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  1. Vladimir Kazimirovich Shileyko (also Shileiko, Shilejko Russian: Владимир Казимирович Шилейко; February 14, 1891 – October 5, 1930) was a Russian orientalist ( assyriologist, hebraist) poet ( acmeist) and translator. Shileyko family had roots in the Lithuanian part of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth ...

  2. Es conocido por sus traducciones al ruso de la epopeya de Gilgamesh . Murió en Moscú de tuberculosis . Vladimir Kazimirovich Shileyko (también Shileiko, Shilejko Ruso : Владимир Казимирович Шилейко ; 14 de febrero de 1891-5 de octubre de 1930) fue un ruso orientalista ( asiriólogo , hebraísta ) poeta ( acmeísta ) y traductor .

  3. Shileyko Vladimir (Woldemar Georg Anna Maria) (1891–1930) – orientalist, specialist in Assyriology and Semitology, translator, poet. He was a disciple of P. C. Kokovtsov, B. A. Turaev, and M. V. Nickolsky.

  4. 7 de mar. de 2022 · En 1918 se divorció y contrajo matrimonio con el también escritor Vladimir Shileyko, del que se separaría en 1921, y al año siguiente, en el 1922, se casó por tercera vez con Nikolay Punin, su último marido, de quien también se separaría finalmente en los años treinta.

  5. In 1918, after the epochal October Revolution, Akhmatova officially divorced Gumilyov and married Vladimir Shileyko, a scholar of ancient Assyrian cuneiform script. She disliked Lenin's Bolsheviks but chose not to emigrate, though her brother and some of her closest friends did leave Russia for Western Europe .

  6. Career. He was a second husband of Russian poet Anna Akhmatova. He is known for his Russian translations of the Epic of Gilgamesh. He died in Moscow of tuberculosis. Vladimir Kazimirovich Shileyko was a Russian orientalist poet and translator.

  7. www.biographies.net › biography › vladimir_shileykoBiography of Vladimir Shileyko

    Who was Vladimir Shileyko? Vladimir Kazimirovich Shileyko was a Russian orientalist poet and translator. He was a second husband of Russian poet Anna Akhmatova. He is known for his Russian translations of the Epic of Gilgamesh. He died in Moscow of tuberculosis.