保加利亚 人物列表
卡拉维洛夫 Lyuben Karavelov埃里亚斯·卡内蒂 Elias Canetti安德烈·盖尔马诺夫 Andrej Germanov
大卫·奥瓦迪亚 David Ovadia布拉加·季米特洛娃 Blaga Nikolova Dimitrova伊丽莎白·巴格利亚娜 Elisaveta Bagryana
瓦普察洛夫 Nikola Yonkov Vaptsarov列夫切夫 Lyubomir Levchev伊凡·伐佐夫 Ivan Vazoff
卡拉维洛夫 Lyuben Karavelov
保加利亚 公元  (1834年1月21日1879年1月21日)

短篇小说 novella《首领》

阅读卡拉维洛夫 Lyuben Karavelov在小说之家的作品!!!
  留宾·卡拉维洛夫(1834-1879),是十九世纪保加利亚的著名作家。作品有小说
  《旧日的保加利亚人》,《湟达》、《无泪哭异冢》等。
   卡拉维洛夫是1857年右左开始创作活动的,《首领》是他的处女作。它通过一个被土耳其反动统治者害得家破人亡而自发进行武装斗争的海杜克的自述,反映了保加利亚人民苦难的境遇和争取解放的坚强决心。
   卡拉维洛夫还是一位社会活动家。1867年,他曾到塞尔维亚、罗马尼亚等地,在保加利亚流亡革命者中间进行组织和宣传工作。1869年被选为保加利亚中央革命委员会主席。晚年他离开政治斗争,继续进行文学创作和从事文化活动。在保加利亚,他是现实主义文学的奠基人之一。


  Lyuben Stoychev Karavelov (Bulgarian: Любен Стойчев Каравелов) (c. 1834 - 21 January 1879) was a Bulgarian writer and an important figure of the Bulgarian National Revival.
  Karavelov was born in Koprivshtitsa. He began his education in a church school, but in 1850 he moved to the school of Nayden Gerov in Plovdiv. He was then sent by his father to study in a Greek school for two years, before transferring to a Bulgarian school, where he also studied Russian literature. He moved to Odrin for an apprenticeship, but he soon came back to Koprivshtitsa and was sent to Constantinople in 1856. There he developed a strong interest in politics and the Crimean War. At the same time, he studied the culture and ethnography of the region.
  In 1857, Karavelov enrolled in the Faculty of History and Philology at the University of Moscow, where he fell under the influence of Russian revolutionary democrats, was placed under police surveylance in 1859, and took part in student riots in 1861. With a group of other your Bulgarian student radicals, he published a journal and started writing poetry and long short stories in Bulgarian, scholarly publications in Bulgarian ethnography and journalism in Russian. In 1867 he went to Belgrade as a correspondent for Russian newspapers, started publishing prose and journalism in Serbian, in 1868 was forced to move to Novi Sad, Austria-Hungary, for his contacts with the Serb opposition, was arrested and spent time in a Budapest prison for alleged participation in a conspiracy, and in 1869 settled in Bucharest with the intent to start his own newspaper and to cooperate with the newly founded Bulgarian Scholarly Society (the future Bulgarian Academy of Sciences).
  At his first newspaper Svoboda (Freedom) in Bucharest (1869–1873), we worked and became friends with poet and revolutionary Hristo Botev who devoted a poem to him. In 1870, Karavelov was elected chairman of the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee, where he worked with Vasil Levski, the leader of the Internal Revolutionary Organization; he shared Levski's ideas of a democratic republic as the goal of the national revolution. Karavelov admired the political systems of Switzerland (which he believed was the model for the ethnically diverse Balkans) and the United States; he praised the American public education system, as well as the emancipated (in his opinion) status of American women.
  
  
  Karavelov House, in Koprivshtitsa
  In 1873–1874, Karavelov and Botev published a second newspaper, Nezavisimost (Independence). Although the older of the two, Karavelov, was the recognized master, both of them wrote a considerable body of very good professional journalism (sometimes it was hard to know who exactly authored the many unsigned materials), setting high standards for Bulgarian language and literature. Following the capture and execution of Levski in 1873, though, the disheartened Karavelov gradually abandoned his revolutionary zeal, attracting Botev's severe criticism, and started publishing a new Znanie (Knowledge) journal and popular science books.
  Karavelov died in 1879, soon after the liberation of Bulgaria, in Rousse.
  Karavelov's works include the short novels Old Time Bulgarians (Bulgarian: „Българи от старо време“; Bulgari ot staro vreme, and Mommy's Boy (Bulgarian: „Мамино детенце“; Mamino detentse), considered among the first original Bulgarian novels. His younger brother Petko was a prominent figure in Bulgaria's political life in the late 19th century.
    

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