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{{family name hatnote|Ivanovich|Samokhin|lang=Eastern Slavic}} |
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{{short description|Soviet-Russian novelist}} |
{{short description|Soviet-Russian novelist}} |
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{{Infobox writer |
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| name = Fedor Samokhin |
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{{Infobox writer <!-- For more information see [[:Template:Infobox writer/doc]]. --> |
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| image = Фёдор Самохин в феврале 1968 года.png |
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| caption = In February 1968 |
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| birth_name = Fyodor Ivanovich Samokhin |
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| birth_name = Fedor Ivanovich Samokhin |
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| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1918|2|12}} |
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| caption = |
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| birth_place = Second Don District, [[Don Host Oblast]], |
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| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1918|2|12}} |
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| birth_place = Second Don District, [[Don Host Oblast]], |
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[[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|Russian Soviet Republic]] |
[[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|Russian Soviet Republic]] |
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| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1992|7|17|1918|2|12}} |
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1992|7|17|1918|2|12}} |
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| death_place = [[Bishkek]], [[Kyrgyzstan]] |
| death_place = [[Bishkek]], [[Kyrgyzstan]] |
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| occupation |
| occupation = {{flatlist| |
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* writer |
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| nationality = [[Russians|Russian]] |
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* journalist |
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| genre = [[Prose]] |
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* translator |
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| language = [[Russian language|Russian]], [[Kyrgyz language|Kyrgyz]] |
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}} |
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| movement = [[Lieutenant prose]], |
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| language = Russian, Kyrgyz |
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[[village Prose]] |
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| education = [[Kyrgyz National University]] |
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| years active = 1949—1992 |
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| alma_mater = [[Kyrgyz National University]] |
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| genre = {{flatlist| |
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| signature = Fyodor Samokhin signature.svg |
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* Novel |
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* short story |
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}} |
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| subject = |
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| movement = [[Literary realism|Realism]] |
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| notableworks = |
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| spouse = {{marriage|Raisa Ilyinichna Samokhina|1947}} |
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| children = {{flatlist| |
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* Victoria |
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* Vladimir |
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* Aleksey |
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}} |
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| signature = Fyodor Samokhin signature.svg |
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}} |
}} |
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''' |
'''Fedor Ivanovich Samokhin''' ({{langx|ru|link=no|Фёдор Иванович Самохин}}; 12 February 1918 – 17 July 1992) was a [[Soviet literature|Soviet]]-[[Kyrgyz literature|Kyrgyz]] writer of prose, journalist and translator, member of the [[Union of Soviet Writers|Union of writers of the USSR]] (since 1958). One of the founders of [[lieutenant prose|lieutenant]] and [[Village Prose|village prose]] in Kyrgyz literature. |
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His first book, ''[[The Boy from Stalingrad (novel)|The Boy from Stalingrad]]'' (''Mal'chik iz Stalingrada'', 1954), about the meeting in Kyrgyzstan and [[Kazakhstan]] of the evacuated population from the western regions of the [[Soviet Union]] during the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]], was awarded the First degree Prize of the Central Committee of the Komsomol and the Union of Writers of Kyrgyzstan, however it later received criticism in the press of the [[Kyrgyz SSR]] because of her "ideological depravity". His landmark book ''[[Cholponbai]]'' (1958) about the life of the Hero of the Soviet Union Cholponbai Tuleberdiev, published in the ''Kyrgyz State Publishing'' House and the ''[[Molodaya Gvardiya (publisher)|Molodaya Gvardiya]]'', is considered by researchers to be examples of the battle genre in Kyrgyz literature; revised into a sketch ''Krov'yu serdtsa'' (''Bleeding Heart''), it was included in the collection ''Young Heroes of the Great Patriotic War'' (''Molodye geroi Velikoy Otechestvennoy voyny'', 1970), published in the series ''[[The Lives of Remarkable People]]''. His last work on military subjects and in his work as a whole was the novel ''[[Homeland, I'll Be Back!]]'' (''Rodina, ya vernus'!'') (1975), which tells how Soviet schoolchildren kidnapped by the Nazis are looking for a way to leave [[Germany]] to return home. |
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The author of a number of works of fiction about the Great Patriotic War, the most famous of which was the story "Cholponbai" about the feat of Hero of the Soviet Union Cholponbai Tuleberdiev, which was reprinted several times. The second edition of the story in the publishing house "Mektep" was digitized in 2019 by the Osh Regional Library named after Toktogul Satylganov, and in 2020 it was included in the section of materials from the Ministry of Education and Science of the Kyrgyz Republic. |
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== Life == |
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Some of Samokhin's books are kept in the world's leading libraries, including the [[British Library]] and [[Harvard Library]],<ref>{{Cite web|title=Izbrannoe / F. Samokhin. - British Library|url=http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/display.do?tabs=moreTab&ct=display&fn=search&doc=BLL01007306255&indx=1&recIds=BLL01007306255&recIdxs=0&elementId=0&renderMode=poppedOut&displayMode=full&frbrVersion=&frbg=&&dscnt=0&scp.scps=scope:(BLCONTENT)&vl(2084770704UI0)=any&tb=t&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&srt=rank&tab=local_tab&dum=true&vl(freeText0)=Samokhin,%20F&dstmp=1597056132627#|access-date=2021-01-12|website=explore.bl.uk}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Izbrannoe - Harvard University|url=https://hollis.harvard.edu/primo-explore/search?tab=books&search_scope=default_scope&vid=HVD2&query=lsr02,contains,11408773|access-date=2021-01-12|website=hollis.harvard.edu|language=en}}</ref> as well as the [[Berlin State Library]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=SBB StaBiKat - results/shortlist|url=http://stabikat.de/DB=1/LNG=EN/LRSET=1/SET=1/SID=4e907da3-0/TTL=1/MAT=/NOMAT=T/REL?PPN=1021958069|access-date=2021-01-12|website=stabikat.de}}</ref> |
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=== Early years. The Eastern Front === |
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Fedor Samokhin was born on [[khutor]] of [[Nizhny Chir|Verkhne-Sadovsky]] of the Don Host Oblast of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in the family of a poor peasant. In 1940, he graduated from the Nizhne-Chirskaya secondary school. He began his career in 1934 as an accountant at his native khutor, from 1940 to 1942 he worked as a senior accountant at the Nizhne-Chirsky fish point.{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} |
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After the outbreak of the [[Eastern Front (World War II)|Eastern Front]], on the instructions of the [[Volgograd Regional Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union|Stalingrad obkom Komsomol]] from 1942 to 1943, he was a member of the bureau of the Nizhne-Chirsky underground Komsomol district committee, became a intelligence for the [[partisan detachment]] "{{interlanguage link|Smertʹ fashyzmu!|ru|Партизанский отряд Нижне-Чирского района}}".{{sfn|Oruzbaeva|1982|p=374}}{{sfn|Kandaurov|1983|p=100}}{{sfn|Yaskovets|2006|p=193}} Samokhin outlined his memories of the work of the detachment in the story ''The Intelligence Agent Claudia Panchishkina'' (1952), and his letter, later published in the magazine ''[[Molodaya Gvardiya (magazine)|Molodaya Gvardiya]]'' in 1982, became the only surviving, according to historian {{interlanguage link|Ivan Kandaurov|ru|Кандауров, Иван Михайлович}}, archival document about the work of the detachment in September 1942.{{sfn|Kandaurov|1982|p=149}} |
