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Nikolai Vladimirovich Stankevich (Russian: Никола́й Влади́мирович Станке́вич) (October 9 [O.S. September 27] 1813July 7 [O.S. June 25] 1840) was a Russian public figure, philosopher, and poet.

Nikolai Stankevich
Born
Nikolai Vladimirovich Stankevich

(1813-10-09)October 9, 1813
Uderevka, Voronezh Governorate (present-day Alexeyevsky District), Russian Empire
DiedJuly 7, 1840(1840-07-07) (aged 26)
Era19th century philosophy
Region
  • Russian philosophy
  • Western philosophy
Influences
Influenced

Biography


Nikolay Stankevich was born in Uderevka, Voronezh Governorate, and in 1834 graduated from the Moscow State University, where he was influenced by Professor Mikhail Kachenovsky and followers of the so-called "skeptical school" in historiography. By late 1831, Stankevich had organized a literary and philosophical society called the Circle of Stankevich. He had been under police surveillance since 1833 due to his connections with a group of oppositionary university students led by Ya.I. Kostenetsky.[1] In 1837, Nikolay Stankevich had to travel abroad due to his tuberculosis.[2]

Stankevich's literary and esthetical views, most of which mirrored the ideas of a Russian historian Nikolai Nadezhdin, presupposed the humanistic enlightenment as the main task of the Russian intelligentsia. Stankevich is known to have considerably influenced some of the Russian and Muscovite intelligentsia in particular, including Vissarion Belinsky, Timofey Granovsky, Mikhail Bakunin, and Alexander Herzen. Among Stankevich's literary works (mostly poetic and not numerous), there are a few verses dedicated to Moscow and a historical tragedy called Vasili Shuisky.[3]

He died, aged 26, in Novi Ligure, Italy.


References



Footnotes


  1. Nicholas Hans, The Russian Tradition in Education, Routledge, 2002, p. 32
  2. Paul Bushkovitch, A Concise History of Russia, Cambridge University Press, 2011, p. 162
  3. Svalov A. N. On N. V. Stankevich's Tragedy "Vasiliy Shuiskiy" (The Academy of Social Sciences, Moscow)

Bibliography



На других языках


- [en] Nikolai Stankevich

[fr] Nikolaï Stankevitch

Nikolaï Vladimirovitch Stankévitch (en russe Николай Владимирович Станкевич) est un philosophe, poète et écrivain russe né le 27 septembre 1813 (9 octobre 1813 dans le calendrier grégorien) à Ouderevka (Gouvernement de Voronej, Russie) et décédé le 25 juin 1840 (7 juillet 1840 dans le calendrier grégorien) à Novi Ligure (Royaume de Piémont-Sardaigne), principalement connu pour le cercle qu’il regroupa autour de lui et qui porte son nom, qui influença durablement l’intelligentsia moscovite, et pour sa correspondance épistolaire avec certains de ses membres, notamment Constantin Aksakov, Mikhaïl Bakounine, Vissarion Belinsky et Vassili Botkine.

[ru] Станкевич, Николай Владимирович

Никола́й Влади́мирович Станке́вич (27 сентября [9 октября] 1813, Острогожск, Воронежская губерния — 25 июня [7 июля] 1840, Нови-Лигуре, Сардинское королевство) — русский писатель, поэт, публицист, мыслитель.



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