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says he was "looked down by the advanced and the literate," and calls his novels "derivative and second-rate." However, Dan
Ungurianu writes, "Despite their lack of conceptual and artistic integrity, Danilevsky's novels remain among the best works of historical fiction of the period."
161:
in 1850. From 1850 to 1857 he served in the
Ministry of Education, where he was sent a number of times to examine the archives of monasteries in the south. In 1856 he was one of the writers sent by
220:(New places, 1867), the whole trilogy describing the settlement of the Ukrainian steppe by runaway serfs. His 1868 story "Zhizn cherez sto let" (Life a hundred years from now, 1868) was a work of
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Aside from some minor verses and translations, Danilevsky's first literary work was a series of stories of
Ukrainian life and traditions, collected in 1854 in the book
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176:(Government Herald) and in 1881 was named the chief editor, thus becoming part of the council supervising the Russian press. He died in December 1890 in
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called it his best novel, "though it takes unwarrantable liberties with the personages of the epoch depicted." It was followed by
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243:(The ninth wave), about the struggle between conservatives and reformers in the 1860s. The following year he wrote
459:, in: C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
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Born into the family of an impoverished landowner, Petr
Ivanovich Danilevsky, in the Izyumsky district of
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212:, 1862), published under the pseudonym D. Skavronsky, brought him wide success; it was followed by
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Russia and
Ukraine: Literature and the Discourse of Empire from Napoleonic to Postcolonial Times
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275:(Princess Tarakanova, 1883), about the self-proclaimed daughter of Empress
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Better known are his novels of the following decades, published in
143:(Institute of the Nobility) from 1841 to 1846, then studied law at
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Plotting
History: The Russian Historical Novel in the Imperial Age
259:," but it was banned by the censor and did not appear until 1879;
247:, which "deals with the tragic fate of the deposed child-emperor
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147:. In 1849 he was mistakenly arrested in connection with the
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A History of
Russian Literature from Its Beginnings to 1900
155:, but he was released and received his certification as
119:. Danilevsky is well known as the author of the novel
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14 April] 1829 – 18 December [
111:
6 December] 1890) was a
Russian historical
151:case and spent several months in the prison of the
503:19th-century male writers from the Russian Empire
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180:and was buried in the village of Prishib in the
392:A Survey of Russian Literature, with Selections
498:19th-century novelists from the Russian Empire
302:Though Danilevsky was popular in his day,
168:In 1857 he retired to his estates in the
508:Saint Petersburg State University alumni
457:Grigory Petróvich Danilevsky (1829–1890)
283:(Moscow destroyed by fire, 1886), about
216:(The return of the fugitives, 1863) and
328:, (Novel), Stanley Paul, London, 1917.
310:
465:
407:(Northwestern University Press, 1999:
373:(University of Wisconsin Press, 2007:
251:and the foiled attempt by Lieutenant
139:, Grigory was educated in the Moscow
352:(McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2001:
239:(Russian Thought). In 1874 appeared
165:to study the borderlands of Russia.
13:
191:
14:
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394:(Chautauqua Press, 1902), p. 230.
299:; and a series of short stories.
163:Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolaevich
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319:, (Novel), Macmillan, NY, 1891.
101:Григо́рий Петро́вич Даниле́вский
29:
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295:(The black year, 1888), about
1:
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488:Russian historical novelists
204:dwellers). His first novel,
93:Grigory Petrovich Danilevsky
41:Grigory Petrovich Danilevsky
7:
448:(public domain audiobooks)
442:Works by Grigory Danilevsky
145:Saint Petersburg University
16:Russian historical novelist
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117:Privy Councillor of Russia
390:Isabel Florence Hapgood,
224:imagining the year 1968.
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317:The Princess Tarakanova
261:Isabel Florence Hapgood
174:Pravitelstvenny vestnik
153:Peter and Paul Fortress
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125:Fugitives in New Russia
493:Russian male novelists
184:(present-day Kharkiv,
103:; 26 April [
348:Myroslav Shkandrij,
311:English Translations
297:Pugachev's Rebellion
483:Ukrainian novelists
281:Sozhzhennaya Moskva
273:Knyazhna Tarakanova
265:Na Indiyu pri Petre
206:Beglye v Novorossii
170:Kharkov Governorate
141:Dvoryansky institut
137:Kharkov Governorate
121:Beglye v Novorossii
53:Kharkov Governorate
23:Grigory Danilevsky
255:to free him from
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330:from Archive.org
326:Moscow in Flames
321:from Archive.org
249:Ioann Antonovich
214:Beglye vorotilis
178:Saint Petersburg
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62:18 December 1890
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271:'s day, 1880);
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192:Literary career
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473:1829 births
424:Ungurianu,
241:Devyaty val
218:Novye mesta
210:Novorossiya
86:1850s-1880s
75:Nationality
467:Categories
415:), p. 297.
381:), p. 128.
360:), p. 169.
336:References
293:Cherny god
198:Slobozhane
46:1829-04-26
428:, p. 129.
291:in 1812;
277:Elizabeth
127:, 1862).
78:Ukrainian
446:LibriVox
289:invasion
285:Napoleon
253:Mirovich
245:Mirovich
158:kandidat
113:novelist
202:Sloboda
186:Ukraine
182:Kharkov
97:Russian
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115:, and
83:Period
269:Peter
409:ISBN
375:ISBN
354:ISBN
233:and
131:Life
109:O.S.
105:O.S.
59:Died
38:Born
444:at
287:'s
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