Mikhail Kheraskov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mikhail Matveyevich Kheraskov (1733-1807) was regarded as the most important Russian poet by Catherine the Great and her contemporaries.

Kheraskov's father was a Romanian boyar who settled in the Ukraine. Patronized by his Freemason friends[citation needed], Mikhail furthered his education abroad and was appointed dean of the Moscow University at the age of 30.

In 1771-79 he wrote Rossiad, the first and only Russian epic in the tradition of Homer and Virgil. The subject of this poem is Ivan the Terrible's taking of Kazan in 1552. The Rossiad's only rival for the title of the longest poem in the Russian language is Kheraskov's Vladimir Reborn (1785), concerned with the Baptism of Kievan Rus.

He was also the author of the Oriental tale Bakhariana (1803). Kheraskov also wrote 20 plays but, like the rest of his writings, are not widely read today[citation needed].


Mikhail Timofeyevich Vysotsky (1791-1837, Russian guitarist-virtuoso and guitar composer) was a godson of Mikhail Kheraskov.

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