- Sergei Aksakov
Sergei Timofeevich Aksakov (Russian: Сергей Тимофеевич Аксаков) (
September 20 ,1791 —April 30 ,1859 (OS);October 1 ,1791 —May 12 ,1859 (NS)) was a 19th century Russian literary figure remembered for his semi-autobiographical tales of a landlord's family life, hunting, fishing, and butterfly collecting.According to the
Velvet Book , the Aksakovs trace their male line to a nephew ofHaakon the Old , who settled inNovgorod in 1027. Sergey was born inUfa , brought up in his family estate at Novo-Aksakovka, and educated atKazan University . Having taken part in the Campaign of 1812, he settled for the quiet life of a sporting country squire in 1816. About two decades later, Aksakov moved toMoscow , where he joined the censorship department and started to publish his notes on hunting andfishing . These made him a national celebrity and won him a number of admirers, some of whom declared Aksakov superior not only toGogol but even toShakespeare .In 1843 Aksakov settled in the village of
Abramtsevo , which was also frequented by hisSlavophile sons,Konstantin Aksakov andIvan Aksakov . In the late 1850s he published his most enduring works, "The Family Chronicle" (1856) and "Childhood Years of Grandson Bagrov" (1858). These are reminiscences of a childhood spent in a Russian patriarchal family rather than a full-scale work of imagination. Aksakov's semi-autobiographical narratives are unmatched for their scrupulous and detailed description of the everyday life of Russian nobility.Among his other works are a fairy tale, "The Scarlet Flower," and an account of his friendship with
Gogol . "The Scarlet Flower" was adapted into an animatedfeature film in the Soviet Union in 1952.
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