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== Biography == |
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[[File:Fedor Samohin 1960.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Fyodor Samokhin (1960)]] |
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The oldest Russian writer of Kyrgyzstan,<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.ru/books?hl=ru&id=UgYqAQAAIAAJ&dq&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=%D0%A1%D0%B0%D0%BC%D0%BE%D1%85%D0%B8%D0%BD|title=Literaturnyĭ Kirgizstan|date=1988|publisher=Ala-Too|language=ru}}</ref> whose works have become an integral part of the literary process in the republic,<ref>{{Cite book|last=Askarov|first=Tendik|url=https://books.google.ru/books?hl=ru&id=aNPVAAAAMAAJ&dq&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=%D0%A4.+%D0%A1%D0%B0%D0%BC%D0%BE%D1%85%D0%B8%D0%BD|title=Ėsteticheskoe postizhenie mira: izbrannye statʹi, issledovanii︠a︡|date=1982|publisher=Kyrgyzstan|language=ru}}</ref> front-line soldier Fyodor Ivanovich Samokhin was born on the farm of [[Nizhny Chir|Verkhne-Sadovsky]] of the [[Don Host Oblast]] of the [[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|Russian Soviet Republic]] in the family of a poor peasant. In 1940 he graduated from the Nizhne-Chirskaya secondary school. In 1944 he studied at the courses for newspaper workers in [[Moscow]];{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} in the same year he joined the ranks of the [[KPSS|CPSU(b)]].{{sfn|Samaganov|1969|p=387}} |
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His work in the detachment was reflected in Ivan Kandaurov's documentary stories ''Stoĭkostʹ'' (1983) and ''Inache oni ne mogli'' (1986). In them, Fedor Samokhin is characterized as a rural correspondent who is actively involved in the public life of the district. After the onset of the war, he did not follow his relatives across the [[Volga]], but began to lead a hidden life. Soon, the head of the detachment, {{interlanguage link|Claudia Panchishkina|ru|Панчишкина, Клавдия Григорьевна}}, proposed to include him in the detachment.{{sfn|Kandaurov|1983|p=97-98, 100-102, 106-107}} |
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He began his career in 1934 as an accountant at his native collective farm, from 1940 to 1942 he worked as a senior accountant at the Nizhne-Chirskiy fish station. From 1942 to 1943 Fyodor Ivanovich was a member of the Bureau of the Nizhne-Chirskiy Underground Komsomol District Committee, was a scout for a partisan detachment, and was seriously wounded. After the liberation of this region from occupation, he was appointed editor of the regional newspaper "Kolkhoznik Dona"; there were also published the first stories of Fedor Samokhin "Na perekate", "Garmon'", "Provody".{{sfn|Samaganov|1969|p=386}} |
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In addition to intelligence work, he also participated in combat operations. To implement one of these, the head suggested creating several groups. The task of the group, which included Fedor Ivanovich, was to disable the steam mill and destroy grain warehouses on the left bank of the [[Don (river)|Don]].{{sfn|Kandaurov|1983|p=111}} Samokhin with comrade blew up a mill that provided bread to the [[Nazism|Nazis]]:<ref>{{cite web |last1=Tikhomirov |first1=V |title=Диверсанты из сельской школы |url=https://life.ru/p/879214 |website=[[Life.ru]] |access-date=22 June 2024 |language=ru |date=20 July 2016}}</ref> for three days they drove bags of burnt wheat to the mill, pretending to stand in line, and on the fourth they began to act. Catching the moment when the engine room became empty, they planted an anti-tank mine. The next day, the Nazis rolled barrels of fuel oil into the mill, after which the mine went off. The arson of warehouses on the banks of the Don took less time: after waiting for the only food guard to fall asleep, he and comrade set fire to the walls and doors doused with gasoline, after which they headed for the river.{{sfn|Kandaurov|1983|p=119-120}} |
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From 1945 he was a correspondent for "[[Komsomolskaya Pravda]]", from 1946 — a literary worker, head of the department of the newspaper "Leninskaya smena" in the city of Alma-Ata, and from 1947 to 1949 — a special correspondent for the newspaper "Kommunist" ([[Jambyl Region]]). From 1949 he lived and worked in Frunze. |
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Later, Panchishkina instructed him to send signals with a rocket launcher for [[Soviet Air Forces]] flying over the village towards Nazi targets.{{sfn|Kandaurov|1983|p=139}} In the first half of November 1942, Claudia Panchishkina and Tamara Artemova were betrayed and shot by the Nazis — realizing that they would soon be discovered, they warned the rest of the underground in advance, thanks to which Samokhin was able to escape.{{sfn|Kandaurov|1983|p=143}} |
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From 1949 to 1961, he was a literary officer, head of a department in the editorial office of the newspaper "Komsomolets Kirghizii", from 1961 to 1963 — a literary employee in the editorial office of the journal "Bloknot agitatora".{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} |
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=== After the war. Moving to Kyrgyzstan === |
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He took up literary work in 1944. The first book of the writer was the story "Razvedchitsa Klavdiya Panchishkina", published in 1952 in Volgograd.{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} |
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[[File:Fedor Samohin 1960.jpg|In the 1960s|thumb|right|275px]] |
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After the liberation of the Nizhne-Chirsky district from occupation, Samokhin was appointed editor of the regional newspaper ''Kolkhoznik Dona'' - his first stories ''Na perekate'', ''Garmon'', ''Provody'' and others were also published there.{{sfn|Samaganov|1969|p=386}} In 1944, he attended a course for newspaper workers in Moscow; in the same year he became a member of the [[CPSU(b)]].{{sfn|Samaganov|1969|p=386-387}}{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} Since 1945, he was a correspondent for ''[[Komsomolskaya Pravda]]'', and a year later a literary employee, head of the department of the ''[[Ekspress-K|Leninskaya Smena]]'' newspaper in [[Almaty]]. From 1947 to 1949 he was a special correspondent for the newspaper ''Kommunist'' ([[Jambyl Region]]).{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} |
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In 1947, he married Samokhina (Koroneva) Raisa Ilyinichna.<ref name="Radio Azattyk">{{Cite web|lang=ru|url=https://rus.azattyk.org/a/30734697.html|title=Fedor Samokhin. Contribution to a treasure trove of multinational literature|website=Radio Azattyk (Kyrgyz service [[Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty]])|date=18 July 2020 |access-date=9 August 2020}}</ref> In 1949 he moved to [[Bishkek|Frunze]].{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}}{{sfn|Djolbulakova|2018|pp=59}} In 1950 he entered the [[Kyrgyz State Pedagogical Institute]], from which he graduated in 1955. From 1949 to 1961 he was a literary staff member, head of the editorial department of the newspaper ''Komsomolets Kirghizii''; from 1961, for two years, he was a literary staff member in the editorial office of the magazine ''Bloknot Agitatora''.{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} |
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A special place among the works created by the writer was occupied by the story "Cholponbai", published for the first time in 1958 by the publishing house "[[Molodaya Gvardiya (publisher)|Molodaya Gvardiya]]", dedicated to the immortal feat of the Hero of the Soviet Union Cholponbai Tuleberdiev;{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} in the same year he was admitted to the Union of Writers of the USSR and received recognition in the literary society of Kyrgyzstan. Samokhin got acquainted with writers, poets and other cultural figures such as [[Aaly Tokombaev]], [[Chingiz Aitmatov]], [[Mikhail Sholokhov]] and others.<ref name="Radio Azattyk">{{Cite web|lang=ru|url=https://rus.azattyk.org/a/30734697.html|title=Fedor Samokhin. Contribution to a treasure trove of multinational literature|website=Radio Azattyk (Kyrgyz service [[Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty]])|accessdate=2020-08-09}}</ref> |
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He did not have both legs and he moved on prosthetics — but he traveled a lot around Kyrgyzstan, got acquainted with the life and everyday life of [[Suusamyr Valley|Susamyr]] livestock breeders, builders of the [[Toktogul Dam]], oil workers from Izbaskent, cotton growers of [[Aravan, Kyrgyzstan|Aravan]], hydrologists of [[Orto-Tokoy Reservoir|Orto-Tokoy]] and fishermen of [[Issyk-Kul]], the miners of [[Kyzyl-Kyya]] and the beet growers of the Kemin Valley, who later became the heroes of his works such as the stories ''My Father's House'' (''Dom moyego ottsa''), ''Three Islands'' (''Tri ostrova'') and ''Chui's Spills'' (''Chuiskiye razlivy'').<ref name="Imshenetsky">{{Cite journal|last=Imshenetsky|first=N.|date=1968|title=To the 50th anniversary of Fedor Samokhin|journal=Komsomolets Kirgizii|pages=4}}</ref> |
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Took part in the translation and publication of the collection of works by Kyrgyz front-line writers "Zveni, komuz!" (1985).{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} |
