Ille Toktash Explained

Ille Tuktash
Birth Date:1907 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Bolshiye Toktashi village, Russian Empire
Death Place:Cheboksary, Chuvashia, USSR
Language:Chuvash, Russian
Nationality:Chuvash
Period:1932–1957
Notableworks:Verses (1930)
First victory (1932)

Ille Tuktash (Chuvash: Илле Тукташ; 1907–1957), also Ilya Tuktash (Russian: Илья Семёнович Тукташ), was a Chuvash writer and poet. He was a member of the USSR Union of Writers.[1]

Early life

Ille Tuktash was born Ilya Semyonovich Semyonov (Russian: Илья Семёнович Семёнов) on 29 July 1907 in the village of Bolshiye Toktashi, in the Alikovsky District of the Chuvash Republic. He graduated from Alikovo Middle School.

Career

He was a reporter between 1942 and 1944.

He was the author of the collections Verses (1930) and The Wind of the October (1932), as well as short stories and essays. His novella Bull Ravine (1932) dealt with the collectivization of Chuvash villages. Tuktash translated into Chuvash The Tale of Igor's Campaign (with I. Ivnik), M. A. Sholokhov's The Quiet Don (book 1), and the short stories of M. Gorky. He is known as a compiler of Chuvash folklore.

Ille died on 20 January 1957 in Cheboksary.

Tuktash created a genre of lyrical poetry including "Grow, motherland, get stronger" (Chuvash: Ӳс, ҫӗршыв, хӑватлан|Üs, sjörskyv, håvatlan), "White Pidgeon" (Chuvash: Шурӑ кӑвакарчӑн, Chuvash: Skurå kåvakartjån), and "Oh Motherland" (Chuvash: Тӑван ҫӗршыв, Chuvash: Tåvan sjörskyv).

Works

Literature

References

  1. http://bse.sci-lib.com/article112707.html Тукташ Илья Семенович

External links