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Ukrainka and Klyment
In 1908 in Yalta the technically savvy Slastion helped Lesia Ukrainka and her husband Klyment Kvitka make live recordings ( on phonograph cylinders ) of the dumy performed by the blind virtuoso Hnat Honcharenko ( circa 1837-circa 1917 ).

Ukrainka and official
In 1897, while being treated in Yalta, Ukrainka met Serhiy Merzhynsky, an official from Minsk who was also receiving treatment for tuberculosis.

Ukrainka and who
Ukrainka was very close to her uncle M. P. Drahomanov ( her spiritual mentor and teacher ), and her brother Mykhaylo ( who would be known under the pseudonym Mykhaylo Obachny ) whom she called " Mysholosie.

Ukrainka and was
Larysa Petrivna Kosach-Kvitka () ( – ) better known under her literary pseudonym Lesya Ukrainka (), was one of Ukraine's best-known poets and writers and the foremost woman writer in Ukrainian literature.
Ukrainka was born in 1871 in the town of Novohrad-Volynskyi of Ukraine.
At this time, Ukrainka was well on her way of becoming a pianist, but due to tuberculosis of the bone, she did not attend any outside educational establishment.
When Ukrainka was seventeen, she and her brother organized a literary circle called Pleyada ( The Pleiades ) in 1888, which they founded to promote the development of Ukrainian literature and translating foreign classics into Ukrainian. It was based on the French school of poesy, the Pleiade.
Ukrainka actively opposed Russian tsarism and was a member of Ukrainian Marxist organizations.
On 1 December 2009, the 200th Guards TBAP was reorganised as the 6953rd Guards Airbase, which later, in December 2010 reformed as an Air Group of the 6952nd Guards Air Base ( Ukrainka ).
– May 3, 2005 ) was born in Ukrainka village, Samara Oblast of Russia, and she lived in the town of Vyborg until her death.

Ukrainka and .
Interest in Lysenko's art songs to the words of prominent Ukrainian poets such as Taras Shevchenko, Lesia Ukrainka, and Oleksander Oles is increasing, partly due to the recent efforts of the British opera singer Pavlo Hunka.
The Hutsuls served as an inspiration for many writers, such as Ivan Franko, Lesya Ukrainka, Mykhailo Kotsiubynsky, Vasyl Stefanik, Marko Cheremshyna, Mihail Sadoveanu, Stanisław Vincenz and painters, such as Teodor Axentowicz famous for his portraits and subtle scenes of Hutsul life.
Several public libraries are serving the city-Central Library of Lesia Ukrainka, City Library for Youth and Children, Central Oblast Library of Taras Shevchenko.
Ukrainka learned how to read at the age of four, and she and her brother Mykhaylo could read foreign languages well enough to read literature in their original language.
Ukrainka had a good familiarity with Russian, Polish, Bulgarian, Greek, Latin, French, Italian, German and English.
Poems and plays of Lessya Ukrainka are associated with her belief in her country ’ s freedom and independence.
Ukrainka also wrote epic poems, prose dramas, prose, several articles of literary criticism, and a number of sociopolitical essays.
Ukrainian karbovanets depicting Lesya Ukrainka.
Merzhynsky died with Ukrainka at his bedside on March 3, 1901.
Ukrainka died on August 1, 1913 at a health resort of Surami, Georgia.
Lesya Ukrainka Statue, University of Saskatchewan.
There are many monuments to Lesya Ukrainka in Ukraine and many other former Soviet Republics.
One of the main Kiev theaters, the Lesya Ukrainka National Academic Theater of Russian Drama is colloquially referred to simply as Lesya Ukrainka Theater.