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The Samokhin family has three children — a daughter and two sons. Daughter Victoria died of a serious illness, son Vladimir died tragically in 1969 in the [[Tian Shan|Tien Shan]]. The second son, Alexey, settled in the [[Russian Far East]].<ref name="Radio Azattyk" /> |
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In 1992, after a long illness, Fyodor Ivanovich Samokhin died in Bishkek.<ref name="Radio Azattyk" /> |
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In 1992, after a long illness, Fedor Samokhin died in Bishkek.<ref name="Radio Azattyk" /> After the writer's death, the editorial board of the ''Literary Kyrgyzstan'' magazine, the Association of Russian and Russian-speaking writers of the Union of Writers of Kyrgyzstan noted that "both Russian and Kyrgyz readers are proud of him as their countryman" and he "will forever remain a bright memory in the hearts of his readers and colleagues in pen".<ref>{{cite journal |title=Fedor Ivanovich Samokhin |journal=[[Vecherniy Bishkek]] |date=July 1992 |page=7}}</ref> |
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== Creative activity == |
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The beginning of his professional writing activity is considered 1949 and the beginning of work in the newspaper "Komsomolets Kirghizii". Fyodor Samokhin did not have both legs and moved on prostheses, but he nevertheless often travelled a lot around the republic, got acquainted with interesting people — livestock breeders of Susamyr, builders of the [[Toktogul Dam|Toktogul hydroelectric power station]], oil workers from Izbaskent, cotton growers of [[Aravan, Kyrgyzstan|Aravan]], hydrologists of [[Orto-Tokoy]] and the fishermen of [[Issyk-Kul]], the miners of [[Kyzyl-Kiya]] and the beet growers of the Kemin valley, who later became heroes of his works such as the stories "Dom moyego ottsa", "Tri ostrova", "Rodina, ya vernus'!" and "Chuiskiye razlivy".<ref name="Imshenetsky">{{Cite journal|last=Imshenetsky|first=N.|date=1968|title=To the 50th anniversary of Fyodor Samokhin|journal=Komsomolets Kirgizii|pages=4}}</ref> |
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== Legacy == |
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The novel "Rodina, ya vernus'!" is dedicated to the dramatic struggle of the USSR for the return of Soviet children who remained in the territory occupied by the fascist forces and were taken into slavery. The main character of the story, a boy Esen Osmonov, who had been kidnapped and transferred to England by that time, was found and returned home by employees of the [[Embassy of Russia, London|Soviet embassy in London]].<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.ru/books?hl=ru&id=FgUqAQAAIAAJ&dq&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=%D0%A4%D0%B5%D0%B4%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%B0+%D0%A1%D0%B0%D0%BC%D0%BE%D1%85%D0%B8%D0%BD%D0%B0|title=Literaturnyĭ Kirgizstan|date=1981|publisher=Ala-Too|language=ru}}</ref> |
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=== Critical perception of the Soviet period === |
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With the arrival in the literary space of the [[Kyrgyz SSR]], the "writer of the Don expanses" (as Samokhin was later called in the ''[[Literaturnaya Gazeta]]''<ref>{{cite journal |title=F. I. Samokhinu — 60 let |journal=Literaturnaya Gazeta |date=March 8, 1978}}</ref>), was met favorably: writer [[Shukurbek Beyshenaliev]] described him as "a gifted author of fiction writings <...> diligently, lovingly engaged in literary work".<ref name="LK">{{Cite web|lang=ru|url=https://facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid0aGjb2H6uv1GbGo8U6NEqAjREdpz6oe6tTseTAxkiKewpAR4WQDFAMMqRc8ARpiUtl&id=100063586302772|title=Samokhin Fedor Ivanovich, 1918 g. r., prose writer|website=Literaturnyy Kyrgyzstan|access-date=29 June 2024}}</ref> The novelist Nikolai Udalov believed that despite the shortcomings of his works, they have "certain artistic merits", help "to recognize some aspects of our lives" and, as the poet Sooronbai Dzhusuyev later noted, forcing readers to appreciate peaceful life.<ref name="LK" /> The novelist and playwright Mikhail Aksakov noted his constant creative search, the desire to find different artistic solutions.<ref name="LK" /> Writer Nikolai Chekmenev said: |
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<blockquote>It is quite good that Samokhin, before taking up a large canvas, worked for many years in a newspaper, where he printed short stories. This accustomed him to simplicity, clarity and brevity of the syllable, to thoughtful work on the language.<ref name="LK" /></blockquote> |
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The main theme of Fyodor Ivanovich's creativity was the theme of the exploits of the Soviet people during the Great Patriotic War. His first literary work in this field was the story "Razvedchitsa Klavdiya Panchishkina" about a fighter of the partisan detachment of the Nizhne-Chirsky region. A special place in this series is occupied by the story "Cholponbai", which has gone through several reprints and received many reviews, including from literary critic and Corresponding Member of the [[National Academy of Sciences of the Kyrgyz Republic]] Tendik Askarov.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Askarov|first=Tendik|date=1958|title=The story of a hero|journal=Komsomolets Kirghizii|pages=3}}</ref> |
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According to the former President of the Kyrgyzstan Writers Union Tendik Askarov, Samokhin's works are considered an "inseparable part of the literary process in the republic".{{sfn|Askarov|1982|pp=286}} |
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The story was written for the 40th anniversary of the [[Komsomol]] and published by the [[Kyrgyz State Publishing House]] and an abridged version of the "[[Molodaya Gvardiya (publisher)|Molodaya Gvardiya]]". When writing it, Fyodor Samokhin visited the homeland of Cholponbai Tuleberdiev, traveled to the places of battles in which he took part, met in person, and got acquainted by correspondence with his friends and associates.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Ivanov|first=N.|date=1958|title=The story of the immortal feat of Cholponbai|journal=[[Kommunist]]|pages=59–63}}</ref><ref name="Imshenetsky" /> |
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In the encyclopedia by the [[Kyrgyz Academy of Sciences|Academy of Sciences of the Kyrgyz SSR]] "Frunze" Abdygany Erkebaev attributed F. I. Samokhin to Russian writers who played "a significant role in the literary life of the republic and its capital".{{sfn|Erkebaev|1984|pp=44-45}} |
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In 2014, an excerpt from the story "Cholponbai" was included in the collection of documents and materials about Cholponbai Tuleberdiev, found in the Central State Archives of the Kyrgyz Republic, the Central State Archive of Political Documentation of the Kyrgyz Republic, Talas Regional State Archives, The Cholponbai Tuleberdiev Memorial Museum and in the Kara-Buurinsky united regional military registration and enlistment office, under the title "Podvig yego bessmerten...".<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://pobeda.srs.kg/download?file=Чолпонбай%20Тулебердиев.pdf7967737911916396080Чолпонбай%20Тулебердиев.pdf |
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|title=Podvig yego bessmerten...(About the feat of Hero of the Soviet Union Cholponbai Tuleberdiev)|publisher=Uluu toolor|year=2014|location=[[Bishkek]]|pages=97}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=K Dnyu Pobedy izdan sbornik dokumentov o podvige Cholponbaya Tuleberdiyeva|url=https://www.vb.kg/doc/272200_k_dnu_pobedy_izdan_sbornik_dokymentov_o_podvige_cholponbaia_tyleberdieva.html|access-date=2021-01-12|website=Vecherniy Bishkek}}</ref> In 2019, the story was digitized by the Osh Regional Library named after Togktogul Satylganov,<ref>{{Cite web|title=Чолпонбай|url=http://neb.kg/index.php/ru/home-ru-ru/oshskaya-oblast/item/1673-cholponbaj|access-date=2021-01-12|website=National Electronic Library of Kyrgyz Republic}}</ref> and in 2020 it was included in the section with materials from the Ministry of Education and Science of the Kyrgyz Republic.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Cholponbai / Electronic library of open educational materials of Kyrgyzstan|url=https://lib.kg/ru/?cat=7&s=%D0%A7%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%BF%D0%BE%D0%BD%D0%B1%D0%B0%D0%B9|access-date=2021-01-12|website=lib.kg}}</ref> |
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=== Reviews of contemporaries. Memory === |
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Fyodor Samokhin was a regular author to the art and socio-political magazine "Literary Kyrgyzstan". Together with other writers (Sergei Fiksin, Nikolai Imshenetsky, Anatoly Bortsov, Viktor Shvemberger and others), who also chose Kyrgyzstan as their second homeland, he created the artistic world of Russian literature, which became an integral part of the spiritual world of the republic's ethnic Slavs.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Khlypenko|first=G|date=2009|title=Slavyanskiy mir v zhurnale "Literaturnyy Kyrgyzstan"|url=http://www.literatura.kg/uploads/lk_1_2009.pdf|journal=Literaturnyy Kyrgyzstan|language=ru|pages=137|via=}}</ref> |
