Frédéric Mistral
Frédéric MistralBorn September 8, 1830(1830-09-08)
FranceDied March 25, 1914(aged 83)
FranceOccupationPoetNationalityFranceNotable award(s) Nobel Prize in Literature
1904
Frédéric Mistral (September 8, 1830—March 25, 1914) was a French poet who led the 19th century revival of Occitan (Provençal) language and literature. He was a key figure in the literary félibrige movement.
He shared the Nobel Prize in literature in 1904 for his contributions in literature and philology. Mistral's father was a well-to-do farmer in the former French province of Provence.
He was born and died in Maillane, Bouches-du-Rhône département, France.
In his honour, the Chilean poet Lucila Godoy Alcayaga took the last name of her pseudonym, Gabriela Mistral.
Works include
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Frédéric Mistral v • d • eNobel Laureatesin Literature1901–1925Prudhomme(1901) · Mommsen(1902) · Bjørnson(1903) · F.Mistral / Echegaray(1904) · Sienkiewicz(1905) · Carducci(1906) · Kipling(1907) · Eucken(1908) · Lagerlöf(1909) · Heyse(1910) · Maeterlinck(1911) · Hauptmann(1912) · Tagore(1913) · Rolland(1915) · Heidenstam(1916) · Gjellerup/ Pontoppidan(1917) · Spitteler(1919) · Hamsun(1920) · France(1921) · Benavente(1922) · Yeats(1923) · Reymont(1924) · Shaw(1925) 1926–1950Deledda(1926) · Bergson(1927) · Undset(1928) · Mann(1929) · Lewis(1930) · Karlfeldt(1931) · Galsworthy(1932) · Bunin(1933) · Pirandello(1934) · O'Neill(1936) · Martin du Gard(1937) · Buck(1938) · Sillanpää(1939) · Jensen(1944) · G.Mistral(1945) · Hesse(1946) · Gide(1947) · Eliot(1948) · Faulkner(1949) · Russell(1950) 1951–1975Lagerkvist(1951) · Mauriac(1952) · Churchill(1953) · Hemingway(1954) · Laxness(1955) · Jiménez(1956) · Camus(1957) · Pasternak(1958) · Quasimodo(1959) · Perse(1960) · Andrić(1961) · Steinbeck(1962) · Seferis(1963) · Sartre(1964) · Sholokhov(1965) · Agnon/ Sachs(1966) · Asturias(1967) · Kawabata(1968) · Beckett(1969) · Solzhenitsyn(1970) · Neruda(1971) · Böll(1972) · White(1973) · Johnson/ Martinson(1974) · Montale(1975) 1976–2000Bellow(1976) · Aleixandre(1977) · Singer(1978) · Elytis(1979) · Miłosz(1980) · Canetti(1981) · García-Márquez(1982) · Golding(1983) · Seifert(1984) · Simon(1985) · Soyinka(1986) · Brodsky(1987) · Mahfouz(1988) · Cela(1989) · Paz(1990) · Gordimer(1991) · Walcott(1992) · Morrison(1993) · Oe(1994) · Heaney(1995) · Szymborska(1996) · Fo(1997) · Saramago(1998) · Grass(1999) · Gao(2000) 2001–presentNaipaul(2001) · Kertész(2002) · Coetzee(2003) · Jelinek(2004) · Pinter(2005) · Pamuk(2006) · Lessing(2007) Complete roster · 1901–1925 · 1926–1950 · 1951–1975 · 1976–2000 · 2001–presentLink former page on this page
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
http://wikipedia.atpedia.jp/wiki/%E9%BA%BB%E5%A9%86%E8%B1%86%E8%85%90
-
http://wikipedia.atpedia.jp/wiki/%E7%94%9F%E4%B9%B3
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0
-
[[wikipedia@pedia]] 0