Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Samad Vurgun

 
Wikipedia: Samad Vurgun
For the town in Armenia, see Hovk.

Samad Vurgun (Azerbaijani: Səməd Vurğun, born Samad Vakilov, March 21, 1906, Yukhari Salahli – May 27, 1956, Baku) was a prominent Azerbaijani and Soviet poet, honoured worker of arts of Azerbaijan SSR and a member of the Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan SSR from 1945. Vurgun was awarded the USSR State Prize for his dramas: in 1941 for Vagif (1937) and in 1942 for Farhad and Shirin (1941).

Vurgun began publishing in 1924. The Azerbaijan State Russian Dramatic Theatre and streets in Baku and Moscow, and formerly the city of Hovk in Armenia, are named after him.

Contents

Collected verses

  • The Poet's Oath (1930)
  • The Lamp (1932)
  • The Parched Books (1947)

Poems

  • The Komsomol Poem (1933, not finished)
  • A Negro tells (1948)
  • Mugan (1949)
  • Reading Lenin (1950)
  • Aygun (1951)
  • The Standard Bearer of Century (1954)

Dramas

  • Vagif (1937)
  • Farhad and Shirin (1941)
  • The Man (1945)

External links

References


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Samad Vurgun" Read more