Antonina Antonovna Baeva ( December 25, 1928 , Big Shelter , now Kurgan Region - July 14, 1999 , Moscow ) is a Russian Soviet poet.
| Antonina Antonovna Baeva | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | December 25, 1928 |
| Place of Birth | Big Shelter , Petukhov district , Ishim district , Ural region , RSFSR , USSR (now Kurgan region ) |
| Date of death | July 14, 1999 (aged 70) |
| Place of death | Moscow , Russian Federation |
| Citizenship | |
| Occupation | poet , teacher |
| Years of creativity | 1958-1999 |
| Language of Works | Russian language |
| Debut | Ahead of the hauls (1961) |
| Awards | |
| Awards | |
Biography
Antonina Antonovna Baeva was born on December 25, 1928 in the village of Bolshoye Priyutnoye, Bolshepriyutinsky Village Council, Petukhov District, Ishimsky District, Ural Region (now the administrative center of the Priyutinsky Village Council of the Kurgan Region ).
Her childhood passed in this area in different villages ( Maloye Priyutnoye , Teploye, Petushki, Zhidki , Novoye Ilyinskoye and Penkovka). Her father, Anton Vasilievich Baev, worked as a collective farm and village chairman. Antonina studied 5-7 grades in with. Bolshe-Shelter, lived with grandfather and uncles. Her mother died in 1937 [1] .
She graduated from the Petukhov city department of public education 8-month courses. Externally, she graduated from the Petukhov Pedagogical College (in three semesters she passed all the exams for a four-year course).
From the age of 17 she worked as a primary school teacher at the village school. Resort "Bear Lake" . Since 1949, she studied at the Ishim Teachers Institute. In the evenings she worked at one of the institute's departments. After graduating in 1951, she taught Russian language and literature at school with. Shablykino Shablykino village council of Ishim district of the Tyumen region .
Since 1952, a member of the CPSU [2] .
Since 1952, a disabled person of the 1st group. It was increasingly difficult for her to move around until a serious illness confined Antonin Baev to bed for life.
Since 1953 she lived in Kurgan . I finished my studies in absentia at the Kurgan Pedagogical Institute . Since 1953, she worked at school No. 11 as a teacher of the Russian language. In November 1956, Antonina Antonovna was dismissed with the wording “for incompetence, for ignorance of her subject”. Later, Baeva herself explained this fact to the fact that it was hard for her colleagues to see her - a disabled person [3] .
Since 1962, a member of the Union of Writers of the USSR .
In 1965, he moved to the city of Kursk with his family, and in 1967, to Krasnodar .
Since 1970, Antonina Antonovna with her daughter Vera Mikhailovna (born 1955) lived in the city of Sochi .
In the last years of his life A.A. Baeva lived in Moscow .
Antonina Antonovna Baeva died on July 14, 1999 . She was buried in the Istra district of the Moscow region .
Creativity
In 1958, A.A. Baeva first published her poem, “Summer is Old,” in the Stavropol newspaper. The first poems by A. Bayeva appeared in print in 1958-1959 on the pages of the Ishimskaya Pravda city newspaper. Antonina was engaged in the literary association of them. P. Ershova edited by [4] .
In 1961, the first book of poems “Ahead of Stage” was published in the publishing house of the newspaper Sovetskoe Zauralie.
Her works are distinguished by their love of life and perseverance, sincerity and sincerity. The image of Russian nature, Russian reality, traditions is an integral part of her work. She wrote many poems, yearning for her native places from the inability to come.
Becoming disabled A.A. Baeva fought and the example was largely due to the feat of Nikolai Alekseevich Ostrovsky. His thirst for life, the desire to remain in service regardless of ailments, gave strength. A lot of Antonina Antonovna gave a visit to the Ostrovsky Museum in the city of Sochi, communication with those who knew and remembered the writer.
Among her works are many poems for children.
Materials of creative activity for 1961-1979 stored in the State Treasury Institution “State Archive of the Kurgan Region”.
Awards and Prizes
- Lenin Komsomol Prize - for the poem "Your Eternal Battle", dedicated to the memory of N. A. Ostrovsky (1979)
- Prize to them. ON. Ostrovsky (Krasnodar Krai Komsomol, 1979)
Works
Poems A.A. Since 1958, Baeva began to appear on the pages of the newspapers Ishimskaya Pravda, Young Leninist, Soviet Zauralie , and in the journal Ural . Published in the anthology "Russian Soviet Poetry of the Urals" (1983). They came out in separate collections.
