Pyotr Koshel: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Russian poet}} |
{{Short description|Russian poet}} |
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{{Family name hatnote|Ageyevich|Koshel|lang=Eastern Slavic}} |
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{{Infobox writer |
{{Infobox writer |
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| name = Pyotr Koshel |
| name = Pyotr Koshel |
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| image = Петр Кошель.jpg |
| image = Петр Кошель.jpg |
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| caption = |
| caption = Koshel, {{circa|1986}} |
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| native_name = Пётр Агеевич Кошель |
| native_name = Пётр Агеевич Кошель |
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| native_name_lang = ru |
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|birth_name = Pyotr |
| birth_name = Pyotr Ageyevich Koshel |
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|birth_date = {{birth date and age|1946|4|20|df=yes}}|birth_place = [[Slutsk]], [[Belorussian SSR]], Soviet Union<br />(now Slutsk, [[Belarus]]) |
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| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1946|4|20|df=yes}} |
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| birth_place = [[Slutsk]], [[Byelorussian SSR]], [[Soviet Union]] (now [[Belarus]]) |
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'''Pyotr Ageevich Koshel''' (April 20 [[1946]], [[Slutsk]], [[Minsk Region]], [[Belorussian SSR]], [[USSR]]) — Russian [[writer]], [[historian]] and [[translator]]. |
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'''Pyotr Ageyevich Koshel''' ({{langx|be|Пётр Агеевіч Кошаль|translit=Piotr Ahieyevich Koshal}}; {{langx|ru|link=no|Пётр Аге́евич Ко́шель}}; born 20 April 1946) is a Belarusian-born Russian writer, historian and translator. |
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==Biography== |
==Biography== |
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Born in the town of [[Slutsk]]. During the war, Pyotr Koshel's father was a [[partisan (military)|partisan]], after the war he worked as a station attendant in Slutsk. In 1952, the family left [[Belarus]] for [[Sakhalin]]. They lived in the village [[Smirnykh]], on the river [[Poronai]], in [[dugout (shelter)|dugout]], in difficult conditions. He began to publish in his school years in regional newspapers. Graduated from one course [[Sakhalin State University]]. At the age of 18 he moved to the mainland, lived in [[Siberia]], [[Moldova]], [[Baltic region|Baltic]]. He worked at an automobile plant, was engaged in |
Born in the town of [[Slutsk]]. During the war, Pyotr Koshel's father was a [[partisan (military)|partisan]], after the war he worked as a station attendant in Slutsk. In 1952, the family left [[Belarus]] for [[Sakhalin]]. They lived in the village [[Smirnykh]], on the river [[Poronai]], in [[dugout (shelter)|dugout]], in difficult conditions. He began to publish in his school years in regional newspapers. Graduated from one course [[Sakhalin State University]]. At the age of 18 he moved to the mainland, lived in [[Siberia]], [[Moldova]], [[Baltic region|Baltic]]. He worked at an automobile plant, was engaged in advertising, mentored in a village school in [[Mogilev region]].<ref>Koshal Pyotr Ageevich // Entsyklapedia of literature and art of Belarus. T. 3.S. 113. — Minsk, BelEn, 1986</ref> |
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From |
From 1973 to 1978 he studied at [[Maxim Gorky Literature Institute]] in the seminar of the poet [[Evgeny Vinokurov (poet)|Evgeny Vinokurov]]. As the critic recalls Vyacheslav Ogryzko, the literary critic [[Vadim Kozhinov]] at that time claimed in «[[Literaturnaya gazeta]]» that there are six poets in Russia: Alexey Prasolov, [[Nikolai Rubtsov]], Vladimir Sokolov, [[Yuri Kuznetsov (poet)|Yuri Kuznetsov]], [[Oleg Chukhontsev]] and Pyotr Koshel. The purse was then the author of the famous poem «The door opens, the father enters ...».<ref>{{cite web |url = http://www.litrossia.ru/2012/33-34/07353.html |title=How many leaves and is lost ... |author = |date = 2012-08-10 |publisher = Literary Russia |accessdate = |language = |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121020192635/http://www.litrossia.ru/2012/33-34/07353.html |archive-date=20 October 2012 |url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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In 1978 he was admitted to the [[Union of Soviet Writers]]. 1982—1995 |
