Age, Biography and Wiki
Liviu Deleanu was born on 21 February, 1911 in Iași, is a writer. Discover Liviu Deleanu's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 56 years old?
Popular As |
Lipe Kligman |
Occupation |
poet, playwright |
Age |
56 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Pisces |
Born |
21 February 1911 |
Birthday |
21 February |
Birthplace |
Iași |
Date of death |
(1967-05-13)1967-05-13 |
Died Place |
Chișinău |
Nationality |
Moldova |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 21 February.
He is a member of famous writer with the age 56 years old group.
Liviu Deleanu Height, Weight & Measurements
At 56 years old, Liviu Deleanu height not available right now. We will update Liviu Deleanu's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
Physical Status |
Height |
Not Available |
Weight |
Not Available |
Body Measurements |
Not Available |
Eye Color |
Not Available |
Hair Color |
Not Available |
Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
Family |
Parents |
Not Available |
Wife |
Not Available |
Sibling |
Not Available |
Children |
Not Available |
Liviu Deleanu Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Liviu Deleanu worth at the age of 56 years old? Liviu Deleanu’s income source is mostly from being a successful writer. He is from Moldova. We have estimated
Liviu Deleanu's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
Salary in 2022 |
Under Review |
House |
Not Available |
Cars |
Not Available |
Source of Income |
writer |
Liviu Deleanu Social Network
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Timeline
Selected poems began to appear in collections in Romania: Răscolite tăceri (2001) and Prutele, tǎcutele! (2003) in Timișoara, and Vremi în alte vremi topite (2005) in Iași. The publisher Causa Mundi (Chișinău) released Deleanu's translations of Pushkin's The Fisherman and the Golden Fish (Povestea pescarului si a pestisorului de aur, 2005). Many of his children's poems gained prominence in Russian translation.
After his premature death, Deleanu's oeuvre went into several editions, including the collections Scrieri (Writings in two volumes), De la mic la mare (For little ones and big ones, 1968), Cartea dorului (Book of wishes, 1968), Destăinuire (1970), Strigăt din inimă (Cry from the heart, 1976), Cu cântări şi flori pe plai (With songs and flowers of the realm, 1980), Şi de n-ar fi cuvântul iubire (Were there no word for love, 1981), Chem cântecul (Call songs, 1982), Ala-bala portocala (1984), Ciocârlii pentru copii (Larks for kids, 1987), Poezii (Poems, 1991), Zǎpǎcilǎ (2002).
During the last months of his life, Deleanu finished The Book of Wishes, having written a poem a day. He died in hospital on 12 May 1967. During his literary career in Moldova, Deleanu never received any literary prizes. Posthumously, however, he was awarded the Boris Glavan Komsomol Prize in 1967 for his poem Tinereţe fǎrǎ moarte (Immortal youth). These days, his poems are included in the curricula of Moldovan schools.
In subsequent years, he published numerous other collections of poetry: Mi-i drag să meşteresc (I love tinkering, 1953), Poezii şi poeme (Poems, 1954), Cǎnturi de ieri şi de azi (Songs of the past and the present, 1958), Stihuri alese (Collected poetry, 1958), Freamăt (1962), Ieşire din legendǎ (Exit into legend, 1963), Dragostea noastrǎ cea de toatǎ zilele (Our everyday love, 1966), Versuri (Verses, 1967). He also wrote books for children: Poezii pentru copii (Verses for children, 1947), Nepoţica o învaţă pe bunica (The Granddaughter teaches her grandmother, 1952), Licurici: stihuri pentru mici (Firefly: poems for little ones, 1961), Triluri vesele (Merry trills, 1963 and 1979).
In the post-war years, he wrote Elegy to victory and his great poem Krasnodon (1950; but a reworked version of this appeared in book form titled Tinereţe fǎrǎ moarte (Immortal youth) came out in 1957, with eleven subsequent editions), which was influenced by A. A. Fadeyev's Young Guard. In 1951, he wrote the dramatic poem Buzduganul fermeca (The magic mace), based on a Moldovan folk-tale; it remains very popular in the Moldovan theatre to this day. His wartime poems were published in the 1952 collection Vremuri noi (New times).
