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  1. Count Vasily Vasilievich Kapnist (Russian: Василий Васильевич Капнист, 23 February 1758 – 9 November 1823), was a Russian poet, playwright and nobleman who was known as an active critic of serfdom in Russia and as a proponent of restoration of the Zaporozhian host in the region of southern Ukraine.

  2. Overview. Vasily Kapnist. (1757—1823) Quick Reference. (1757–1823) Russian dramatist and poet. His major claim to fame is the satirical comedy The Slanderer (1796) which, with its themes of bureaucratic jerrymandering, bribe-taking, and general inefficiency, is in ... From: Kapnist, Vasily in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance »

  3. In 1939, on the eve of the Second World War, Mykhailo Antonovych repeated Dembin'ski's story.3 After the Second World War the Kapnist who took the secret trip to Berlin in 1791 was identified as the poet Vasilii Kapnist by both T. Ciuciura and the eminent Slavist Dmitrij Tschizewskij.4.

  4. For seventy-five years a furiously controversial legend has hung over the name and reputation of the eighteenth-century Russian poet Vasilii Vasilievich Kapnist.

  5. Jan 29, 2022 · Vasily Kapnist (1758-1823) - a prominent Ukrainian poet, playwright, and social and political activist late XVIII - early XIX century.

    • Alexandra Alexeievna Djakow
    • October 28, 1823
    • February 12, 1758
  6. Kapnist, Vasyl, b 23 February 1758 in Obukhivka, Myrhorod regiment, d 9 November 1823 in Kybyntsi, Poltava gubernia. (Portrait: Vasyl Kapnist.) Noted poet; civic and political figure. He served as marshal of the nobility for Myrhorod county in 1782 and for Kyiv gubernia in 1785–7.

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  8. Mar 1, 2021 · On Julia's Death - Vasily Kapnist. The evening darkness shrouds. The slumbering world in peace. And from her throne of clouds. Shines Luna through the trees. My thoughts in silence blend, But gather'd all to thee: Thou moon! the mourner's friend, O come! and mourn with me.