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  1. Samuil Yakovlevich Marshak (alternative spelling: Marchak) (Russian: Самуил Яковлевич Маршак; 3 November [O.S. 22 October] 1887 – 4 July 1964) was a Soviet writer of Belarusian Jewish origin, translator and poet who wrote for both children and adults.

  2. Samuíl Yákovlevich Marshak (en ruso: Самуи́л Я́ковлевич Марша́к; 22 de octubre jul. / 3 de noviembre de 1887 greg., Vorónezh – 4 de julio de 1964, Moscú) fue un escritor, poeta, dramaturgo, crítico literario y traductor ruso.

  3. Samuil Marshak (1887-1964), the most prolific and popular children’s writer in the USSR, was the elder brother of Il’ia Marshak (1896-1953), who under the pseudonym Mikhail Il’in specialized in presenting complex scientific topics to a young audience.

  4. Samuil Iakovlevich Marshak. Born Voronezh, 1887; died Moscow, 1964. Samuil Iakovlevich Marshak first came to prominence as a lyric poet and translator of Yiddish and Hebrew texts, thanks to the patronage of critic Vladimir Stasov and writer Maksim Gor’kii.

  5. Samuíl Yákovlevich Marshak fue un escritor, poeta, dramaturgo, crítico literario y traductor ruso. Entre algunos de sus trabajos más reconocidos se encuentran las traducciones al ruso de los sonetos de William Shakespeare y gran cantidad de obras de literatura infantil, algo por lo que Maksim Gorki le proclamó «fundador de la literatura ...

  6. Overview. Samuil Marshak. (1887—1964) Quick Reference. (1887–1964), Russian children's writer and translator, one of the pioneers of Soviet children's literature. Besides being one of the foremost translators of Shakespeare's sonnets into Russian, he translated English nursery ... From: Marshak, Samuil in The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales »

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

    As editor in chief of the state children’s publishing house in Leningrad, he attracted the most talented children’s writers—people who had no patience for formulas, sentimentalism, and moralizing. Marshaks dynamic, witty poems introduced children to the world of nature and simple things.