WRITER

Emma Andijewska

1931 - Today

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Emma Andijewska (Ukrainian: Е́мма Іванівна Андіє́вська, romanized: Emma Ivanivna Andiievska; born March 19, 1931) is a Ukrainian modern poet, writer and painter living in Germany. Her works are marked with surrealist style. Some of Andijewska's works have been translated to English and German. Andijewska lives and works in Munich. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Emma Andijewska is the 4,324th most popular writer (up from 4,705th in 2019), the 653rd most popular biography from Ukraine (up from 722nd in 2019) and the 88th most popular Ukrainian Writer.

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Among WRITERS

Among writers, Emma Andijewska ranks 4,324 out of 7,302Before her are Margita Figuli, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Zabel Sibil Asadour, James Blish, Johan Sebastian Welhaven, and Richard Powers. After her are Anna Maria Lenngren, Kamini Roy, Vladimir Odoyevsky, Vladimir Oravsky, Alexander of Abonoteichus, and Cesare Balbo.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1931, Emma Andijewska ranks 334Before her are Imrich Stacho, Dorian Gray, Jean Philippe, Elias M. Stein, Joel Antônio Martins, and Hans Alfredson. After her are Aldo Aureggi, Arturo Pomar, Konrad Stäheli, George Maxwell Richards, Arne Selmosson, and Ichirō Nagai.

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In Ukraine

Among people born in Ukraine, Emma Andijewska ranks 653 out of 1,365Before her are Polina Osipenko (1907), Vasyl Stefanyk (1871), Volodymyr Groysman (1978), Nadezhda Tkachenko (1948), Ivan Martos (1754), and Sergey Kozlov (1963). After her are Ostap Vyshnya (1889), Aleksander Ford (1908), Shura Cherkassky (1909), Yevhen Arzhanov (1948), Anatoly Kuznetsov (1929), and Anatoliy Konkov (1949).

Among WRITERS In Ukraine

Among writers born in Ukraine, Emma Andijewska ranks 88Before her are Vira Vovk (1926), Jan Brzechwa (1898), David Bergelson (1884), Ida Fink (1921), Sofia Yablonska (1907), and Vasyl Stefanyk (1871). After her are Ostap Vyshnya (1889), Anatoly Kuznetsov (1929), Milena Rudnytska (1892), Yevgeny Petrov (1902), Margarita Aliger (1915), and Fedir Bohatyrchuk (1892).