In 1978 he was admitted to the [[Union of Soviet Writers]]. 1982—1995 – Lead Editor of the [[Soviet Writer]] Publishing House, oversaw the translated poetry of [[Ukraine]], [[Belarus]] and [[North Caucasus]]. Compiled by the Moscow «Poetry Day—1983». |
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The poems were published in the magazines «[[Youth (magazine)|Youth]]», «[[New world (magazine)|New world]]», «[[Banner (magazine)|Banner]]», «[[Friendship of peoples (magazine)|Friendship of peoples]]», [[Literaturnaya gazeta]]», [[Literary Russia]]», etc. Author of numerous historical essays, translations of Serbian, Belarusian, Dagestan poetry.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://old.lgz.ru/archives/html_arch/lg092003/Tetrad/art12_10.htm|title =What's ahead ...|author =|date = 2003-03-05|publisher = Literary newspaper|accessdate = |language =}}</ref> |
The poems were published in the magazines «[[Youth (magazine)|Youth]]», «[[New world (magazine)|New world]]», «[[Banner (magazine)|Banner]]», «[[Friendship of peoples (magazine)|Friendship of peoples]]», [[Literaturnaya gazeta]]», [[Literary Russia]]», etc. Author of numerous historical essays, translations of Serbian, Belarusian, Dagestan poetry.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://old.lgz.ru/archives/html_arch/lg092003/Tetrad/art12_10.htm|title =What's ahead ...|author =|date = 2003-03-05|publisher = Literary newspaper|accessdate = |language =}}</ref> |
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=== Poems === |
=== Poems === |
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* Foliage. Poems. |
* Foliage. Poems. – Mn., Mastatskaya literatura, 1979 – 80 p. – 6000 copies. |
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* City star. Poems. |
* City star. Poems. – M.: Mol. guard, 1981 .- 31 p., (Young voices) – 30,000 copies. |
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* River Life. Poems. |
* River Life. Poems. – Minsk, Mastatskaya literatura, 1987 .- 141 p. – 5000 copies. |
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* As it is. Poems. |
* As it is. Poems. – M.: Sov. writer, 1987 .- 141 p. – 15,000 copies. |
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=== Nonfiction === |
=== Nonfiction === |
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* History of Russian terrorism. |
* History of Russian terrorism. – M., Golos, 1995 .- 369 p. (History of Russian life). – 10,000 copies. |
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* History of detectives in Russia: in 2 vols. |
* History of detectives in Russia: in 2 vols. – Mn., Literature, 1996. – (Encyclopedia of Secrets and Sensations). 20,000 copies. |
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* History of the Russian investigation. |
* History of the Russian investigation. – M., Young Guard, 2005 .- 394 p. |
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* Arisen by the Will of Peter: The History of St. Petersburg from Ancient Times to the Middle of the 18th Century. |
* Arisen by the Will of Peter: The History of St. Petersburg from Ancient Times to the Middle of the 18th Century. – M., Rubezhi XXI, 2003. – 524, : (History of the cities of the world) (Three centuries of the northern capital of Russia; T. 1). – 5000 copies. |
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* Capital of the Russian Empire: History of St. Petersburg in the second half of the 18th century. |
* Capital of the Russian Empire: History of St. Petersburg in the second half of the 18th century. – M., Rubezhi XXI, 2007. – 452 (History of the cities of the world) (Three centuries of the northern capital of Russia) . |
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* Brilliant Petersburg: History of St. Petersburg in the first half of the 19th century. |
