LC control no. | n 79117956 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
LC classification | PQ2668.O7 (French) PC839.H6 (Romanian) PQ6658.O68 (Spanish) |
Personal name heading | Horia, Vintilă |
Variant(s) | Caftangioglu, Vintilă Crângu, Valer Dacio, Juan Horia Iucul, Vintilă Iucul, Vintilă Horia |
Associated country | Romania Argentina Spain |
Birth date | 1915-12-31 |
Death date | 1992-04-04 |
Place of birth | Segarcea (Romania) |
Place of death | Madrid (Spain) |
Profession or occupation | Authors Novelists Essayists College teachers Diplomats |
Found in | His Antologia poeților ... 1950. His Le voyage à San Marcos, c1988: t.p. (Vintila Horia) His Reconquista del descubrimiento, c1992: t.p. (Vintila Horia) cover flaps (d. 04/04/1992, Madrid) His Mai sus de miazănoapte, 1992: t.p. (Vintilă Horia) cover p. 4 ( b. 12-31-1915, in Segarcea, Oltenia, Romania: d. 04-04-1992, in Madrid, Spain) Jurnal de sfârşit de ciclu, 1987-1989: title page (Vintilă Horia) page facing title page (born 1915; died 1992; Romanian novelist, poet, essayist, diplomat, and university professor; exiled during the time of the communist regime in Romania) Wikipedia, visited August 13, 2020: RomanianVintilă Horia page (Vintilă Horia: literary pseudonym of Vintilă Caftangioglu; born 18 December (n.s.: 31 December) 1915 in Segarcea; died 4 April 1992 in Collado Villalba, Madrid, Spain; Romanian diplomat, essayist, philosopher, journalist, teacher, poet, and novelist; wrote primarily in Romanian and French; Romanian diplomat in Rome and Vienna, 1914-1945; lived in Italy, 1945-1948; Argentina, 1948-1953; and Spain 1953-1992) French Vintial Horia page (Vintila Horai; pseudonym of Vintilă Caftangioglu; also used the pseudonyms Valer Crângu and Juan Dacio) Spanish Vintila Horia page (Vintilă Horia Iucal) <https://ro.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vintil%C4%83_Horia> <https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vintila_Horia> <https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vintil%C4%83_Horia> |
Associated language | rum fre spa |