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Vaślejĕ Mitta

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Vaślejĕ Mitta
Born(1908-03-05)March 5, 1908
Bolshiye Arabosy, Chuvashia
Died(1957-06-10)June 10, 1957
Bolshiye Arabosy, Chuvashia
Occupationwriter, poet and translator
NationalityChuvash
Notable works«Кăмăл» (Mood, 1932)
«Такмаксем» (Ditty, 1934)
«Кăмăлтан» (From the Heart, 956)
«Кăмăлăмпа шухăшăм» (My mood and My dream, 1959)

Vasley Mitta or Vasily Yegorovich Mitta (Russian: Василий Егорович Митта, Template:Lang-cv, (1908-03-05)March 5, 1908 Bolshiye Arabosy, Simbirsk, Russian Empire - (1957-06-10)June 10, 1957; Bolshiye Arabosy, Chuvash ASSR, USSR) was a Chuvash poet and novelist, translator, essayist and author of the literary-critical articles.[1][2][3]

Life and education

Mitta was born in Bolshiye Arabosy (Большие Арабуси) settlement (present-day the village of Pervomayskoye of Batyrevsky District, Chuvashia) of Buinsky Uyezd in the Simbirsk Governorate of the Russian Empire to a Chuvash peasant family.

In 1924 he entered the Ulyanovsk Chuvash Pedagogical College (Ульяновский чувашский педагогический техникум) and was educated at this technical school in Ulyanovsk. Following his graduation in 1928 he began working as a teacher in several schools, before starting work in the newspaper Паянхи сас. In 1937 he was arrested. In 1955-1957 he worked in the literary journal Tăvan Atăl (Тӑван Атӑл).

Works

As a child he developed an interest in the poetry of Alexander Pushkin and the stories of Nikolai Gogol. He began to write Chuvash poetry, and was first published in 1925, and continued to appear in Chuvash newspapers and magazines. His works centered around the notion of a new concept of his homeland. He also translated works of famous Russian writers and poets. He was repressed in 1937 as part of the Great Purge, finally being released in 1954. He died three years later.

Memory

References