Russian poet, translator, literary historian and journalist
For the Russian meteorologist, see Alexander Voeikov.
Alexander Fyodorovich Voeykov
Born
September 10 [O.S. August 30] 1779 Moscow
Died
July 28 [O.S. July 16] 1839 Saint Petersburg
Occupation
Poet • translator • journalist • satirist
Nationality
Russian
Notable works
The Asylum (1814)
Spouse
Aleksandra Andreevna Voeikova
Alexander Fyodorovich Voeykov (Алекса′ндр Фё′дорович Вое′йков, September 10 (August 30, o.s) 1779, Moscow, Russian Empire - July 28 (16) 1839, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire) was a Russian poet, translator, literary historian and journalist, best known for his satirical poems of 1814-1820.[1]
^"Alexander Fyodorovich Voeykov". Russian Writers Biobibliographical Dictionary. Vol. 1. Ed. P. A. Nikolayev. Moscow. Prosveshchenye Publishers. 1990. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
parallel. It was named in honor of Alexander Voeikov, a climatologist, who studied this phenomenon. The formation of the Voeykov axis is due to the continental...
Vyazemsky, Vasily Zhukovsky, Anton Delvig, Ivan Dmitriev, AlexanderVoeykov, Nikolay Yazykov and Alexander Izmaylov all wrote epigrams on Khvostov. In a satire...
August 1 – Francis Scott Key, American poet (died 1843) September 10 – AlexanderVoeykov, Russian poet (died 1839) November 14 – Adam Oehlenschläger, Danish...
Kholkh. In November 1813, at the invitation of Zhukovsky, his friend AlexanderVoeykov (1779-1839) arrived in Muratovo. Despite his outward unattractiveness...
officer, himself a published poet who was close to the circle of AlexanderVoeykov. It was Palmin Senior who's imbued his son with the love to the twin...
University. He founded the journal Meteorologicheskü vestnik in 1891. Among Voeykov's contributions were the use of budgets of evaporation, inflow and outflow...
December 8. The region crosses the climatic separating and wind-destroying Voeykov axis, it passes on average through the eastern and northern regions of...
influenced by the works of Russian geographer and meteorologist A. I. Voeykov and V. I. Vernadsky. During World War II, he worked as an engineer-hydrologist...
German as their native language. In 1891 it was recorded by Alexander Ivanovich Voeykov that there were 262 whose annual production was equal to 28,912...