Alexis Guedroitz Explained

Alexis Guedroitz
Birth Name:Alexis Nicolaevich Guedroitz
Birth Date:9 June 1923
Birth Place:Pančevo, Serbia
Death Place:Brussels, Belgium
Occupation:Professor of Russian language and literature, interpreter, adapter, writer and lecturer
Language:French, Russian
Nationality:Belgian
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Prince[1] Alexis Nicolaevich Guedroitz (9 June 1923 – 1 February 1992) was a Belgian professor of Russian Language and Literature (Ecole de Guerre; Centre Nucléaire de Mol; Higher Institute of Interpreters and Translators Marie Haps; Higher Institute of the City of Brussels) and an interpreter who participated in several meetings between Soviet and Belgian politicians, such as Spaak-Khrushchev (1961), Spaak-Kosygin (1969), Harmel-Gromyko (1972), and the official visit of the King and Queen of the Belgians in USSR (1975).

He was also one of the founders and delegates in Belgium of the International Dostoevsky Society (IDS).

Biography

Childhood

Born in exile in Pancevo, Serbia, in 1923, Alexis Guedroitz was the son of the Russian Prince Nicholas Wladimirovich[2] Guedroitz and his wife Alexandra Gregorievna Strigewsky. Shortly after his birth, his father, a young officer of the Imperial Guard, died from wounds of war. The young Alexis, his sister Olga and his half-brother Andrey were brought up by their mother remarried in Brussels with Mister George Iovleff.

Private life

Alexis Guedroitz married twice. First in Dublin in 1948, he married Oonagh Ryan, with whom he had a daughter, actress Ania Guedroitz, then in Brussels in 1962, he married Jeanne Marie de Hemricourt de Grunne with whom he had two sons, Nicolas and Michel Guedroitz.

Theatrical adaptations

Literary adaptations

Books as author

Periodicals

Press Releases

Bibliography

Decorations

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.flickr.com/photos/cepatri/2914730954/ Ferrand, Les Familles Princières de l'Ancien Empire de Russie
  2. Open database of officers of the Imperial Russian Army: Gedroits Nikolay Vladimirovich
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=xitWHAAACAAJ Le triomphe de Stephan Pasternacq
  4. Web site: Terrain vague . 2011-09-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120325130627/http://www.antiqbook.be/boox/pro/144829_289B.shtml . 2012-03-25 . dead .
  5. https://books.google.com/books?id=s5vwGwAACAAJ Les Prix Nobel de la littérature russe: de Bounine à Soljenitzyne
  6. https://books.google.com/books?id=87BgPgAACAAJ Faire: un verbe à tout faire