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According to philologists G. N. Khlypenko, R. D. Bulatova (from the [[Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University]]) and C. A. Dzholbulakova (from the [[Kyrgyz Technical University]]), F. I. Samokhin was among the creators of lieutenant and village prose in Kyrgyzstan.{{sfn|Khlypenko|Bulatova|2004|p=41, 43}}{{sfn|Djolbulakova|2018|pp=61}} Ph.D. in Philology Almazbek Alymkulov considers Samokhin to be representatives of [[Literary realism|realism]], and his works to be examples of the battle genre in Kyrgyz literature, which made a "great contribution" to this literary direction. At the same time, Alymkulov noted his "multifaceted, complex and contradictory" depiction of the heroism of his characters, their similarity in this regard to the images recreated by [[Mikhail Sholokhov]], [[Alexander Bek]], [[Vasily Grossman]], [[Konstantin Simonov]], [[Ilya Ehrenburg]] and others.{{sfn|Alymkulov|2014|pp=3-5, 13, 22}}{{sfn|Alieva|2023|pp=160}} |
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Associate professor of the Department of Theory and History of Russian and Foreign Literature of the [[Kyrgyz National University]] D. T. Burzhubaeva ranked Fedor Samokhin among the "talented" writers who sought to capture the versatility of life.{{sfn|Burzhubaeva|2023|pp=59-60}} Literary critic Papan Duyshonbaev considers him the author of "calendar prose", that is, works mainly based on the political and public agenda. Duyshonbaev believes that in Samokhin's prose there are "typical" images of workers, peasants, intellectuals, mainly the topics of the [[population transfer in the Soviet Union|population transfer]], [[Collectivization in the Soviet Union|collectivization]], the creation of [[sovkhoz]], [[Industrialization in the Soviet Union|industrialization]] and [[Virgin Lands campaign|land development]] are raised.{{sfn|Duyshonbaev|2022|pp=14}} |
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Other works of the author on the theme of war were the stories "Malchik iz Stalingrada" and "Don — reka partizanskaya".<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Samokhin |first1= F. | title = Izbrannoe | location = Frunze| publisher = Kyrgyzstan | year = 1978 }}</ref> |
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In 2021, the [[National Library of the Kyrgyz Republic]] hosted an exhibition of his books "Skazat' lyudyam pravdu!" ("To Tell People the Truth!") dedicated to the 103rd anniversary of the writer's birth.<ref>{{cite web |title=В Нацбиблиотеке представлена выставка советского писателя Федора Самохина |url=https://culture.akipress.org/news:1682062 |website=[[AKIpress News Agency]] |access-date=1 July 2024 |date=February 13, 2021}}</ref> |
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In the work of Fyodor Ivanovich, essays also used the predominant direction. One of the works in this genre, entitled "Krov'yu serdtsa", was published in the collection of works by Soviet Kyrgyz writers "Geroyi surovykh let". The book also includes the works of Aaly Tokombayev, [[Chinghiz Aitmatov|Chingiz Aitmatov]], Sooronbai Zhusuev and other writers.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Heroes of the harsh years [Text]: [Stories]: [Translation] - Search RSL|url=https://search.rsl.ru/en/record/01006081417|access-date=2020-08-10|website=search.rsl.ru}}</ref> The essay was also included in the collection entitled "Molodye geroyi Velikhoy Otechestvennoy voyny", compiled by [[Vasil Bykov]].<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Sostaviteli: E. I. Gorelik|first1=L. P. Aleksandrova, R. A. Evseeva|url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/katalog-zhzl-1890-2010/oclc/663741433&referer=brief_results|title=Katalog "ZhZL": 1890-2010.|last2=Aleksandrova|first2=L. P|last3=Gorelik|first3=E. I|last4=Evseeva|first4=R. A|date=2010|publisher=[[Molodaya Gvardiya (publisher)|Molodaya Gvardiya]]|isbn=978-5-235-03337-5|location=Moscow|language=Russian|oclc=663741433}}</ref> Also, the essay was included in the collection "In the name of the Motherland" by the Politizdat publishing house, compiled by the Soviet writer, journalist and Major General David Ortenberg.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.ru/books?hl=ru&id=kg51AAAAIAAJ&dq=&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=%D0%A4.+%D0%A1%D0%B0%D0%BC%D0%BE%D1%85%D0%B8%D0%BD|title=Во имя Родины|date=1968|publisher=Политиздат|language=ru}}</ref> |
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== |
== As Translator == |
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In 1968, he translated from Kyrgyz into Russian articles by Kasymaly Bayalinov "Nezabyvaemoe" and Zhoomart Bokonbaev "Velikiy pisatel' proletariata", telling about the meeting of Kyrgyz writers with [[Maxim Gorky]] during the [[First Congress of Soviet Writers]]. His translations were included in the collection "Dumy o Gorkom", which in 2021 was included in the eighth volume of the memoir heritage of the post-war period of the history of the USSR from the project of the [[Russian State Library]] and the [[State Public Historical Library of Russia]] "Sovetskoye obshchestvo v vospominaniyakh i dnevnikakh".<ref>{{cite book |title=Sovetskoye obshchestvo v vospominaniyakh i dnevnikakh|date=15 May 2022 |publisher=Publishing house of the [[St. Petersburg Institute of History of the Russian Academy of Sciences]] "Nestor-Istoriya" |location=St. Petersburg |isbn=978-5-04-175771-7 |page=276 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ODadDwAAQBAJ|language=ru}}</ref> In 1985, he took part in the translation and publication of a collection of works by Kyrgyz front-line writers “Zveni, komuz!”.{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} |
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In 1947 he was married to Samokhina (Koroneva) Raisa Ilinichna. The Samokhin family had three children — a daughter and two sons. Daughter Victoria died of a serious illness, son Vladimir died under tragic circumstances in 1969 in the [[Tien-Shan Mountain]], the second son Aleksey lives in the [[Russian Far East]].<ref name="Radio Azattyk" /><ref>{{Cite web|title=Fyodor Samokhin|url=https://fantlab.ru/autor67963|access-date=2020-08-10|website=FantLab.ru|language=ru}}</ref> |
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== Works == |
== Works == |
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=== Novels === |
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{{refbegin|2}} |
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* ''The Intelligence Agent Claudia Panchishkina'' (''Razvedchitsa Klavdiya Panchishkina'', 1952) |
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;Selected editions |
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* ''[[The Boy from Stalingrad (novel)|The Boy from Stalingrad]]'' (''Mal'chik iz Stalingrada'', 1954) |
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* "Razvedchik Klavdiya Panchishkina" (Volgograd, 1952) |
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* ''Cholponbai'' ("Kyrgyz State Publishing House", 1958) |
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* "Malchik iz Stalingrada" ("Regional book publishing", 1954) |
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* ''Cholponbai'' ("[[Molodaya Gvardiya (publisher)|Molodaya Gvardiya]]", 1958) |
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* "Cholponbai": |
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* ''Cholponbai'' ("Mektep", 1982) |
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* ''My Father's House'' (''Dom moyego ottsa'', 1963) |
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# "Cholponbai" ("[[Molodaya Gvardiya (publisher)|Molodaya Gvardiya]]", 1958) |
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* ''Chui's Spills'' (''Chuiskiye razlivy'', 1968; {{OCLC|254078203}}) |
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# "Cholponbai" ("Mektep", 1982) |
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* ''Three Islands'' (''Tri ostrova'', 1975) |
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* "Dom moyego ottsa" ("Kyrgyz State Publishing House", 1963) |
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* ''[[Homeland, I'll Be Back!]]'' (''Rodina, ya vernus'!'', 1975) |
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* "Chuiskiye razlivy" ("Kyrgyzstan", 1968) |
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* "Rodina, ya vernus'!" ("Kyrgyzstan", 1975) |
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=== Short stories === |
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* ''Where Rivers Meet'' (''Gde slivayutsya reki'', 1956) |
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* "Izbrannoe" ("Kyrgyzstan", 1978) |
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* ''Bleeding Heart'' (''Krov'yu serdtsa'', 1968) |
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* "Povesti i rasskazy" ("Kyrgyzstan", 1988) |
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* ''Three Islands'' (''Tri ostrova'', 1975) |
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{{refend}} |
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* ''The Boy and the Wolf'' (Mal'chik i volk, 1978) |
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* ''Eternal Snow'' (Netayushchiy sneg, 1989) |
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=== Collections of works === |
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* ''Selected Works'' (''Izbrannoe'', 1978; {{OCLC|254083273}}) |
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* ''Novels and Short Stories'' (''Povesti i rasskazy'', 1988; {{ISBN|5-655-00113-6}}) |
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== Honours == |
== Honours == |
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* [[Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} |
* [[Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=441}} |
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* [[Jubilee Medal "Twenty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
* [[Jubilee Medal "Twenty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
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* Badge "25 years of victory in the Great Patriotic War"{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
