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April 6 - Prominent Armenian Writer Levon Shant's Birthday

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  • April 6 - Prominent Armenian Writer Levon Shant's Birthday

    APRIL 6 - PROMINENT ARMENIAN WRITER LEVON SHANT'S BIRTHDAY

    Tert.am
    06.04.12

    Today marks the 143th birth anniversary of prominent Armenian
    playwright, novelist, poet and public figure Levon Shant.

    Born in 1869 to a family of vendors, Shant lost his parents at an
    early age. After receiving his primary education in a Constantinople
    Armenian seminary, he went to Echmiadzin and later pursued his studies
    in Leipzig, Jena and Munich, specializing mainly in psychology and
    pedagogy. In 1899, he returned to the Transcaucasus where he was
    engaged in a teaching activity for over 10 years.

    Shant was a member of Tbilisi's Vernatun club and maintained close
    contacts with his contemporaries (Hovhannes Tumanyan, Ghazaros
    Aghayan, Avetik Isahakyan and Derenik Demirchyan). He returned to
    Constantinople in 1911 to continue teaching. In 1915, he settled in
    Europe, and four years later, again returned to the Transcacuasus.

    Shant was a vice president of Armenia's parliament during the First Republic.

    His creative life lasted six decades. In the 1890s, he published his
    poems, and series of short storeys. But Shant's most prominent pieces
    that left an important trace in the Armenian literature and culture
    are associated with his dramaturgy that include such works as The I"
    Man (1901), For Someone (1903), On the Road (1904), Ancient gods
    (1908), The Emperor (1916) etc.

    Shant also translated works by the world-renowned writers, Ethel
    Lilian Voynich (Gadfly) and Henrik Ibsen (An Enemy of the People).

    He died on November 29, 1951 in Beirut.

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