Brief biography of Dombrovsky
Life and work of Yuri Osipovich Dombrovsky Yuri Osipovich Dombrovsky Russian Soviet prose writer, poet and literary critic, memoirist. Biography Yuri Osipovich Dombrovsky - Russian Soviet prose writer, poet and literary critic, memoirist. Yuri Osipovich was born in Moscow on May 12 in the family of a famous lawyer. His mother was a biologist. Yuri grew up in Arbat lanes and after graduation entered the highest state literary courses.
Already in his youth, he began to write. However, in the year he was sent from Moscow to Alma-Ata, where he spent three years in exile. In this city, he worked as an archaeologist, artist, journalist and teacher. After that, several arrests followed.
In the year, Yuri spent 7 months in the investigative insulator, and in the year he was sent to the camp for Kolyma, where he stayed for up to a year. In the year, he was sent to Taisheta Ozerlag and released only in the year. All accusations against Dombrovsky were reduced to the "spread of anti -Soviet ideas", but he did not admit guilt. In the year, Yuri Osipovich was justified in view of the lack of corpus delicti.
The work of Yuri Dombrovsky is two different periods: Kazakh and Moscow in the first period, he actively collaborated with local newspapers and magazines, publishing notes, reviews and articles. In the year, his first story “The Death of Lord Byron” was released, and in the year his first novel “Derzhavin” was released in the year, in which the writer explores the issues of heroism and temporary framework.
In the year, Yuri returned to Moscow, and two years later he graduated from the novel "The Monkey comes for his skull." The publication of his novel “The Guardian of Antiquities” in the New World magazine became a significant event in literature and brought the author wide fame. Then followed the novel "Faculty of Unnecessary things", which developed the theme of the previous work and touched on the problem of law and society.
Although the manuscript was completed in the year, the first edition of the novel appeared abroad, in Paris, in the year. In addition to prose, Dombrovsky also wrote poems that were published in an appendix to the novel "Faculty of Unnecessary things." Shortly after the exit of the novel in the West, in March, Dombrovsky was brutally beaten at the restaurant of the Central House of Writers in Moscow and two months later on May 29, he died of internal bleeding.
He was buried in the Kuzminsky cemetery in Moscow. Contemporaries of the author of contemporaries are those authors whose years of work intersect for at least one year over the years of the current author. Sorting is performed according to the search coefficient, that is, the first page shows the most popular and famous authors. Tolstoy, Alexey Nikolaevich January 10, Brief certificate.