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* [[Jubilee Medal "Thirty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
* [[Jubilee Medal "Thirty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
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* [[Jubilee Medal "Forty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
* [[Jubilee Medal "Forty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
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* [[Jubilee Medal "50 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
* [[Jubilee Medal "50 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
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* [[Jubilee Medal "60 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
* [[Jubilee Medal "60 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"]]{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
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* Three |
* Three Ddiplomas of honor of the Presidium of the [[Supreme Soviet of the Kirghiz SSR]].{{sfn|Botoyarov|1989|p=442}} |
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==References== |
== References == |
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=== Citations === |
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{{Reflist}} |
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{{reflist|20em}} |
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=== Sources === |
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{{refbegin|30em}} |
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* {{Cite book |
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| last1 = Samaganov |
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| first1 = Jenbai |
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| title = Pisateli Sovetskogo Kirgizstana |
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| location = Frunze |
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| publisher = Kyrgyzstan |
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| year = 1969 |
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}} |
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* {{Cite book |
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|last1=Oruzbaeva |
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|first1= B. |
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| title = Kyrgyz Soviet Encyclopedia |
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| location = Frunze |
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| publisher = Main editorial office of the Kyrgyz Encyclopedia |
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| year = 1982 |
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}} |
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* {{cite journal |
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|last1=Kandaurov |
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|first1=I |
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|editor1-last=Ivanov |
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|editor1-first=A |
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|editor1-link=Anatoli Ivanov (writer) |
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|title=Inache oni ne mogli |
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|journal=Molodaya Gvardiya |
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|date=1982 |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HCk0AAAAIAAJ&q=Федора+Самохина |
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}} |
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* {{cite book |
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| last1=Askarov |
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| first1=T |
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| title=Esteticheskoye postizheniye mira |
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| publisher=Publishing House "Kyrgyzstan" |
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| year = 1982 |
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| location=Frunze |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aNPVAAAAMAAJ&q=ф.+самохина+аскаров |
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}} |
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* {{cite book |
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== Bibliography == |
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| last1=Kandaurov |
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* {{Cite book |last1=Samaganov |first1= Jenbai | title = Writers of Soviet Kyrgyzstan (biobibliographic reference) | location = Frunze| publisher = Kyrgyzstan | year = 1969 }} |
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| first1=I |
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* {{Cite book |last1=Botoyarov |first1= K. | title = Writers of Soviet Kyrgyzstan (biobibliographic reference) | location = Frunze| publisher = Adabiyat | year = 1989 | isbn = 5-660-00084-3 }} |
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| title=Stoykost |
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| editor1-last=Tsvetkov |
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| editor1-first=B. M |
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| publisher=Nizhne-Volzhsky book publishing house |
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| year = 1983 |
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| location=Volgograd |
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}} |
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* {{Cite book |
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| last1 =Botoyarov |
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| first1 = K. |
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| title = Pisateli Sovetskogo Kirgizstana |
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| location = Frunze |
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| publisher = Adabiyat |
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| year = 1989 |
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| isbn = 5-660-00084-3 |
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}} |
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* {{Cite book |
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| last1= Yaskovets |
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| first1= G. |
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| title = Lyudi iz legendy : o geroicheskikh podvigakh komsomol'tsev i molodezhi Stalingrada |
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| location = Volgograd |
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| publisher = Print |
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| year = 2006 |
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| isbn = 5-94424-062-8 |
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}} |
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* {{cite journal |
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|last1=Djolbulakova |
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|first1=Ch. |
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|title=Fornation and Development of Russian Prose in Kyrgyzstan: Historiographical Discourse |
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|journal=Vestnik KRSU |
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|location = Bishkek |
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|volume=18 |
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|pages=57–62 |
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|url=http://www.lib.krsu.edu.kg/uploads/files/public/9849.pdf |
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|date=2018 |
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|issn=1694-500X |
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}} |
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* {{cite book |
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|last1=Khlypenko |
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|first1=G. |
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|last2=Bulatova |
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|first2=R. |
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|title=The context of Kyrgyz and Russian literature in Kyrgyzstan |
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|date=2004 |
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|publisher=KRSU |
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|location=Bishkek |
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|isbn=5-8355-1350-X |
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|page=204 |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zFcHAQAAMAAJ&q=Самохин |
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}} |
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* {{cite book |
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|last1=Alymkulov |
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|first1=A |
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|title=National features of the heroic in Russian and Kyrgyz military prose: abstract. Thesis... of Candidate of Philological Sciences |
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|date=2014 |
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|publisher=Kyrgyz National University |
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|location=Bishkek |
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|page= |
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|url=https://stepen.vak.kg/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/Alymkulov-Almazbek-Abylkasymovich-1.pdf |
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}} |
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* {{cite book |
