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  1. yivoencyclopedia.org › article › Marshak_Samuil_IakovlevichYIVO | Marshak, Samuil Iakovlevich

    Translation. (1887–1964), poet and writer. Samuil Marshak’s father, a soapmaker, descended from a family of rabbis. His mother was the daughter of the Vitebsk government rabbi, in whose house Marshak began to study Hebrew at the age of six. Marshak’s talents later drew the attention of the art historian Vladimir Stasov and the writer ...

  2. Category:Marshak, Samuil. Works by this person are generally in the public domain in Canada. Works by this person are not in the public domain in countries with a life+70 copyright term (including all EU countries), unless an exception applies. In the United States, all works first published before 1929 are in the public domain; works first ...

  3. Samuil Marshak drawing.jpg 1,944 × 2,592; 1.09 MB The Soviet Union 1988 CPA 5920 souvenir sheet (Post) small resolution.jpg 900 × 713; 112 KB The Soviet Union 1988 CPA 5920 souvenir sheet (Post).jpg 2,277 × 1,786; 808 KB

  4. Samuil Marshak. Samuil Yakovlevich (1887.22.10, Voronej - 1964.4.7, Moskva) — rus shoiri, 20-asr rus bolalar adabiyoti asoschilaridan. M.ning "Jek qurgan uy", "Bolalar qafasda", "Ahmoq sichqoncha haqida ertak" sheʼriy kitoblari 1923-yilda nashr qilingan. M. 1933-yilda "Mister Tvister" hajviy pamfletini yaratdi. "Nomaʼlum qahramon haqida ...

  5. 1 de may. de 1989 · 342 books17 followers. Samuil Yakovlevich Marshak (Russian: Самуил Маршак; 3 November 1887 – 4 June 1964) was a Russian and Soviet writer, translator and children's poet. Among his Russian translations are William Shakespeare's sonnets, poems by William Blake and Robert Burns, and Rudyard Kipling's stories. Maxim Gorky proclaimed ...

  6. 1 de mar. de 2013 · In 1920s Soviet Russia, writer and poet Samuil Marshak and graphic artist Vladimir Lebedev came together to bring the energy and boldness of Russian avant-garde art into children’s publishing. The results of this remarkable collaboration were a series of stunning picture books, four of which are collected and reproduced in full here, newly translated, together in one volume for the first time.

  7. MARSHAK, SAMUEL YAKOVLEVICHMARSHAK, SAMUEL YAKOVLEVICH (1887–1964), Zionist and Russian poet. Marshak was born in Voronezh. Though his father received a solid religious education, Marshak himself seems to have experienced traditional Judaism only when he lived, as a child, with his observant grandparents in Vitebsk. There, for two years, he studied Hebrew with a teacher by the name of ...