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- Mihail_Celarianu abstract "Mihail Celarianu (August 1, 1893–1985) was a Romanian poet and novelist.A native of Bucharest, he was the third of eight children born to Constantin Celarianu, an officer in the Romanian Army, and his wife Antoaneta (née Pricup). After middle and high school in Bucharest and Brăila, he took a technical course of study at the Bucharest Conservatory, hoping to launch a career in vocal music, an idea he abandoned. Celarianu spent two years in Paris (1912-1914) studying medicine, returning home upon the outbreak of World War I. (His 1936 novel Femeia sângelui meu, which he considered "almost entirely autobiographical", would deal with this period; he was accused of immorality when it was published.) He enlisted for duty after Romania entered the war in 1916, first as an infantryman and then, after attending the Pipera-based bombardiers' school, as an air gunner. The war inspired his play Drapelul, which was staged in Onești, as well as a lengthy episode in his 1940 novel Diamant verde.From 1923 to 1929, Celarianu worked as a civil servant at Ion Minulescu's office in the Arts and Religious Affairs Ministry, an experience that informed his 1934 novel Polca pe furate, published on the recommendation of Mihail Sebastian. From 1929 to 1944, he was librarian and then specialist at the Labor, Health and Social Protection Ministry, where one of his office colleagues was Felix Aderca. Between 1944 and 1949, he was secretary of the fellow-travelling Democratic Writers' Union. His wife Nina was the daughter of Alexandru Macedonski, whose poems he selected and published in 1920 as Poezii alese.He made his poetry debut in Duminica in 1906, aged thirteen. His first book, Poeme și proză, appeared in 1913, during his Paris stay. He was a regular customer of the Oteteleșeanu Restaurant and, following a suggestion by Tudor Vianu, began frequenting the Eugen Lovinescu-led Sburătorul circle. He wrote two children's books (Zâna izvorului sănătății, together with Jean Bart and Dr. Ygrec, 1936; Isprăvile lui Stan cel cuminte, 1939), as well as a volume of humorous sketches, Noaptea de fericire (1944). He translated Honoré de Balzac, Boris Polevoy (in collaboration) and Édouard de Keyser. Magazines that publish his work include Sburătorul, Universul literar, Flacăra, Viața Românească, Revista Fundațiilor Regale and România Literară. He won the Romanian Writers' Society Prize in 1929, 1935 and 1939; and the Romanian Academy's Mihai Eminescu Prize in 1966. During the interwar period, Celarianu was a promoter of novels that analyzed situations through satire and especially eroticism. He was a Symbolist poet of the elegiac and sensual or erotic tendency, as exemplified by his volumes Drumul (1928) and Flori fără pace (1938).".
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- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Air_gunner.
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- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Boris_Polevoy.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Brăila.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Bucharest.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:1893_births.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:1985_deaths.
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- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_novelists.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_poets.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_translators.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Child_writers.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Bucharest.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_childrens_writers.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_civil_servants.
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- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_humorists.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_librarians.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_military_personnel_of_World_War_I.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_novelists.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romanian_poets.
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- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Symbolist_poets.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Eugen_Lovinescu.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Felix_Aderca.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Fellow_traveller.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Flacăra.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Honoré_de_Balzac.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Ion_Minulescu.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Jean_Bart.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Mihail_Sebastian.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Ministry_of_Culture_and_National_Patrimony_(Romania).
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Ministry_of_Labor,_Family,_and_Social_Protection_(Romania).
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink National_University_of_Music_Bucharest.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Onești.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Pipera.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Revista_Fundațiilor_Regale.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Romania.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Romanian_Academy.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Romanian_Army.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Romanian_Land_Forces.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Romanian_Writers_Society.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink România_Literară.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Sburătorul.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Symbolism_(arts).
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Tudor_Vianu.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Viața_Românească.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLink Édouard_de_Keyser.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mihail Celarianu".
- Mihail_Celarianu hasPhotoCollection Mihail_Celarianu.
- Mihail_Celarianu wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:1893_births.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:1985_deaths.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:20th-century_dramatists_and_playwrights.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:20th-century_novelists.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:20th-century_poets.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:20th-century_translators.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Child_writers.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:People_from_Bucharest.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Romanian_childrens_writers.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Romanian_civil_servants.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Romanian_dramatists_and_playwrights.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Romanian_humorists.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Romanian_librarians.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Romanian_military_personnel_of_World_War_I.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Romanian_novelists.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Romanian_poets.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Romanian_translators.
- Mihail_Celarianu subject Category:Symbolist_poets.
- Mihail_Celarianu hypernym Poet.
- Mihail_Celarianu type Person.
- Mihail_Celarianu comment "Mihail Celarianu (August 1, 1893–1985) was a Romanian poet and novelist.A native of Bucharest, he was the third of eight children born to Constantin Celarianu, an officer in the Romanian Army, and his wife Antoaneta (née Pricup). After middle and high school in Bucharest and Brăila, he took a technical course of study at the Bucharest Conservatory, hoping to launch a career in vocal music, an idea he abandoned.".
- Mihail_Celarianu label "Mihail Celarianu".
- Mihail_Celarianu sameAs Q20738352.
- Mihail_Celarianu sameAs Q20738352.
- Mihail_Celarianu wasDerivedFrom Mihail_Celarianu?oldid=677942481.
- Mihail_Celarianu isPrimaryTopicOf Mihail_Celarianu.