Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Marina Tsvetáyeva. Marina Ivánovna Tsvetáyeva ( rusu: Марина Ивaновна Цветaева; 8 d'ochobre de 1892 , Moscú – 31 d'agostu de 1941 , Yelábuga (es) ) foi una escritora rusa, que destacó como poeta y prosista.

  2. Anastasiya Tsvetaeva. Actress: Dazhe ne dumay! Ten nezavisimosti. Anastasiya Tsvetaeva was born on 24 September 1981 in Moscow, RSFSR, USSR [now Russia]. She is an actress and director, known for Dazhe ne dumay! Ten nezavisimosti (2004), Jerusalem Syndrome (2014) and Sterva dlya chempiona (2010). She has been married to Nadav Olgan since November 2010. They have one child.

  3. Memorias. Mi vida con Marina. El libro que presentamos es un documento imprescindible para conocer a Marina Tsvietáieva y un gran fresco de casi un siglo de Historia. 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 ...

  4. Marina Tsvetáyeva. Marina Ivánovna Tsvetáyeva (en cirílico Марина Ивaновна Цветaева; Moscú, 26 de septiembre ( calendario juliano) / 8 de octubre ( calendario gregoriano) de 1892- Yelábuga, 31 de agosto de 1941) fue una escritora rusa, que destacó como poetisa y prosista. Es una de las poetas más originales del siglo XX.

  5. Marina Tsvetaeva. Russian poet Marina Tsvetaeva (also Marina Cvetaeva and Marina Tsvetayeva) was born in Moscow. Her father was a professor and founder of the Museum of Fine Arts, and her mother, who died of tuberculosis when Marina was 14, was a concert pianist. At the age of 18 Tsvetaeva published her first collection of poems, Evening Album.

  6. Anastasia Tsvetayeva was a Russian writer, poet and memoirist. She started to write earlier than her younger sister Marina Tsvetayeva. Although Anastasia Tsvetaeva published several stories in the 1910s, she was not a representative of any leading literary association or group.

  7. 21 de mar. de 2019 · In 1913, Poet Marina Tsvetayeva and her sister Anastasia lived in Feodosiya. In the 1990s, over 1,000 items were collected for the future museum through the efforts of the admirers of Marina Tsvetayeva's poetry. In 2001, the museum was officially registered as a division of the Maximilian Voloshin Cimmeria Reserve.