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Alykul Osmonov : ウィキペディア英語版
Alykul Osmonov

Alykul Osmonov ((キルギス語:Алыкул Осмонов)) (March 21, 1915 - December 12, 1950) was a Kyrgyz poet, significant for his efforts to modernizing poetry in Kyrgyzstan. His main accomplishments were transforming poetry from an oral to a literary tradition, focusing upon secular themes with an emphasis on inner emotion, daily life, and nationalism, and translating numerous European authors into the Kyrgyz language, including William Shakespeare, Sándor Petőfi, and Alexander Pushkin.
== Biography ==

Osmonov was born in Kaptal-Aryk in Panfilov District, Kyrgyzstan, about (75km west ) of Bishkek. He was orphaned at a young age and was brought up in state care, first in a Bishkek orphanage, then in a Tokmok orphanage. From 1929, Osmonov studied at pedagogical school in Bishkek, but owing to tuberculosis which he had acquired from one of the orphanages, he was forced to leave. Nevertheless, he was able to begin a journalistic career, working for several early Soviet-era Kyrgyz-language newspapers, including "Chabul" ("Attack"), "Leninchil Jash" ("Lenin's Youth"), and "Kyzyl Kyrgyzstan" ("Red Kyrgyzstan", which continues to exist to this day under the title, ("Kyrgyz Tuusu" )). From 1939 to 1940, he served as secretary-in-chief for the Kyrgyzstan National Writers Union ("Кыргызстан Улуттук Жазуучулар союзу", which also continues to exist today). A year before, he was granted membership into the Union of Soviet Writers.
His first poem, "Kyzyl Juk" ("Red Strings of Wheat"), was published in 1930, and his first volume of poems, ''Tandagy Yrlai'' (''Poems at Dawn''), in 1935. Eventually he would publish up to 500 poems, including the well-known volume, ''Mahabat'' (''Love''), as well as several major translations, including Shota Rustaveli's ''The Knight in the Panther's Skin'', Shakespeare's ''Othello'' and ''Twelfth Night'', and Pushkin's ''Eugene Onegin''. Several of his poems were inspired by his various romantic escapades, in particular his first love, a woman named Aida, whom he pursued in 1934, and his failed marriage to Zeinep Sooranbaeva (1941-1943), as well as the personal tragedies which seemed to pursue him, such as his parents' deaths or his own daughter's death in 1943. He, himself, would die tragically: in Bishkek of pulmonary disease pneumonia in 1950, at the age of 35.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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