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  1. Anastasia Tsvetayeva's acclaimed Vospominaniya (Memoirs), finished in 1967 and first published in 1971, by Sovetsky Pisatel, made her famous, and remains her best-known work, although later books, Starost i molodost (Old Age and Youth, 1988), Nepostizhimyie (The Incomprehensible) and Neischerpayemoye (The Unfathomable, both 1992) were also lauded by critics and literary historians.

  2. Tsvetaev was born 16 May (O. S. 4 May) 1847, in Shuya, Ivanovo Oblast, the son of Vladimir Vasilyevich Tsvetaev (1818–1884), a village priest. After the early death of his mother in 1859, his father raised him and his three brothers for a life in the priesthood, sending them to the religious school in Shuya, then to the seminary in Vladimir.

  3. Memorial Plaque to Anastasiya Tsvetayeva, Aleksandrov: Consulta opiniones, artículos, y 2 fotos de Memorial Plaque to Anastasiya Tsvetayeva, clasificada en Tripadvisor en el N.°32 de 32 atracciones en Aleksandrov.

  4. Tsvetaeva, Marina (1892–1941)Innovative Russian poet, long undervalued for political reasons, who is now generally recognized as a national treasure. Name variations: Marina Cvetaeva; Marina Tsvetayeva or Tsvétaieff; Marina Tswetajewa-Efron.

  5. 5 de sept. de 1993 · Anastasia Tsvetayeva died on 5 September 1993, aged 98. She was interred in the Vagankovo Cemetery. In January 2012 the Anastasiya Tsvetayeva Museum opened in Pavlodar, where she spent her first post-exile years in the early 1960s. Anastasia Ivanovna Tsvetayeva was a Russian writer, poet and memoirist, a younger sister of Marina Tsvetayeva.

  6. En 1971 se publicó en Moscú la primera edición (antológica) de las Memorias de Anastasia Tsvietáieva, escritora y hermana menor de la poeta Marina Tsvietáieva, en las que ofrece un repaso asombroso no sólo por la atormentada vida de la gran poeta rusa, sino por la historia de Rusia desde principios del siglo xx, marcada por la Revolución de 1917.