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|last1=Alieva |
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|first1=Kh |
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|title=The origin and evolution of the Kyrgyz military novel |
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|date=2023 |
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|publisher=[[Osh State University]] |
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|location=Bishkek |
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|isbn=978-9967-03-203-3 |
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|pages=160 |
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|url=https://base.oshsu.kg/resurs/document/PDF-20230510124028-frf.pdf#page=149 |
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}} |
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* {{cite book |
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|last1=Erkebaev |
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|first1=A |
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|editor1-last=Oruzbaeva |
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|editor1-first=B |
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|title=Frunze : Encyclopedia |
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|date=1984 |
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|publisher=Glavnaya redaktsiya Kirgizskoy Sovetskoy Entsiklopedii |
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|location=Frunze |
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|pages=44–45 |
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|url=http://cslnaskr.krena.kg/collections/uploads/%D0%A4%D1%80%D1%83%D0%BD%D0%B7%D0%B5......1984.pdf |
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|chapter=Literaturnaya zhizn' |
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}} |
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* {{cite journal |
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|last1=Duyshonbaev |
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|first1=P. |
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|title=The modern meaning of moral and ethical values in "Manas" |
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|journal=International Scientific Journal "Epos" |
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|location = Bishkek |
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|volume= |
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|pages=14 |
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|url=https://epos.rads-doi.org/index.php/ep/article/view/3/1 |
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|date=2022 |
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|issue=9/1 |
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|issn=1694-8564 |
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}} |
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* {{cite journal |
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|last1=Burzhubaeva |
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|first1=D. |
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|title=The past and present of russian literature in Kyrgyzstan |
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|journal=Russkoe Slovo V Kyrgyzstane |
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|location = Bishkek |
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|volume=18 |
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|pages=59–60 |
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|url=https://www.krsu.edu.kg/images/periodicals/2023-06/russ_slovo_N_1_2023.pdf |
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|date=2023 |
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|issn=1694-6820 |
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}} |
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{{refend}} |
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== External links == |
== External links == |
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{{Sister project links|wikt=|mw=no|d=Q65163420|b=no|v=no|s=no|voy=no|n=no}} |
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[http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/display.do?tabs=moreTab&ct=display&fn=search&doc=BLL01007306255&indx=1&recIds=BLL01007306255&recIdxs=0&elementId=0&renderMode=poppedOut&displayMode=full&frbrVersion=&frbg=&&dscnt=0&scp.scps=scope%3A%28BLCONTENT%29&vl(2084770704UI0)=any&tb=t&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&srt=rank&tab=local_tab&dum=true&vl(freeText0)=Samokhin%2C%20F&dstmp=1597056132627 Samokhin's books] in the [[British Library]] |
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* [https://bll01.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/search?query=any,contains,Fedor%20Samokhin&tab=LibraryCatalog&search_scope=Not_BL_Suppress&vid=44BL_INST:BLL01&lang=en&offset=0 Books by Fedor Samokhin] in the [[British Library]] |
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* [https://hollis.harvard.edu/primo-explore/search?tab=books&search_scope=default_scope&vid=HVD2&query=lsr02,contains,11408773 Books by Fedor Samokhin] in the [[Harvard Library]] |
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{{Authority control}} |
{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Samokhin, |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Samokhin, Fedor Ivanovich}} |
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[[Category:1918 births]] |
[[Category:1918 births]] |
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[[Category:1992 deaths]] |
[[Category:1992 deaths]] |
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[[Category:People from Don Host Oblast]] |
[[Category:People from Don Host Oblast]] |
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[[Category:Communist Party of the Soviet Union members]] |
[[Category:Communist Party of the Soviet Union members]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Soviet spies]] |
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[[Category:World War II spies]] |
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[[Category:World War II spies for the Soviet Union]] |
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[[Category:Kyrgyz National University alumni]] |
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[[Category:Soviet short story writers]] |
[[Category:Soviet short story writers]] |
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[[Category:20th-century Russian short story writers]] |
[[Category:20th-century Russian short story writers]] |
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[[Category:Russian-language writers]] |
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[[Category:Kazakhstani journalists]] |
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[[Category:Kyrgyzstani journalists]] |
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[[Category:Soviet newspaper editors]] |
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[[Category:Kyrgyz-language writers]] |
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[[Category:Russian male novelists]] |
[[Category:Russian male novelists]] |
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[[Category:Soviet novelists]] |
[[Category:Soviet novelists]] |
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[[Category:Soviet male writers]] |
[[Category:Soviet male writers]] |
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[[Category:Kyrgyzstani writers]] |
[[Category:20th-century Kyrgyzstani writers]] |
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[[Category:Soviet translators]] |
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[[Category:Translators to Russian]] |
Latest revision as of 16:37, 1 December 2024
Fedor Samokhin | |
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Born | Fedor Ivanovich Samokhin 12 February 1918 Second Don District, Don Host Oblast, Russian Soviet Republic |
Died | 17 July 1992 Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan | (aged 74)
Occupation |
|
Language | Russian, Kyrgyz |
Education | Kyrgyz National University |
Genre |
|
Literary movement | Realism |
Years active | 1949—1992 |
Spouse |
Raisa Ilyinichna Samokhina
(m. 1947) |
Children |
|
Signature | |
Fedor Ivanovich Samokhin (Russian: Фёдор Иванович Самохин; 12 February 1918 – 17 July 1992) was a Soviet-Kyrgyz writer of prose, journalist and translator, member of the Union of writers of the USSR (since 1958). One of the founders of lieutenant and village prose in Kyrgyz literature.
His first book, The Boy from Stalingrad (Mal'chik iz Stalingrada, 1954), about the meeting in Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan of the evacuated population from the western regions of the Soviet Union during the Eastern Front, was awarded the First degree Prize of the Central Committee of the Komsomol and the Union of Writers of Kyrgyzstan, however it later received criticism in the press of the Kyrgyz SSR because of her "ideological depravity". His landmark book Cholponbai (1958) about the life of the Hero of the Soviet Union Cholponbai Tuleberdiev, published in the Kyrgyz State Publishing House and the Molodaya Gvardiya, is considered by researchers to be examples of the battle genre in Kyrgyz literature; revised into a sketch Krov'yu serdtsa (Bleeding Heart), it was included in the collection Young Heroes of the Great Patriotic War (Molodye geroi Velikoy Otechestvennoy voyny, 1970), published in the series The Lives of Remarkable People. His last work on military subjects and in his work as a whole was the novel Homeland, I'll Be Back! (Rodina, ya vernus'!) (1975), which tells how Soviet schoolchildren kidnapped by the Nazis are looking for a way to leave Germany to return home.
