Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q105940> ?p ?o }
- Q105940 description "Georgian philosopher".
- Q105940 description "Georgian philosopher".
- Q105940 subject Q13288675.
- Q105940 subject Q13307769.
- Q105940 subject Q19573817.
- Q105940 subject Q20926671.
- Q105940 subject Q5312304.
- Q105940 subject Q6408558.
- Q105940 subject Q6647300.
- Q105940 subject Q7031948.
- Q105940 subject Q7032052.
- Q105940 subject Q7068160.
- Q105940 subject Q7836761.
- Q105940 subject Q8488858.
- Q105940 subject Q8573687.
- Q105940 subject Q8793509.
- Q105940 subject Q8832606.
- Q105940 subject Q8882717.
- Q105940 subject Q9766822.
- Q105940 abstract "Giwi Margwelaschwili (Georgian: გივი მარგველაშვილი) (born December 14, 1927 in Berlin) is a German-language Georgian writer and philosopher.He is the son of the notable Georgian intellectual Tite Margwelaschwili, who moved to Germany after the Red Army invasion of Georgia in 1921 and was chairman of the Georgian political emigre organization in Berlin. Due to allied bombing he attended three different gymnasium schools in Berlin and participated in the anti-Fascist youth movement Swing Kids.After the war the family lived in Berlin-Wilmersdorf in the British sector of Berlin. In December 1945 Giwi and his father were abducted by the Soviet secret police NKVD and confined in the cellar of a Soviet commandantura in Berlin-Weissensee for six weeks. Subsequently he was detained in a Soviet Special Camp at Sachsenhausen. While his father was deported to Tbilisi and shot as a traitor after eight months of interrogation and torture, Giwi was released after 18 months in the camp. He was not allowed to return to West Berlin and moved to his relatives in Tbilisi.Margwelaschwili learned Georgian and Russian, and graduated from high school. He studied English at the Tbilisi State University and was an aspirant for foreign languages. 1957-1970 he taught English and German at the Tbilisi Institute of Foreign Languages. In the 1950s, he composed his first novels and philosophic writings on phenomenology.In 1969, he was allowed to travel to East Germany as a translator for the Rustaveli Theatre for the first time since 22 years. In 1970 his first scientific work about "The role of the language in Heidegger's philosophy" was published. In 1971 he was appointed to the Institute of Philosophy at the Georgian Academy of Sciences and visited dissident and songwriter Wolf Biermann in Berlin. Due to that contact he was prohibited to leave the Soviet Union until 1987. In 1972 Giwi met Heinrich Böll, a Nobel laureate in literature from Germany, who was impressed by his unpublished autobiography Kapitän Wakusch. Böll tried to help him get a passport but was not successful.In 1990 he settled in Berlin with the help of civil rights activist Ekkehard Maaß and was naturalized as a German citizen in 1994. In 1991 his first autobiographic work, Muzal. Ein georgischer Roman, was published in Germany. Several books followed, including novels, philosophic commentaries on Classical authors, and poems, which quickly won a nationwide and international acclaim. Nevertheless, most of his work remained unpublished.In 1995 he was awarded the Literature Prize of Brandenburg federal state. He became a member of the International PEN and received a scholarship of the President of Germany. The University of Bamberg appointed him professor for poetry. Berlin's Akademie der Künste decorated him with the Kunstpreis Berlin for his life's work. In 2006, the Goethe Institute awarded the prestigious Goethe Medal to him. He has an honorary doctorate from Tbilisi State University.He is married to the author and German philologist Naira Gelashvili. His daughter Anna is also a German philologist.".
- Q105940 birthDate "1927-12-14".
- Q105940 birthYear "1927".
- Q105940 thumbnail Margwelaschwili-giwi.jpg?width=300.
- Q105940 wikiPageExternalLink www.giwi-margwelaschwili.de.
- Q105940 wikiPageExternalLink deindex.htm.
- Q105940 wikiPageExternalLink 19_giwi.pdf.
- Q105940 wikiPageExternalLink bios1_3_6_460.html.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q1208.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q127197.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q13288675.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q13307769.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q145.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q15180.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q154498.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q157033.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q166153.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q16957.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q179235.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q181043.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q182449.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q183.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q1860439.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q188.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q188823.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q19573817.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q206811.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q20926671.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q210189.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q230.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q2437228.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q25223.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q323063.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q3651623.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q37008.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q37922.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q414110.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q42747.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q486761.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q512889.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q5312304.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q538954.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q55043.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q56036.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q60963.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q64.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q6408558.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q6647300.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q675164.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q675309.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q693628.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q7031948.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q7032052.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q7068160.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q707272.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q753110.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q7836761.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q821609.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q8488858.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q8573687.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q8793509.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q8832606.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q8882717.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q9766822.
- Q105940 wikiPageWikiLink Q994.
- Q105940 dateOfBirth "1927-12-14".
- Q105940 name "Margwelaschwili, Giwi".
- Q105940 shortDescription "Georgian philosopher".
- Q105940 type Person.
- Q105940 type Agent.
- Q105940 type Person.
- Q105940 type Agent.
- Q105940 type NaturalPerson.
- Q105940 type Thing.
- Q105940 type Q215627.
- Q105940 type Q5.
- Q105940 type Person.
- Q105940 comment "Giwi Margwelaschwili (Georgian: გივი მარგველაშვილი) (born December 14, 1927 in Berlin) is a German-language Georgian writer and philosopher.He is the son of the notable Georgian intellectual Tite Margwelaschwili, who moved to Germany after the Red Army invasion of Georgia in 1921 and was chairman of the Georgian political emigre organization in Berlin.".
- Q105940 label "Giwi Margwelaschwili".
- Q105940 depiction Margwelaschwili-giwi.jpg.
- Q105940 givenName "Giwi".