* Brilliant Petersburg: History of St. Petersburg in the first half of the 19th century. – M., Rubezhi XXI, 2008. – 685, <nowiki> [2] </nowiki> p. (History of the cities of the world). |
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* All Russia: Collection. |
* All Russia: Collection. – M., Mosk. Writer; [[Novotroitsk]]: NOSTA, 1993/10000 copies. |
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* My Pushkiniana. |
* My Pushkiniana. – M., Voice, 1999. – 459 p. |
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=== Educational literature === |
=== Educational literature === |
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* Big school encyclopedia: |
* Big school encyclopedia: 6–11 grades. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 1999 .-- 20,000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00041-6; T. 1: History. Literature. – 591 p. : ISBN 5-224-00047-5; T. 2: Russian language. Mathematics. Physics. Chemistry. Biology. Geography. English language. Orthodox dictionary-reference. – 718 p. : ISBN 5-224-00048-3. |
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* The Great Patriotic War. Encyclopedia for schoolchildren. |
* The Great Patriotic War. Encyclopedia for schoolchildren. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000 .- 447 p. – 12,000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00904-9 |
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* Art. Encyclopedic Dictionary student. |
* Art. Encyclopedic Dictionary student. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000 .- 446 p. – 15,000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00508-6 |
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* Dictionary-reference book: economics, foreign trade, exhibitions. |
* Dictionary-reference book: economics, foreign trade, exhibitions. – M., Society of preservation lit. Heritage, 2012 .- 342 ISBN 978-5-902484-53-0 |
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=== Popular non-fiction literature === |
=== Popular non-fiction literature === |
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* At the dawn of humanity. |
* At the dawn of humanity. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000. – 351 p. – 3000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00716-X |
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* Biology: in the land of eternal mysteries. |
* Biology: in the land of eternal mysteries. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000. – 302 p. – 5000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00509-4 |
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* Biology. Fauna and flora of Russia. |
* Biology. Fauna and flora of Russia. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000 .- 542 p. – 5000 copies.- ISBN 5-224-00762-3 |
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=== Translated literature === |
=== Translated literature === |
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* A pomelo flew through our village: For children. age / Per. P. Koshel; Artist. T. Zebrova. |
* A pomelo flew through our village: For children. age / Per. P. Koshel; Artist. T. Zebrova. – M.: Malysh, 1991 .- 500,000 copies. |
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* [[Alaiza Pashkevich]]. Favorites. Per. from Belarusian. P. Koshel. |
* [[Alaiza Pashkevich]]. Favorites. Per. from Belarusian. P. Koshel. – Mn., 1986 .- 222 p. |
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* Magic shrimp. Folklore, poetry, stories. Per. from Belarusian. Peter Koshel. |
* Magic shrimp. Folklore, poetry, stories. Per. from Belarusian. Peter Koshel. – Minsk, 1997 – 7000 copies. |
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* Hour of wind: Poems and poems of Belarusian poets of the 1920–1930. : For senior school age / Comp. and lane. from Belarusian. P. Koshel. Foreword by Neil Gilevich. |
* Hour of wind: Poems and poems of Belarusian poets of the 1920–1930. : For senior school age / Comp. and lane. from Belarusian. P. Koshel. Foreword by Neil Gilevich. – Minsk., Yunatstva, 1987. – 125 p. – 8000 copies. |
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* [[Vintsent Dunin-Martsinkyevich]]. Favorites: Poems, stories and stories. Dramatic works / From Belarusian. and Polish. |
