Samara Oblast
Died12 May 1954(1954-05-12) (aged 49)
Birsk, Bashkir ASSR, USSR
Occupationpoet, novelist, playwright, librettist
CitizenshipRussian Empire , USSR
Alma materBashkir State University (1934-1937)
Notable awardsSalavat Yulaev Award

,1967

Hadiya Davletshina (Bashkir: Дәүләтшина Һәҙиә Лотфулла ҡыҙы, real name Hadiya Lutfulovna Davletshina, 5 March 1905 – 5 December 1954), was a Bashkir poet, writer and playwright.[1][2]

Biography

Born March 5, 1905 in the village Khasanovo of Pugachev district in Samara province into a poor peasant family

1920 working as a teacher in the village of Samara province Dengizbaevo;

1920 study in the Tatar-Bashkir Pedagogical College in Samara;

1932 study at the Moscow Institute for the preparation of the editors;

1935 - 1937 studies at the Bashkir Pedagogical Institute;

1933 work in the literary staff of the newspaper BASSR Baimaksky region (along with her husband, writer Bashkir lip Davletshin subsequently Commissar of Education, Bashkir ASSR);

1937 - 1942 as the wife of imprisoned repressed, then to death lived in exile in Birsk.

Notes and references