Antiochus Kantemir
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AntiochusTemplate:Sfnp or AntiochTemplate:Sfnp Kantemir or Cantemir (Template:Langx; Template:Langx; Template:Langx; Template:Langx; 8 September 1708 – 31 March 1744) was a Moldavian who served as a man of letters, diplomat, and prince during the Russian Enlightenment. He has been called "the father of Russian poetry".
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Life
Kantemir was born into a noble Moldavian family at Iași on 8 September 1708.Template:Sfnp His illiterate grandfather Constantin had been made voivode of Moldavia by the Ottomans in 1685 and was succeeded by his well-educated sons Antioch and Demetrius. Kantemir was the son of Demetrius by his wife, Princess Kassandra Cantacuzene, who claimed descent from the Byzantine dynasty of the same name.Template:Sfnp He spent much of his youth in Constantinople as a hostage to the Turks.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". He was then educated by his father and at the St Petersburg AcademyTemplate:Sfnp before moving to the family estate near Dmitrovsk.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
He served as the Russian ambassador at London from 1731 to 1736, when he was relocated to Paris to serve as Russia's minister plenipotentiary to the Kingdom of France.Template:Sfnp There, he became a noted intellectualTemplate:Sfnp and a close friend of Montesquieu and Voltaire. Kantemir died a bachelor in Paris amid litigation concerning his illegitimate children.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Work
Considered "the father of Russian poetry",Template:Sfnp Kantemir used his classical education to assist Peter the Great's programme of modernizing and westernizing Russian culture. His most noticeable effort in this regard is his Petrida, an unfinished epic glorifying the emperor. He produced a tract on old Russian versification in 1744Script error: No such module "Unsubst". and numerous odes and fables.Template:Sfnp His use of gallic rhyme schemes can make his work seem antiquated and awkward to modern readers.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
He edited his father's History of the Growth and Decay of the Ottoman Empire in England and wrote a biography and bibliography of his father which later accompanied its 1756 edition.[1]Template:Sfnp His 1742 Letters on Nature and Man (O Prirode i Cheloveke) was a philosophical work.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". He is best remembered for his satires in the manner of Juvenal, including To My Mind: On Those Who Blame Education and On the Envy and Pride of Evil-Minded Courtiers, which were among the first such works in the Russian language.Template:Sfnp
Kantemir translated Horace and Anacreon into Russian, as well as Algarotti's Dialogues on Light and Colors.Template:Sfnp He also translated De Fontenelle's Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds, in 1730. When Kantemir's teacher, Christopher Gross, asked the academy to publish the translation, the responsible manager of the chancellery, Johann Daniel Schumacher, wanted to first get permission from the government and the Holy Synod. Correspondence regarding the matter dragged on until 1738, when permission to publish was finally given, but the book was not published until 1740.[2]
Kantemir's own works were translated into French by the Abbé Guasco, who also penned his biography.Template:Sfnp
Notes
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References
- Template:Cite EB9
- Template:Cite EB1911
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External links
- Template:In lang A collection of Kantemir's poetry
- Template:In lang The ancestors Prince Antiokh Dmitrievich Kantemir
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- Pages with script errors
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- 1708 births
- 1744 deaths
- Saint Petersburg State University alumni
- Cantemirești family
- Enlightenment philosophers
- Writers from Iași
- Diplomats of the Russian Empire
- Essayists from the Russian Empire
- Male essayists
- Russian literary critics
- 18th-century philosophers from the Russian Empire
- Male poets from the Russian Empire
- Male writers from the Russian Empire
- Russian male poets
- 18th-century Moldavian people
- Russian people of Romanian descent
- Russian people of Crimean Tatar descent
- Russian people of Greek descent
- Ambassadors of the Russian Empire to France
- Ambassadors of the Russian Empire to the United Kingdom
- 18th-century translators from the Russian Empire
- Sons of princes regnant