Life
[edit]Early years. The Eastern Front
[edit]Fedor Samokhin was born on khutor of Verkhne-Sadovsky of the Don Host Oblast of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic in the family of a poor peasant. In 1940, he graduated from the Nizhne-Chirskaya secondary school. He began his career in 1934 as an accountant at his native khutor, from 1940 to 1942 he worked as a senior accountant at the Nizhne-Chirsky fish point.[1]
After the outbreak of the Eastern Front, on the instructions of the Stalingrad obkom Komsomol from 1942 to 1943, he was a member of the bureau of the Nizhne-Chirsky underground Komsomol district committee, became a intelligence for the partisan detachment "Smertʹ fashyzmu! ".[2][3][4] Samokhin outlined his memories of the work of the detachment in the story The Intelligence Agent Claudia Panchishkina (1952), and his letter, later published in the magazine Molodaya Gvardiya in 1982, became the only surviving, according to historian Ivan Kandaurov , archival document about the work of the detachment in September 1942.[5]
His work in the detachment was reflected in Ivan Kandaurov's documentary stories Stoĭkostʹ (1983) and Inache oni ne mogli (1986). In them, Fedor Samokhin is characterized as a rural correspondent who is actively involved in the public life of the district. After the onset of the war, he did not follow his relatives across the Volga, but began to lead a hidden life. Soon, the head of the detachment, Claudia Panchishkina , proposed to include him in the detachment.[6]
In addition to intelligence work, he also participated in combat operations. To implement one of these, the head suggested creating several groups. The task of the group, which included Fedor Ivanovich, was to disable the steam mill and destroy grain warehouses on the left bank of the Don.[7] Samokhin with comrade blew up a mill that provided bread to the Nazis:[8] for three days they drove bags of burnt wheat to the mill, pretending to stand in line, and on the fourth they began to act. Catching the moment when the engine room became empty, they planted an anti-tank mine. The next day, the Nazis rolled barrels of fuel oil into the mill, after which the mine went off. The arson of warehouses on the banks of the Don took less time: after waiting for the only food guard to fall asleep, he and comrade set fire to the walls and doors doused with gasoline, after which they headed for the river.[9]
Later, Panchishkina instructed him to send signals with a rocket launcher for Soviet Air Forces flying over the village towards Nazi targets.[10] In the first half of November 1942, Claudia Panchishkina and Tamara Artemova were betrayed and shot by the Nazis — realizing that they would soon be discovered, they warned the rest of the underground in advance, thanks to which Samokhin was able to escape.[11]
After the war. Moving to Kyrgyzstan
[edit]After the liberation of the Nizhne-Chirsky district from occupation, Samokhin was appointed editor of the regional newspaper Kolkhoznik Dona - his first stories Na perekate, Garmon, Provody and others were also published there.[12] In 1944, he attended a course for newspaper workers in Moscow; in the same year he became a member of the CPSU(b).[13][1] Since 1945, he was a correspondent for Komsomolskaya Pravda, and a year later a literary employee, head of the department of the Leninskaya Smena newspaper in Almaty. From 1947 to 1949 he was a special correspondent for the newspaper Kommunist (Jambyl Region).[1]
In 1947, he married Samokhina (Koroneva) Raisa Ilyinichna.[14] In 1949 he moved to Frunze.[1][15] In 1950 he entered the Kyrgyz State Pedagogical Institute, from which he graduated in 1955. From 1949 to 1961 he was a literary staff member, head of the editorial department of the newspaper Komsomolets Kirghizii; from 1961, for two years, he was a literary staff member in the editorial office of the magazine Bloknot Agitatora.[1]
He did not have both legs and he moved on prosthetics — but he traveled a lot around Kyrgyzstan, got acquainted with the life and everyday life of Susamyr livestock breeders, builders of the Toktogul Dam, oil workers from Izbaskent, cotton growers of Aravan, hydrologists of Orto-Tokoy and fishermen of Issyk-Kul, the miners of Kyzyl-Kyya and the beet growers of the Kemin Valley, who later became the heroes of his works such as the stories My Father's House (Dom moyego ottsa), Three Islands (Tri ostrova) and Chui's Spills (Chuiskiye razlivy).[16]
The Samokhin family has three children — a daughter and two sons. Daughter Victoria died of a serious illness, son Vladimir died tragically in 1969 in the Tien Shan. The second son, Alexey, settled in the Russian Far East.[14]
In 1992, after a long illness, Fedor Samokhin died in Bishkek.[14] After the writer's death, the editorial board of the Literary Kyrgyzstan magazine, the Association of Russian and Russian-speaking writers of the Union of Writers of Kyrgyzstan noted that "both Russian and Kyrgyz readers are proud of him as their countryman" and he "will forever remain a bright memory in the hearts of his readers and colleagues in pen".[17]
Legacy
[edit]Critical perception of the Soviet period
[edit]With the arrival in the literary space of the Kyrgyz SSR, the "writer of the Don expanses" (as Samokhin was later called in the Literaturnaya Gazeta[18]), was met favorably: writer Shukurbek Beyshenaliev described him as "a gifted author of fiction writings <...> diligently, lovingly engaged in literary work".[19] The novelist Nikolai Udalov believed that despite the shortcomings of his works, they have "certain artistic merits", help "to recognize some aspects of our lives" and, as the poet Sooronbai Dzhusuyev later noted, forcing readers to appreciate peaceful life.[19] The novelist and playwright Mikhail Aksakov noted his constant creative search, the desire to find different artistic solutions.[19] Writer Nikolai Chekmenev said:
It is quite good that Samokhin, before taking up a large canvas, worked for many years in a newspaper, where he printed short stories. This accustomed him to simplicity, clarity and brevity of the syllable, to thoughtful work on the language.[19]
According to the former President of the Kyrgyzstan Writers Union Tendik Askarov, Samokhin's works are considered an "inseparable part of the literary process in the republic".[20]
In the encyclopedia by the Academy of Sciences of the Kyrgyz SSR "Frunze" Abdygany Erkebaev attributed F. I. Samokhin to Russian writers who played "a significant role in the literary life of the republic and its capital".[21]
Reviews of contemporaries. Memory
[edit]According to philologists G. N. Khlypenko, R. D. Bulatova (from the Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University) and C. A. Dzholbulakova (from the Kyrgyz Technical University), F. I. Samokhin was among the creators of lieutenant and village prose in Kyrgyzstan.[22][23] Ph.D. in Philology Almazbek Alymkulov considers Samokhin to be representatives of realism, and his works to be examples of the battle genre in Kyrgyz literature, which made a "great contribution" to this literary direction. At the same time, Alymkulov noted his "multifaceted, complex and contradictory" depiction of the heroism of his characters, their similarity in this regard to the images recreated by Mikhail Sholokhov, Alexander Bek, Vasily Grossman, Konstantin Simonov, Ilya Ehrenburg and others.[24][25]
Associate professor of the Department of Theory and History of Russian and Foreign Literature of the Kyrgyz National University D. T. Burzhubaeva ranked Fedor Samokhin among the "talented" writers who sought to capture the versatility of life.[26] Literary critic Papan Duyshonbaev considers him the author of "calendar prose", that is, works mainly based on the political and public agenda. Duyshonbaev believes that in Samokhin's prose there are "typical" images of workers, peasants, intellectuals, mainly the topics of the population transfer, collectivization, the creation of sovkhoz, industrialization and land development are raised.[27]
In 2021, the National Library of the Kyrgyz Republic hosted an exhibition of his books "Skazat' lyudyam pravdu!" ("To Tell People the Truth!") dedicated to the 103rd anniversary of the writer's birth.[28]
As Translator
[edit]In 1968, he translated from Kyrgyz into Russian articles by Kasymaly Bayalinov "Nezabyvaemoe" and Zhoomart Bokonbaev "Velikiy pisatel' proletariata", telling about the meeting of Kyrgyz writers with Maxim Gorky during the First Congress of Soviet Writers. His translations were included in the collection "Dumy o Gorkom", which in 2021 was included in the eighth volume of the memoir heritage of the post-war period of the history of the USSR from the project of the Russian State Library and the State Public Historical Library of Russia "Sovetskoye obshchestvo v vospominaniyakh i dnevnikakh".[29] In 1985, he took part in the translation and publication of a collection of works by Kyrgyz front-line writers “Zveni, komuz!”.[1]
Works
[edit]Novels
[edit]- The Intelligence Agent Claudia Panchishkina (Razvedchitsa Klavdiya Panchishkina, 1952)
- The Boy from Stalingrad (Mal'chik iz Stalingrada, 1954)
- Cholponbai ("Kyrgyz State Publishing House", 1958)
- Cholponbai ("Molodaya Gvardiya", 1958)
- Cholponbai ("Mektep", 1982)
- My Father's House (Dom moyego ottsa, 1963)
- Chui's Spills (Chuiskiye razlivy, 1968; OCLC 254078203)
- Three Islands (Tri ostrova, 1975)
- Homeland, I'll Be Back! (Rodina, ya vernus'!, 1975)
Short stories
[edit]- Where Rivers Meet (Gde slivayutsya reki, 1956)
- Bleeding Heart (Krov'yu serdtsa, 1968)
- Three Islands (Tri ostrova, 1975)
- The Boy and the Wolf (Mal'chik i volk, 1978)
- Eternal Snow (Netayushchiy sneg, 1989)
Collections of works
[edit]- Selected Works (Izbrannoe, 1978; OCLC 254083273)
- Novels and Short Stories (Povesti i rasskazy, 1988; ISBN 5-655-00113-6)
Honours
[edit]- Medal "For the Defence of Stalingrad"[1]
- Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin"[1]
- Jubilee Medal "Twenty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945"[30]
- Jubilee Medal "Thirty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945"[30]
- Jubilee Medal "Forty Years of Victory in the Great Patriotic War 1941–1945"[30]
- Jubilee Medal "50 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"[30]
- Jubilee Medal "60 Years of the Armed Forces of the USSR"[30]
- Three Ddiplomas of honor of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Kirghiz SSR.[30]
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h Botoyarov 1989, p. 441.