Deleanu's poetry evolved from the modernism of his early days to a more traditional style of classical poetry in his later years. Its motives, concepts and expressive works of the period between the first and second world wars, are modern, fitting perfectly in the direction of Romanian poetry of those years. He used modernist techniques and stylistic devices of poetry including free verse. In the 1950s and 1960s, however, Deleanu's literary profile took a new and different form. In his poetry collections, which included literary works of absolute maturity, he cleaved to the traditional in his classic expression. The world of his creations of the postwar period is based on a certain themes: love, nature, the process of creation, the fate of the creator, and age over time - the motives which in the context of the Bessarabian poetry of the postwar period, clearly depict the image of a lyric poet of genuine sensitivity. His poetry indicates a special interest in formal and expressive perfection.
Returning to Chișinău in 1944, Deleanu received news of the death of his parents during the Iași pogrom of 1941, in which during a week, more than 14,000 Jews of the town were murdered. Deleanu wrote the anguished poem Coşmar (Nightmare).
During the Second World War, he lived in Moscow, translating Russian poetry into Moldovan. Some of the poets he translated were Ivan Krylov, Alexander Pushkin, Mikhail Lermontov, Nikolay Nekrasov, Sergei Yesenin, Sergey Mikhalkov, Korney Chukovsky, Aleksandr Tvardovsky as well as Agniya Barto. He wrote Balada lui Kotovschii (The Ballad of Kotovsky), Ballada urii and several other works. From 1943, he also worked as literary editor of the ensemble Doina.
Deleanu's third collection Glod alb (White mud) was published by Cultura Poporului (Popular Culture) in 1940. In it was included a long poetic cycle on the Spanish Civil War that was originally written in 1937, Sabii peste Spania (Swords over Spain), along with well-known poems such as Serenade pe baricade (Serenade on the barricades), Don Quijote, Guernica, A doua moarte (Second death). In the prewar years, some of Deleanu's poems became popular songs, including Sanie cu zurgălăi (Sleigh bells - set to music by Richard Stein, 1909-1992), which was for a long time considered the national song.
In 1928, along with the poet Virgil Gheorghiu (1903-1977), Deleanu founded his own journal Prospect (subtitled Simptom literar), which was recognised by George Călinescu in his authoritative Istoria literaturii române (History of Romanian Literature) as one of the first modernist periodicals published in Romania. In the first three issues, edited by Deleanu himself, appeared poems by him and Virgil Gheorghiu; from the fourth issue onwards, other names appeared as well: Mihail Bicleanu, Sașa Pană, Aurel Zaremba and others.
In 1928, Deleanu continued his literary career in Bucharest. During his sojourn in the Romanian capital, he wrote theatre reviews, reportage, articles on art, advertising, printed translation from the Yiddish, and published fragments of his novel in such journals as Adam (the organ of the Jewish community of the city), Ediţie specialǎ (Special edition), Bilete de papagal (a satirical magazine edited by Tudor Arghezi) and Cuvîntul liber (The Free Word). His second collection of poetry Ceasul de veghe (The Hour of the Vigil) was released by Santier publishing house in 1937 to favourable reviews from Bucharest's critics such as George Călinescu ('Mr. Deleanu's collection of poems reveals humanitarian concerns, sympathy for the miners, workers, designers, vagrants. The subject should not frighten, because Mr. Deleanu has treated it with remarkable skill...'), Izabella Sadoveanu, and Enrica Furtuna.
The same year, he met his soon-to-be wife, Baka Rivilis (1921-2005), at Soroca, where she was working at the provincial archives. For the rest of his life, she remained a faithful and energetic promoter of Deleanu's oeuvre while maintaining a busy schedule of her own translation work.
Liviu Deleanu (born Lipe Kligman; 21 February 1911, Iași – 12 May 1967, Chișinău) was a Moldovan and Romanian poet and playwright, a doyen of postwar Moldovan literature.
Liviu Deleanu was born in Iași, the capital of the Romanian province of Moldavia, in a house on strada Veche (Veche street) in 1911. His father, Semi (Shmil) Kligman, was a poet in Yiddish and Hebrew, who supported his earliest poetic efforts. Deleanu hated his childhood, recalling the privations faced by him and his mother after his father was conscripted during the First World War. His mother, who was not well educated, instilled in him a love of language and folk imagination. However, it was his aunt, famous in the family for her verses, from whom he inherited his poetic gift.
Some of Deleanu's works were set to music: Poem on Haia Lifşiţ by the composer Solomon Lobel (1910-1981) for mixed choir, a cappella and solo (1965).