* [[Vintsent Dunin-Martsinkyevich]]. Favorites: Poems, stories and stories. Dramatic works / From Belarusian. and Polish. – Minsk, 1991—365 p. |
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* Donkey at name days: Belarusian fables: trans. from Belarusian. / Per., Comp. P. Purse; Artist. M. Basalyga. |
* Donkey at name days: Belarusian fables: trans. from Belarusian. / Per., Comp. P. Purse; Artist. M. Basalyga. – Minsk: Yunatstva, 1989. – 237 p. |
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== Bibliography == |
== Bibliography == |
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* [http://ya-zemlyak.ru/avtpoesia.asp?id_avt=624 Petr Koshel // Russian poetry] |
* [http://ya-zemlyak.ru/avtpoesia.asp?id_avt=624 Petr Koshel // Russian poetry] |
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* [https://lgz.ru/article/16-6781-21-04-2021/pleshchetsya-slaboe-ekho/ Peter Koshel. A faint echo splashes / Literaturnaya gazeta, 2021-04-21] |
* [https://lgz.ru/article/16-6781-21-04-2021/pleshchetsya-slaboe-ekho/ Peter Koshel. A faint echo splashes / Literaturnaya gazeta, 2021-04-21] |
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* [https://moskvam.ru/publications/publication_3053.html Peter Koshel. Along the Current] // Moscow Magazine, July 2023 |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Koshel, Pyotr}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Koshel, Pyotr}} |
Latest revision as of 23:31, 27 October 2024
Pyotr Koshel | |
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Native name | Пётр Агеевич Кошель |
Born | Pyotr Ageyevich Koshel 20 April 1946 Slutsk, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union (now Belarus) |
Occupation | Writer, oral historian |
Language | Russian |
Citizenship | Russia |
Alma mater | Maxim Gorky Literature Institute |
Pyotr Ageyevich Koshel (Belarusian: Пётр Агеевіч Кошаль, romanized: Piotr Ahieyevich Koshal; Russian: Пётр Аге́евич Ко́шель; born 20 April 1946) is a Belarusian-born Russian writer, historian and translator.
Biography
[edit]Born in the town of Slutsk. During the war, Pyotr Koshel's father was a partisan, after the war he worked as a station attendant in Slutsk. In 1952, the family left Belarus for Sakhalin. They lived in the village Smirnykh, on the river Poronai, in dugout, in difficult conditions. He began to publish in his school years in regional newspapers. Graduated from one course Sakhalin State University. At the age of 18 he moved to the mainland, lived in Siberia, Moldova, Baltic. He worked at an automobile plant, was engaged in advertising, mentored in a village school in Mogilev region.[1]
From 1973 to 1978 he studied at Maxim Gorky Literature Institute in the seminar of the poet Evgeny Vinokurov. As the critic recalls Vyacheslav Ogryzko, the literary critic Vadim Kozhinov at that time claimed in «Literaturnaya gazeta» that there are six poets in Russia: Alexey Prasolov, Nikolai Rubtsov, Vladimir Sokolov, Yuri Kuznetsov, Oleg Chukhontsev and Pyotr Koshel. The purse was then the author of the famous poem «The door opens, the father enters ...».[2]
In 1978 he was admitted to the Union of Soviet Writers. 1982—1995 – Lead Editor of the Soviet Writer Publishing House, oversaw the translated poetry of Ukraine, Belarus and North Caucasus. Compiled by the Moscow «Poetry Day—1983».
The poems were published in the magazines «Youth», «New world», «Banner», «Friendship of peoples», Literaturnaya gazeta», Literary Russia», etc. Author of numerous historical essays, translations of Serbian, Belarusian, Dagestan poetry.[3]
Some works
[edit]Poems
[edit]- Foliage. Poems. – Mn., Mastatskaya literatura, 1979 – 80 p. – 6000 copies.
- City star. Poems. – M.: Mol. guard, 1981 .- 31 p., (Young voices) – 30,000 copies.
- River Life. Poems. – Minsk, Mastatskaya literatura, 1987 .- 141 p. – 5000 copies.
- As it is. Poems. – M.: Sov. writer, 1987 .- 141 p. – 15,000 copies.
Nonfiction
[edit]- History of Russian terrorism. – M., Golos, 1995 .- 369 p. (History of Russian life). – 10,000 copies.
- History of detectives in Russia: in 2 vols. – Mn., Literature, 1996. – (Encyclopedia of Secrets and Sensations). 20,000 copies.
- History of the Russian investigation. – M., Young Guard, 2005 .- 394 p.
