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Sofia Tolstaya : ウィキペディア英語版
Sophia Tolstoy

Countess Sophia Andreyevna Tolstaya (née Behrs; (ロシア語:Со́фья Андре́евна Толста́я), sometimes Anglicised as ''Sophia Tolstoy''; 22 August 1844 – 4 November 1919), was a Russian diarist and the wife of Russian novelist and thinker Leo Tolstoy.
==Biography==
Sophia was one of three daughters of the physician Andrey Evstafievich Behrs (1808-1868), and his wife, Liubov Alexandrovna Behrs, née Islavinа (1826-1886). Her mother's grandfather Count Pyotr Zavadovsky was the first minister of education in Russia's history.
Sophia was first introduced to Leo Tolstoy in 1862, when she was 18 years old. At 34, Tolstoy was 16 years her senior. On 17 September 1862 the couple became formally engaged after Tolstoy gave Sophia a written proposal of marriage,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The autobiography of Countess Sophie Tolstoi )〕 marrying a week later in Moscow. At the time of their marriage, Leo Tolstoy was already well known as a novelist after the publication of ''The Cossacks''. On the eve of their marriage, Tolstoy gave Sophia his diaries detailing his sexual relations with female serfs. In ''Anna Karenina'', 34-year-old Constantine Levin, a semi-autobiographical character behaves similarly, asking his 19-year-old fiancée Kitty to read his diaries and learn of his past transgressions.
The diary included the fact that he had fathered a child by a woman who remained on the Yasnaya Polyana estate. In Anne Edward's ''Sonya'', she describes Sophia as having a deep fear that Tolstoy would somehow re-enter a relationship with the woman.
The Tolstoys had 13 children, eight of whom survived childhood. The family was prosperous, owing to Tolstoy's efficient management of his estates and to the sales of his works, making it possible to provide adequately for the family.
Tolstaya was a devoted help to her husband in his literary work. She acted more than a copyist of ''War and Peace'', copying and editing the manuscript seven times from beginning to end.〔 In 1887, Tolstaya took up the relatively new art of photography. She took over a thousand photographs that documented her life, including with Tolstoy, and the decline of pre-Soviet Tsarist Russia. She was also a diarist and documented her life with Leo Tolstoy in a series of diaries which were published in English translation in the 1980s.〔The latest condensed version, ''The Diaries of Sofia Tolstoy'', translated by Cathy Porter, was published by Alma Books, London, in 2009 (ISBN 9781846880803).〕 Tolstaya wrote her memoirs as well, which she titled ''My Life''.
After many years of an increasingly troubled marriage—the couple argued over Tolstoy's desire to give away all his private property—Leo left Sophia abruptly in 1910, aged 82, with his doctor, Dushan Makovicki (Dušan Makovický), and daughter Alexandra. Tolstoy died 10 days later in a railway station, whilst Sophia was kept away from him (as depicted in the film, ''The Last Station'').〔 Following the death of her husband, Sophia continued to live in Yasnaya Polyana and survived the Russian Revolution in relative peace. She died in 1919.
With recent increased interest in Sophia Tolstaya some new biographical works, based on her memoirs and diaries, have been published:
* Ursula Keller/Natalja Sharandak: ''Sofja Andrejewna Tolstaja: Ein Leben an der Seite Tolstojs.'' Frankfurt am Main, Germany 2009
* Nina Niktina. ''Sofja Tolstaja.'' Moscow 2010
* Alexandra Popoff. ''Sophia Tolstoya. A Biography.'' Free Press 2010

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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