Fyodor Dmitrievich Kryukov
Fyodor Kryukov ( Russian Фёдор Дмитриевич Крюков * 2 . Jul / 14. February 1870 greg. , † 4. March 1920 ) was a Cossack anti-Bolshevik writer and soldier of the White Army .
In 1906 Krjukow was elected to the 1st Reich Duma for the Trudoviki peasant party . After its dissolution by the tsar, he signed the Vyborg Manifesto , which called on the population to civil disobedience.
Various literary critics, notably Alexander Solzhenitsyn and Roi Medvedev , claim that Kryukov is the actual author of the novel The Silent Don , published from 1927 to 1940 , for which Mikhail Sholokhov received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1965 . This is the result of a statistical analysis of the text by Anatoly Fomenko .
Krjukow, who is mentioned in Solzhenitsyn's novel November 1916 under the name "Fyodor Dmitrijewitsch Kownjew", died in 1920 of typhus .
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Roy Medvedev: Problems in the Literary Biography of Mikhail Sholokhov (Cambridge University Press, 1977)
- ↑ Anatoly Timofeevich Fomenko: History - Fiction or Science? (2005), pp. 425-444, chapter: The authorial invariant in Russian literary texts. Its application: Who was the real author of the "Quiet Don"?
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Krjukow, Fyodor Dmitrievich |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Крюков, Фёдор Дмитриевич (Russian spelling) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Russian writer |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 14, 1870 |
DATE OF DEATH | March 4, 1920 |