Romanian writer and translator
Hermiona Asachi
Born (1821-12-16 ) December 16, 1821Died December 9, 1900(1900-12-09) (aged 78)Paris, France
Nationality Romanian French Occupation(s) author, translation, writer Spouses
Alexandru Moruzi
(
div. 1849)
[ 1]
Hermiona[ a] Asachi (Romanian: [aˈsaki] , surname also spelled Asaki ; December 16, 1821 – December 9, 1900), also known as Hermione Asachi , was a Romanian writer and translator.
Life
Hermiona was born Glicheria Melirato,[ 4] the daughter of Kiriaco Melirato and Elena Teyber .[ 5] She was later adopted by Gheorghe Asachi , her mother's second husband.
Hermiona translated texts by Silvio Pellico and Benjamin Franklin into Romanian for her father's publication Albina Românească . In 1845, she moved to France, where she corresponded with various French intellectuals such as Victor Hugo , Jules Michelet and Louis Blanc .[ 6]
She was first married to Alexandru D. Moruzi [ro ] . In 1852, she married the French historian Edgar Quinet ,[ 6] [ 7] She edited some of Quinet's texts for publication,[ 8] subsequently publishing under the name Hermiona Quinet .
Asachi died in Paris at the age of 78.[ 6]
Works
Literary translations
René-Paul și Paul-René , translation of the short story by Émile Deschamps (1839)
Ruth , poems by Caroline Pichler (1839)
Istoria sfântă pentru tinerimea moldo-română (Sacred history for young Moldavians and Romanians) (1840)
Despre îndatoririle oamenilor (On the duties of men) , by Silvio Pellico (1843)
Edgar Quinet
Works published from Edgar Quinet's notes, manuscripts, and notebooks. Many were selected, annotated, prefaced, and arranged by Hermione.
Mémoires d'exil (1869)[ 9]
Paris, journal du siège (1873)
Sentiers de France (1875)
Le livre de l'exilé, 1851-1870; Après l'exil, manifestes et discours, 1871-1875 (1875)
Vie et mort du génie grec (1876)
Lettres à sa mère (1877)
Histoire de mes idées (1878)
Lettres d’exil à Michelet et à divers amis (1885-6) (4 volumes)
Edgar Quinet avant et depuis l'exil (1887-9)[ 9]
Cinquante ans d'amitié, Michelet-Quinet (1899)
Other works
Le Vrai dans l'éducation (1891)[ 9]
Ce que dit la musique (1893)
La France idéale (1896)[ 9]
De Paris à Édimbourg (1898)
Notes
^ Also spelled Hermione[ 2] and Ermiona.[ 3]
References
^ Willy Aeschimann (1986). La pensée d'Edgar Quinet [The Thinking of Edgar Quinet ] (in French). Paris: Anthropos. p. 639.
^ de:Oscar Alfred Haac [in German] (1947). "XIX". In David Baguley (ed.). A Critical Bibliography of French Literature: The Nineteenth Century in Two Parts . Vol. 5. Syracuse, New York : Syracuse University Press . p. 675.
^ Wendy Bracewell; Alex Drace-Francis, eds. (2008). A Bibliography of East European Travel Writing on Europe . Vienna: Central European University Press . p. 505. ISBN 9789633863893 .
^ Asachi-Quinet, Hermiona . 1967. p. 366.
^ Eugen Lovinescu (1982). Mariana Simionescu; ro:Alexandru George [in Romanian] (eds.). Opere . Vol. 3. London: Minerva Press . p. 332.
^ a b c Țarălungă, Ecaterina. Enciclopedia identității românești. Personalități (in Romanian). p. 38.
^ van Dijk, Suzan (1995). George Sand lue à l'étranger: recherches nouvelles 3 (in French). p. 70. ISBN 9051838611 .
^ Quattrocchi, Umberto (1999). CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names: Common Names, Scientific Names, Eponyms, Synonyms, and Etymology . p. 2245. ISBN 084932677X .
^ a b c d David Patrick ; Francis Hindes Groome , eds. (1898). "Quinet, Edgar" . Chambers Biographical Dictionary . J. B. Lippincott & Co. p. 772.
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