married and 1907
In 1871, she married James George Skelton Anderson ( d. 1907 ) of the Orient Steamship Company co-owned by his uncle Arthur Anderson, but she did not give up her medical practice.
( The latter married Tilo Freiherr von Wilmowsky, ( 1878 – 1966 ) in 1907 ).
The married life of Malcolm III and Margaret has been the subject of two historical novels: A Goodly Pearl ( 1905 ) by Mary H. Debenham, and Malcolm Canmore's Pearl ( 1907 ) by Agnes Grant Hay.
In 1907, Amos Kling married his second wife and soon after began an effort at rapprochement with daughter and son-in-law.
In spite of the Orthodox Church's opposition to marriage between first cousins, the couple married on 23 January 1906: their first two children, Fyodor ( Theodore ) and Ludmila, were born in 1907 and 1908, respectively.
On 6 March 1928, Schindler married Emilie Pelzl ( 1907 – 2001 ), daughter of a wealthy Sudeten German farmer from Maletein.
Sandburg met Lilian Steichen at the Social Democratic Party office in 1907, and they married the next year.
Clive Bell married Vanessa in 1907, and Leonard Woolf returned from the Ceylon Civil Service to marry Virginia in 1912.
Porter married again in 1907, to childhood sweetheart Sarah ( Sallie ) Lindsey Coleman, whom he met again after revisiting his native state of North Carolina.
Yeats ( 1907 ) The need to support Ida Nettleship ( 1877 – 1907 ), whom he married in 1901, led him to accept a post teaching art at the University of Liverpool.
Early in 1900, he married his first wife, Ida Nettleship ( 1877 – 1907 ); the couple had five children.
Next, Forster published The Longest Journey ( 1907 ), an inverted bildungsroman following the lame Rickie Elliott from Cambridge to a career as a struggling writer and then to a post as a schoolmaster, married to the unappealing Agnes Pembroke.
In 1904 he married Ethel Hester Moore ( 1878 – 1961 ), and in 1907 he moved with his family to " Sopers ", a house in the village of Ditchling in Sussex, which would later become the centre of an artists ' community inspired by Gill.
Buchan also read for and was called to the bar in 1901, though he did not practice as a lawyer, and on 15 July 1907 married Susan Charlotte Grosvenor daughter of Norman Grosvenor and a cousin of the Duke of Westminster.
On 4 October 1954, Trevor-Roper married Lady Alexandra Henrietta Louisa Howard-Johnston ( 9 March 1907 – 15 August 1997 ), eldest daughter of Field Marshal the Earl Haig by his wife, the former Hon.
In 1907, Munthe married an English woman, Hilda Pennington-Mellor.
* Arnold Hubert ( 3 January 1884-1948 ), married Jane Hungerford in Sydney 1907 ; he later emigrated to Canada
He was the son of Count André de Laborde de Monpezat ( Mont-de-Marsan, 6 May 1907 – Le Cayrou, 23 February 1998 ) and his wife, Renée Doursenot ( Périgueux, 26 October 1908 – Le Cayrou 11 February 2001 ), ( married religiously Cahors, 6 January 1934 and civilly Cahors 22 January 1948 ), who was previously married firstly civilly in Paris on 29 September 1928 and divorced at the Tribunal Civil Français de Saigon on 21 September 1940 Louis Leuret ( Châteauneuf-sur-Loire, 18 March 1881 – Saigon, South Vietnam, 29 December 1962 ).
In September 1924, Richardson married the 17-year-old student actress Muriel (" Kit ") Hewitt ( 1907 – 1942 ); the marriage was childless but devoted.
It was said of her, that of all foreign princesses married into the Swedish royal house, she was perhaps the one best suited to be Queen consort of Sweden, and for the first ten years in Sweden, she almost was: from 1897 until 1907, Queen Sophia seldom showed herself at public occasions and Crown Princess Victoria spent most of her time abroad, so Princess Ingeborg thereby filled the position of first lady at the Swedish court.
On his return to England, he moved to London, where he met and married the artist Vanessa Stephen — sister of Virginia Woolf — in 1907.
Her daughter, born of her marriage to Clarke, married Louis-Mathurin Busson du Maurier and was the mother of the caricaturist George du Maurier ( 1834 – 96 ) and the great-grandmother of the novelist Daphne du Maurier ( 1907 – 1989 ), who wrote a book about her ( Mary Anne ).
During that tour, on 22 March 1907, she married co-star, American James Carew, who had appeared with her at the Court Theatre.

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