- Baevaa A.A. Ahead of the hauls. - Barrow: gas. “Owls. Trans-Urals ”, 1961. - 51 p. - 2000 copies. [five]
- Baevaa A.A. Find: poems for preschool age. - Sverdlovsk: Book. ed., 1963. - 22 p. - 100,000 copies. [6]
- Baevaa A.A. Horned horse: poems for preschool and younger. school. age. - Chelyabinsk: Prince. ed., 1963. - 16 p. - 100,000 copies. [7]
- Baevaa A.A. Meadowsweet blossoms. - Chelyabinsk: Prince. ed., 1963. - 104 p. - 3000 copies. [eight]
- Baevaa A.A. Birch juice. - Chelyabinsk: South Ural book. ed., 1964. - 71 p. - 5,000 copies. [9]
- Baevaa A.A. Guessed? : poems for doshkas. age. - Sverdlovsk: Mid-Ural book. ed., 1964. - 19 p. - 100,000 copies. [ten]
- Baevaa A.A. Warm thawed spots: verses for children. - Chelyabinsk: South Ural book. ed., 1965. - 15 p. - 50,000 copies. [eleven]
- Baevaa A.A. Winter rainbow. - M .: Sov. writer, 1966. - 103 p. - 10,000 copies. [12]
- Baevaa A.A. Crane feather. - Voronezh: Center.-Chernozem. Prince ed., 1967. - 111 p. - 10,000 copies. [13]
- Baevaa A.A. Sea pebbles: poems for doshkas. age. - Sverdlovsk: Mid-Ural book. ed., 1967. - 18 p. - 150,000 copies. [14]
- Baevaa A.A. Forest rose. - M .: Sov. Russia, 1968 .-- 103 p. - 10,000 copies. [15]
- Baevaa A.A. Road to the sea. - Krasnodar: Prince. ed., 1969. - 92 p. - 4000 copies. [sixteen]
- Baevaa A.A. At the window summer: poems for preschoolers. - Krasnodar: Prince. ed., 1970 .-- 21 p. - 150,000 copies. [17]
- Baevaa A.A. Poems: for doshkas. age. - M .: Kid, 1970 .-- 15 p. - 150,000 copies. [18]
- Baevaa A.A. Lyrics. - Krasnodar: Prince. ed., 1971. - 111 p. - 4000 copies. [nineteen]
- Baevaa A.A. Viburnum berry. - M .: Sov. writer, 1972.- 104 p. - 10,000 copies. [20]
- Baevaa A.A. Birthday. - Krasnodar: Prince. ed., 1974. - 47 p. - 5,000 copies. [21]
- Baevaa A.A. Poems. - M .: Sov. Russia, 1976. - 190 p. - 25,000 copies. [22]
- Baevaa A.A. Oriole song. - M .: Sov. writer, 1977 .-- 110 p. - 20,000 copies. [23]
- Baevaa A.A. Warm winters. - Krasnodar: Prince. ed., 1978. - 271 p. - 5,000 copies. [24]
- Baevaa A.A. Your eternal battle: a poem. - Krasnodar: Prince. ed., 1979. - 31 p. - 10,000 copies. [25]
- Baevaa A.A. Wind from Tobol. - Chelyabinsk: South Ural book. ed., 1981. - 87 p. - 5,000 copies. [26]
- Baevaa A.A. Child light. - M .: Sov. writer, 1982. - 143 p. - 20,000 copies. [27]
- Baevaa A.A. Bunny: poems for doshkas. age. - M .: Kid, 1982. - 16 p. - 300,000 copies. [28]
- Baevaa A.A. Your eternal battle. - M .: Mol. Guard, 1982.- 79 p. - 50,000 copies. [29]
- Baevaa A.A. Tobol is a steppe river. - Alma-Ata: Zhazushi, 1983 .-- 135 p. - 6000 copies. [thirty]
- Baevaa A.A. Voices of Russia. - M .: Sov. Russia, 1984.- 174 p. - 25,000 copies. [31]
- Baevaa A.A. Your eternal battle: a poem, add., Dorab .. - Krasnodar: Prince. ed., 1984. - 95 p. - 2000 copies. [32]
- Baevaa A.A. Men's work. - M .: True, 1985. - 32 p. - (B-ka "Spark" No. 37). - 85,000 copies. [33]
- Baevaa A.A. Holiday of life. - M .: Sov. writer, 1985 .-- 143 p. - 20,000 copies. [34]
- Baevaa A.A. Favorites. Poems and poems. - M .: Hudozh. lit., 1986 .-- 559 p. - 25,000 copies. [35]
- Baevaa A.A. Strict age. - M .: Sov. writer, 1990 .-- 189 p. - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 5-265-01232-X . [36]
- Baevaa A.A. Ermakov bow: poem. - M .: Book, 1995 .-- 31 p. - 2000 copies. - ISBN 5-7132-0062-0 . [37]
Notes
- ↑ Baeva Antonina - Department of Culture of the Kurgan Region
- ↑ Committee on Archives Management of the Kurgan Region - The personal fund of the poetess A.A. Bayeva (R-1610)
- ↑ Antonina Antonovna Baeva 1928-1999
- ↑ BAEVA Antonina Antonovna - Site of the city of Ishim, Tyumen Region (inaccessible link)
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg
- ↑ Russian National Library, St. Petersburg