Dictators
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The Greek writer Kostas Barnaby (1884–1974) was born in Bulgaria, studied in Plovdiv, later entered the philosophy of Athenian University, after which he taught at the gymnasium. From 1919 to 1921 he listened to lectures on philosophy and aesthetics in the Sorbonne. The first collections of his poems were distinguished by aesthetics. He later moved to social topics, became a champion of revolutionary transformations in society. In 1934 he was invited to the USSR, where he took part in the first congress of Soviet writers, in 1956 he was awarded the International Lenin Prize to strengthen the world between peoples.
The reader is offered a collection of pamphlets about the Roman emperors "dictators". This book is brightly colored by the worldview on the era of the Roman Empire of the author himself, the portraits of the ruling elite are not just critically, but sometimes brought to sarcasm
The reader is offered a collection of pamphlets about the Roman emperors "dictators". This book is brightly colored by the worldview on the era of the Roman Empire of the author himself, the portraits of the ruling elite are not just critically, but sometimes brought to sarcasm
Author:
Author:Kostas Barnalis
Cover:
Cover:Hard
Category:
- Category:Fiction
- Category:Modern Literature
- Category:Poetry & Literature
- Category:Esoteric, Folklore & Myth
Publication language:
Publication Language:Russian
Paper:
Paper:Offset
ISBN:
ISBN:978-5-9582-0071-9
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