- ^ Oruzbaeva 1982, p. 374.
- ^ Kandaurov 1983, p. 100.
- ^ Yaskovets 2006, p. 193.
- ^ Kandaurov 1982, p. 149.
- ^ Kandaurov 1983, p. 97-98, 100-102, 106-107.
- ^ Kandaurov 1983, p. 111.
- ^ Tikhomirov, V (20 July 2016). "Диверсанты из сельской школы". Life.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 22 June 2024.
- ^ Kandaurov 1983, p. 119-120.
- ^ Kandaurov 1983, p. 139.
- ^ Kandaurov 1983, p. 143.
- ^ Samaganov 1969, p. 386.
- ^ Samaganov 1969, p. 386-387.
- ^ a b c "Fedor Samokhin. Contribution to a treasure trove of multinational literature". Radio Azattyk (Kyrgyz service Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty) (in Russian). 18 July 2020. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
- ^ Djolbulakova 2018, pp. 59.
- ^ Imshenetsky, N. (1968). "To the 50th anniversary of Fedor Samokhin". Komsomolets Kirgizii: 4.
- ^ "Fedor Ivanovich Samokhin". Vecherniy Bishkek: 7. July 1992.
- ^ "F. I. Samokhinu — 60 let". Literaturnaya Gazeta. 8 March 1978.
- ^ a b c d "Samokhin Fedor Ivanovich, 1918 g. r., prose writer". Literaturnyy Kyrgyzstan (in Russian). Retrieved 29 June 2024.
- ^ Askarov 1982, pp. 286.
- ^ Erkebaev 1984, pp. 44–45.
- ^ Khlypenko & Bulatova 2004, p. 41, 43.
- ^ Djolbulakova 2018, pp. 61.
- ^ Alymkulov 2014, pp. 3–5, 13, 22.
- ^ Alieva 2023, pp. 160.
- ^ Burzhubaeva 2023, pp. 59–60.
- ^ Duyshonbaev 2022, pp. 14.
- ^ "В Нацбиблиотеке представлена выставка советского писателя Федора Самохина". AKIpress News Agency. 13 February 2021. Retrieved 1 July 2024.
- ^ Sovetskoye obshchestvo v vospominaniyakh i dnevnikakh (in Russian). St. Petersburg: Publishing house of the St. Petersburg Institute of History of the Russian Academy of Sciences "Nestor-Istoriya". 15 May 2022. p. 276. ISBN 978-5-04-175771-7.
- ^ a b c d e f Botoyarov 1989, p. 442.
Sources
[edit]- Samaganov, Jenbai (1969). Pisateli Sovetskogo Kirgizstana. Frunze: Kyrgyzstan.
- Oruzbaeva, B. (1982). Kyrgyz Soviet Encyclopedia. Frunze: Main editorial office of the Kyrgyz Encyclopedia.
- Kandaurov, I (1982). Ivanov, A (ed.). "Inache oni ne mogli". Molodaya Gvardiya.
- Askarov, T (1982). Esteticheskoye postizheniye mira. Frunze: Publishing House "Kyrgyzstan".
- Kandaurov, I (1983). Tsvetkov, B. M (ed.). Stoykost. Volgograd: Nizhne-Volzhsky book publishing house.
- Botoyarov, K. (1989). Pisateli Sovetskogo Kirgizstana. Frunze: Adabiyat. ISBN 5-660-00084-3.
- Yaskovets, G. (2006). Lyudi iz legendy : o geroicheskikh podvigakh komsomol'tsev i molodezhi Stalingrada. Volgograd: Print. ISBN 5-94424-062-8.
- Djolbulakova, Ch. (2018). "Fornation and Development of Russian Prose in Kyrgyzstan: Historiographical Discourse" (PDF). Vestnik KRSU. 18. Bishkek: 57–62. ISSN 1694-500X.
- Khlypenko, G.; Bulatova, R. (2004). The context of Kyrgyz and Russian literature in Kyrgyzstan. Bishkek: KRSU. p. 204. ISBN 5-8355-1350-X.
- Alymkulov, A (2014). National features of the heroic in Russian and Kyrgyz military prose: abstract. Thesis... of Candidate of Philological Sciences (PDF). Bishkek: Kyrgyz National University.
- Alieva, Kh (2023). The origin and evolution of the Kyrgyz military novel (PDF). Bishkek: Osh State University. p. 160. ISBN 978-9967-03-203-3.
- Erkebaev, A (1984). "Literaturnaya zhizn'". In Oruzbaeva, B (ed.). Frunze : Encyclopedia (PDF). Frunze: Glavnaya redaktsiya Kirgizskoy Sovetskoy Entsiklopedii. pp. 44–45.
- Duyshonbaev, P. (2022). "The modern meaning of moral and ethical values in "Manas"". International Scientific Journal "Epos" (9/1). Bishkek: 14. ISSN 1694-8564.
- Burzhubaeva, D. (2023). "The past and present of russian literature in Kyrgyzstan" (PDF). Russkoe Slovo V Kyrgyzstane. 18. Bishkek: 59–60. ISSN 1694-6820.
External links
[edit]- 1918 births
- 1992 deaths
- People from Don Host Oblast
- Communist Party of the Soviet Union members
- Soviet spies
- World War II spies
- World War II spies for the Soviet Union
- Kyrgyz National University alumni
- Soviet short story writers
- 20th-century Russian short story writers
- Russian-language writers
- Kazakhstani journalists
- Kyrgyzstani journalists
- Soviet newspaper editors
- Kyrgyz-language writers
- Russian male novelists
- Soviet novelists
- Soviet male writers
- 20th-century Kyrgyzstani writers
- Soviet translators
- Translators to Russian