Zaharia Stancu
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Zaharia Stancu (Romanian pronunciation: [zahaˈri.a ˈstaŋku]; October 7, 1902 – December 5, 1974) was a Romanian prose writer, novelist, poet, and philosopher. He was also the director of the National Theatre Bucharest, the President of the Writers' Union of Romania, and a titular member of the Romanian Academy.
Biography[]
Stancu was born in 1902 in Salcia, a village in Teleorman County, Romania. After leaving school at the age of thirteen he worked at various jobs. He worked as tanner, shopkeeper in a grocer's store and in a tobacco store, and clerk at the prefecture. In 1921, with the help of Gala Galaction, he became a journalist. In 1933 he finished his studies in literature and philosophy at the University of Bucharest.
His first volume of poetry, Poeme simple (Simple Poems), appeared in 1927, receiving the Romanian Writers' Prize. During World War II, he was imprisoned for his opposition to the fascist government of Ion Antonescu (see Romania during World War II), and he spent time in the Târgu Jiu internment camp for political prisoners.
In 1946, he became a director of Romania's National Theater. After the Communist regime was established, he was a elected titular member of the Romanian Academy and the President of the Writers' Union of Romania (1966–1974). He won the Romanian State Prize for Literature and, in 1971, he was awarded the Herder Prize by the Austrian government.
Between 1926 and 1944 Stancu published six volumes of poetry. In 1948 his first important novel, Through the Ashes of the Empire and .
(Barefoot), was published. It has been translated into thirty languages. Other important novels are (The Gypsy Tribe), (A Gamble with Death), and (The Mad Forest). The latter two novels were made into films,References[]
- (in Romanian) [1] Venera E. Dumitrescu, "In Memoriam - Zaharia Stancu (1902-1974)", in Observatorul, 11/7/2002.
- 1902 births
- 1974 deaths
- People from Teleorman County
- University of Bucharest alumni
- Romanian male novelists
- Romanian male poets
- Titular members of the Romanian Academy
- Members of the Great National Assembly
- Chairpersons of the National Theatre Bucharest
- Inmates of Târgu Jiu camp
- Romanian communists
- 20th-century Romanian novelists
- 20th-century Romanian poets
- Herder Prize recipients
- 20th-century Romanian male writers
- Burials at Bellu Cemetery
- Romanian writer stubs