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1-9 of 9
- Writer
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Honoré de Balzac was a French writer whose works have been made into films, such as, Cousin Bette (1998) starring Jessica Lange, and television serials, such as Cousin Bette (1971), starring Margaret Tyzack and Helen Mirren.
He was born on March 20, 1799, in Tours, France. His father, Bernard Francois Balzac, was a government regional administrator who married a daughter of his boss. The family moved to Paris in 1815. There Balzac went to the Sorbonne, matriculated in jurisprudence and became a clerk for an attorney.
Balzac's efforts at publishing his early novels under a pseudonym and in his own publishing company failed, and he went into debt. His activity as a journalist brought recognition among intellectuals for his political and cultural reviews, which resonated with the mixed social expectations during the Restoration. However, with the 1830 fall of the Bourbon monarchy came the new, "bourgeous" (or capitalist) monarchy, a chimera doomed to fall in the 1848 revolutions that swept Europe. Such was the political background for Balzac's literary works.
Balzac created the idea of a serialized cross-genre web of stories and novels, linked together as a broad historic panorama of lives and events. This idea was implemented in his "La Comedie humane" ("The Human Comedy"). It included about 100 stories, novels and essays, some of them unfinished. Such a vast body of handwriting could not be possible without an obsession. His plans and plots grew constantly and often changed, just to include a new idea based on a fresh gossip. Altogether his works reflected on a mosaic of life in Paris, and France in general, from the 1820s to 1850.
"Les Chouans" (1829) was a prologue to the collection of Balsac's interconnected works, known as the Human Comedy; it really opened with "Scenes de la Vie Privee", six Scenes From a Private Life (1830-1832) and "La Peau de chagrin" (The Goat-skin 1831). Balzac was writing 14 to 18 hours a day and often through the night, constantly doping himself with countless cups of coffee. He draw upon ideas from the works of Walter Scott and William Shakespeare, as in 1835's "Le pere Goriot" ("Father Goriot"), a "King Lear" type of story set in 1820s Paris. He also created many of his own purely original plots and introduced over 2,000 characters through the books of the Human Comedy. The largest "stones" in his pyramid of fiction are "Eugene Grande" (1833), a thousand-page saga; "Les Illusions Perdues" ("Lost Illusions"); "Le cousin Pons" (1847), "La Cousine Bette" (1848). His novel "Eugenia Grande" was translated into Russian in 1844 by the young writer Fyodor Dostoevsky.
One year before his death, being in declining health, Balzac traveled to Poland to see his pen-friend of 15 years, Countess Evelina Hanska. She was a wealthy lady of the Polish nobility. They married in Berdichev, Russian Empire, in 1850, when Balzac had only three months left to live. He died on August 18, 1850, in Paris, and was laid to rest in the cemetery of Père Lachaise.- Writer
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Born to noble parents (his father Sergei was a retired major, and his mother, Nadezhda, was the granddaughter of an ennobled Ethiopian general) on the 26th of May, 1799 in Moscow, Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin became involved with a liberal underground revolutionary group that saw him exiled to the Caucasus.
He spent most of his time there writing poetry and novels. In 1826 Pushkin was pardoned by the Tsar and allowed to return home after six years of exile. He married Natalia Goncharova, whose coquettish behavior led to her husband challenging an admirer of hers to a duel in January 1837. Though both were wounded, only Pushkin died two days later from his injuries.- Thomas Oliphant was born on 25 December 1799 in Strathearn, Perthshire, Scotland, UK. He died on 9 March 1873 in London, England, UK.
- La Comtesse de Ségur was born on 1 August 1799 in St. Petersburg, Russian Empire [now Russia]. La Comtesse was a writer, known for As Meninas Exemplares, Un bon petit diable (1923) and Les Vacances (1924). La Comtesse was married to Eugène de Ségur. La Comtesse died on 9 February 1874 in Paris, France.
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Jacques Fromental Halévy was born on 27 May 1799 in Paris, France. Jacques Fromental was a composer, known for Der Shylock von Krakau (1913), Die Jüdin (1918) and Va prononcer la mort (1927). Jacques Fromental died on 17 March 1862 in Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France.- Jedediah Smith was born on 6 January 1799 in Bainbridge, New York, USA. He died on 27 May 1831 in Ulysses, Kansas, USA.
- Rodolphe Töpffer was born on 31 January 1799 in Geneva, Switzerland. Rodolphe was a writer, known for Le Cabinet des estampes (1953) and Prikkebeen (1972). Rodolphe died on 8 June 1846 in Geneva, Switzerland.
- August Kopisch was born on 26 May 1799 in Breslau, Silesia, Prussia, Holy Roman Empire [now Wroclaw, Dolnoslaskie, Poland]. August was a writer, known for Die Heinzelmännchen (1956), Heroische Männer (1963) and Die Heinzelmännchen von Köln (1960). August died on 6 February 1853 in Berlin, Germany.
- Almeida Garrett was born on 4 February 1799 in Porto, Portugal. He was a writer, known for Frei Luís de Sousa (2014), Der Mönch von Santarem (1924) and Frei Luís de Sousa (1950). He died on 9 December 1854 in Lisbon, Portugal.