WRITER

Andrejs Upīts

1877 - 1970

Photo of Andrejs Upīts

Icon of person Andrejs Upīts

Andrejs Upīts (4 December 1877 – 17 November 1970) was a Latvian teacher, poet and short story writer. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Andrejs Upīts is the 4,901st most popular writer (up from 5,035th in 2019), the 150th most popular biography from Latvia (down from 148th in 2019) and the 21st most popular Latvian Writer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Andrejs Upīts by language

Loading...

Among WRITERS

Among writers, Andrejs Upīts ranks 4,901 out of 7,302Before him are Alex Garland, Heðin Brú, William Gibson, Alina Fernández, Simon Leys, and Georg Calixtus. After him are Alexander Abusch, Álvaro Pombo, Eugène Guillevic, Linn Ullmann, Pherecrates, and Martin Kukučín.

Most Popular Writers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1877, Andrejs Upīts ranks 148Before him are René Navarre, Wang Guowei, Dudley Pound, Elsa Laula Renberg, Charles Collignon, and Abelardo Olivier. After him are Miltiadis Gouskos, Ernst Wetter, Otto Gebühr, Sidney Johnson, Robert Farnan, and Maud Wagner. Among people deceased in 1970, Andrejs Upīts ranks 206Before him are Lee Barnes, Vince Lombardi, Pierre Mac Orlan, Rube Goldberg, Irene Guest, and István Kozma. After him are Vano Muradeli, Fritz von Unruh, John O'Hara, Leandro Faggin, Ludovico Bidoglio, and Haakon Sörvik.

Others Born in 1877

Go to all Rankings

Others Deceased in 1970

Go to all Rankings

In Latvia

Among people born in Latvia, Andrejs Upīts ranks 150 out of 323Before him are Eliyahu Rips (1948), Marija Naumova (1973), Aleksandr Kaleri (1956), Eduard Tisse (1897), Bruno Habārovs (1939), and Jānis Cimze (1814). After him are Erik Hornung (1933), Jānis Endzelīns (1873), Kārlis Skalbe (1879), Hermanis Matisons (1894), Fridrikh Ermler (1898), and Andris Nelsons (1978).

Among WRITERS In Latvia

Among writers born in Latvia, Andrejs Upīts ranks 21Before him are Anna Brigadere (1861), Astrid Ivask (1926), Rūdolfs Blaumanis (1863), Aleksandrs Čaks (1901), Werner Bergengruen (1892), and Mirdza Ķempe (1907). After him are Erik Hornung (1933), Kārlis Skalbe (1879), Regīna Ezera (1930), Imants Ziedonis (1933), Juris Alunāns (1832), and Anšlavs Eglītis (1906).