Sengiin Erdene ( Mong. Sengiin Erdene ; December 7, 1929 - 2000 ) - people's writer of Mongolia , screenwriter.
| Sengiin Erdene | |
|---|---|
| Sengiin Erdene | |
| Date of Birth | December 7, 1929 |
| Place of Birth | Binder, Hentai, MPR |
| Date of death | 2000 |
| Nationality | |
| Occupation | Prose writer, poet, playwright |
| Years of creativity | 1956-1994 |
| Direction | psychological prose |
| Genre | story, novel, novel |
| Language of Works | |
| Awards | Writers Union Award (1976) |
| Awards | State award of the MPR (1965) People's Writer (1994) |
- This name is Mongolian ; Sengiin is a middle name , not a last name ; this person’s personal name is Erdene.
Biography
Born on December 7, 1929 in the somon Binder of the Khentei aimag of the MPR . The Buryat father, who had immigrated from the USSR several years earlier, was executed during the repressions of the 1930s in the Lhumbe affair . In 1949 he graduated from the Lancers-Bator Officer School, then in 1955 - from the Faculty of Medicine of the Moscow State University ; worked for several years as a psychiatrist.
He wrote collections of psychological short stories “Dust from under the hooves” ( Mong. Malyn kholyn toos ; 1964), “The Crane” ( Mong. Naran toruu ; 1972); a series of epic stories, including “The Year of the Blue Mouse” (1970), “Girl’s Summer” (1978), “In the Distance, Where are the Blue Mountains” (1981; about D. Natsagdorzhe ), novels “The Circle of Life” ( Mong. Amdyralyn Toyrog ; 1983) on the Mongolian intelligentsia, [1] “Dzanabadzar” (1989), “Meet in the Next Life” ( Mongolian Hoyt Nasandaa Uulzya , 1996).
In 1965 he was awarded the state award, in 1976 - the prize of the Union of Writers of Mongolia, in 1994 he became a national writer of Mongolia. He also wrote screenplays and plays. Some of his works have been translated into Russian and German. [2]
Notes
- ↑ Sangying Erdene
- ↑ "Hulan bid hoer" and "Salute" in Renate Bauwe-Radna (ed.), Erkundungen , Berlin, 1976; several short stories and short stories in Sonnenkraniche , Berlin, 1979; The End of the Serüün Temple , 2009