- Arisen by the Will of Peter: The History of St. Petersburg from Ancient Times to the Middle of the 18th Century. – M., Rubezhi XXI, 2003. – 524, : (History of the cities of the world) (Three centuries of the northern capital of Russia; T. 1). – 5000 copies.
- Capital of the Russian Empire: History of St. Petersburg in the second half of the 18th century. – M., Rubezhi XXI, 2007. – 452 (History of the cities of the world) (Three centuries of the northern capital of Russia) .
- Brilliant Petersburg: History of St. Petersburg in the first half of the 19th century. – M., Rubezhi XXI, 2008. – 685, [2] p. (History of the cities of the world).
- All Russia: Collection. – M., Mosk. Writer; Novotroitsk: NOSTA, 1993/10000 copies.
- My Pushkiniana. – M., Voice, 1999. – 459 p.
Educational literature
[edit]- Big school encyclopedia: 6–11 grades. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 1999 .-- 20,000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00041-6; T. 1: History. Literature. – 591 p. : ISBN 5-224-00047-5; T. 2: Russian language. Mathematics. Physics. Chemistry. Biology. Geography. English language. Orthodox dictionary-reference. – 718 p. : ISBN 5-224-00048-3.
- The Great Patriotic War. Encyclopedia for schoolchildren. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000 .- 447 p. – 12,000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00904-9
- Art. Encyclopedic Dictionary student. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000 .- 446 p. – 15,000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00508-6
- Dictionary-reference book: economics, foreign trade, exhibitions. – M., Society of preservation lit. Heritage, 2012 .- 342 ISBN 978-5-902484-53-0
Popular non-fiction literature
[edit]- At the dawn of humanity. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000. – 351 p. – 3000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00716-X
- Biology: in the land of eternal mysteries. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000. – 302 p. – 5000 copies. – ISBN 5-224-00509-4
- Biology. Fauna and flora of Russia. – M., OLMA-PRESS, 2000 .- 542 p. – 5000 copies.- ISBN 5-224-00762-3
Translated literature
[edit]- A pomelo flew through our village: For children. age / Per. P. Koshel; Artist. T. Zebrova. – M.: Malysh, 1991 .- 500,000 copies.
- Alaiza Pashkevich. Favorites. Per. from Belarusian. P. Koshel. – Mn., 1986 .- 222 p.
- Magic shrimp. Folklore, poetry, stories. Per. from Belarusian. Peter Koshel. – Minsk, 1997 – 7000 copies.
- Hour of wind: Poems and poems of Belarusian poets of the 1920–1930. : For senior school age / Comp. and lane. from Belarusian. P. Koshel. Foreword by Neil Gilevich. – Minsk., Yunatstva, 1987. – 125 p. – 8000 copies.
- Vintsent Dunin-Martsinkyevich. Favorites: Poems, stories and stories. Dramatic works / From Belarusian. and Polish. – Minsk, 1991—365 p.
- Donkey at name days: Belarusian fables: trans. from Belarusian. / Per., Comp. P. Purse; Artist. M. Basalyga. – Minsk: Yunatstva, 1989. – 237 p.
Bibliography
[edit]- Kozhinov V.V., Pyotr Koshel. — Poetry Day-1978, Soviet writer, 1978;
- Baranova-Gonchenko L. Jacket with patches // Literary study, 1983, No. 3;
- History of punishment and terrorism. Conversation // Literary Russia. — 1996, February 23;
- Verstakov V. Poetry: Pyotr Koshel // Literary Russia. 1997, October 17;
- Belarusian writings. Biblіagrafіchny sloўnіk. T.3. Mn., 1994. S. 392
References
[edit]- ^ Koshal Pyotr Ageevich // Entsyklapedia of literature and art of Belarus. T. 3.S. 113. — Minsk, BelEn, 1986
- ^ "How many leaves and is lost ..." Literary Russia. 10 August 2012. Archived from the original on 20 October 2012.
- ^ "What's ahead ..." Literary newspaper. 5 March 2003.