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- Petre_Dulfu abstract "Petre Dulfu (March 10, 1856–October 31, 1953) was an Imperial Austrian-born Romanian poet, translator and playwright.Born in Tohat, Maramureș County, his parents were Nichifor Dulfu and his wife Agapia (née Bran), members of the rural intellectual class. From early childhood, his mother inspired a love of stories in him. He attended Hungarian-language primary school and gymnasium in Baia Mare from 1864 to 1871, earning top marks, and went to high school in the same town from 1872. In 1876, he graduated from high school in Cluj, where he studied for two years. He attended Franz Joseph University in the latter city, earning a doctorate in philosophy in 1881. His thesis, written in Hungarian, dealt with the work of Vasile Alecsandri, surveyed the Romanian literary context and included a dozen poems translated by Dulfu. After graduation, he moved to the Romanian Old Kingdom and worked as a teacher. After a brief stint in the capital Bucharest, he directed and taught at a school in Turnu Severin for the 1881-1882 year. Beginning in 1882, he again taught philosophy and later Romanian in Bucharest; one of the two schools where he worked was for girls. He came to know faculty colleague Ioan Slavici, as well as Mihail Eminescu, Alexandru Vlahuță and Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu. In 1886, he married Elena Mateescu, with whom he had four children and who encouraged his work as a writer. He obtained Romanian citizenship in 1891. During World War I, he worked as a postal censor in the temporary capital of Iași, where an illness claimed one of his daughters. Although normally a disciplined teacher, he lost his composure on December 1, 1918, the day the union of Transylvania with Romania was proclaimed; cutting short the lesson and visibly moved, he explained the significance of the event to his pupils. In 1921, he retired from the girls' school, as the pupils daily reminded him of his deceased daughter.His first published work consisted of verses that appeared in Familia in 1874. His contributions appeared in magazines both pedagogical (Educatorul, Lumina pentru toți, Revista pedagogică) and literary (Amicul familiei, Șezătoarea, Tribuna). In 1911, he joined the Romanian Writers' Society. In 1903, he was awarded the Romanian Academy's Adamachi Prize for his translations of Euripides (Ifigenia în Aulida, 1879; Ifigenia în Taurida, 1880) and for the 1894 Isprăvile lui Păcală, the volume that secured his reputation as a writer. He wrote two plays: the moralizing one-act Ceartă pentru nimica (1889) and Păcală argat, a dramatization of his favorite character, Păcală. His final work, Cei doi feți-logofeți cu părul de aur, appeared in 1939. A gifted teacher and a cultural figure concerned with educating the peasantry, his poetic renditions of folklore were deemed \"good writings for the common people\" by George Călinescu. He died in Bucharest.The Maramureș County library in Baia Mare has borne his name since 1992.".
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- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageLength "4457".
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageOutDegree "39".
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageRevisionID "704113787".
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Alexandru_Vlahuță.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Austrian_Empire.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Baia_Mare.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Bogdan_Petriceicu_Hasdeu.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Bucharest.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:1856_births.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:1953_deaths.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_translators.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Austro-Hungarian_emigrants_to_Romania.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Franz_Joseph_University_alumni.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Naturalised_citizens_of_Romania.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Maramureș_County.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_Austro-Hungarians.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_censors.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_dramatists_and_playwrights.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_poets.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_schoolteachers.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_translators.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Cluj-Napoca.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Drobeta-Turnu_Severin.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Euripides.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Familia_(magazine).
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Franz_Joseph_University.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink George_Călinescu.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Iași.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Ioan_Slavici.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Iphigenia_in_Aulis.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Iphigenia_in_Tauris.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Maramureș_County.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Mihai_Eminescu.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Poșta_Română.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Păcală.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Romania.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Romanian_Academy.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Romanian_Old_Kingdom.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Romanian_Writers_Society.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Ulmeni,_Maramureș.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Union_of_Transylvania_with_Romania.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLink Vasile_Alecsandri.
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageWikiLinkText "Petre Dulfu".
- Petre_Dulfu wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:1856_births.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:1953_deaths.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:20th-century_translators.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:Austro-Hungarian_emigrants_to_Romania.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:Franz_Joseph_University_alumni.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:Naturalised_citizens_of_Romania.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:People_from_Maramureș_County.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:Romanian_Austro-Hungarians.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:Romanian_censors.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:Romanian_dramatists_and_playwrights.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:Romanian_poets.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:Romanian_schoolteachers.
- Petre_Dulfu subject Category:Romanian_translators.
- Petre_Dulfu hypernym Poet.
- Petre_Dulfu type Person.
- Petre_Dulfu comment "Petre Dulfu (March 10, 1856–October 31, 1953) was an Imperial Austrian-born Romanian poet, translator and playwright.Born in Tohat, Maramureș County, his parents were Nichifor Dulfu and his wife Agapia (née Bran), members of the rural intellectual class. From early childhood, his mother inspired a love of stories in him. He attended Hungarian-language primary school and gymnasium in Baia Mare from 1864 to 1871, earning top marks, and went to high school in the same town from 1872.".
- Petre_Dulfu label "Petre Dulfu".
- Petre_Dulfu sameAs Q18543977.
- Petre_Dulfu sameAs Petre_Dulfu.
- Petre_Dulfu sameAs Q18543977.
- Petre_Dulfu wasDerivedFrom Petre_Dulfu?oldid=704113787.
- Petre_Dulfu isPrimaryTopicOf Petre_Dulfu.