Nikolai Khmelnitsky

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Born
Николай Иванович Хмельницкий

(1789-08-22)22 August 1789
Died20 September 1845(1845-09-20) (aged 56)
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Occupation(s)dramatist, translator, critic, state official
Yearsactive1806 – 1840s
Nikolai Ivanovich Khmelnitsky
Born
Николай Иванович Хмельницкий

(1789-08-22)22 August 1789
Died20 September 1845(1845-09-20) (aged 56)
Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Occupation(s)dramatist, translator, critic, state official
Years active1806 – 1840s

Nikolai Ivanovich Khmelnitsky (Russian: Никола́й Ива́нович Хмельни́цкий, 22 [o.s. 11] August 1789, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire, - 20 [o.s. 8] September 1845, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire) was a Russian dramatist, literary critic and translator. In 1812-1814, as an army officer, he was Mikhail Kutuzov's adjutant, and later, in 1829-1838, served as a governor of Smolensk. Khmelnitsky's chosen genre was the saloon comedy, and many prominent authors, Alexander Pushkin among them, valued him as an influential figure in the Russian literary scene of the 1820s.[1]

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