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  • Frédéric Mistral - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Frédéric Mistral (September 8, 1830 — March 25, 1914) was a French poet who led the 19th century revival of Occitan (Provençal) language and literature.

  • Frédéric Mistral - Biography

    Biography. Frédéric Mistral (1830-1914) came from an old and well-to-do family of landowners that had settled in Provence in the sixteenth century.

  • Literature 1904

    div class="l_inside"> <div class="l_line"><img src="http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1904/mistral.jpg" width="162" height="227" alt="Frédéric Mistral ...

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Frédéric Mistral

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Frédéric MistralFrédéric Mistral

Frédéric Mistral (1830-1914), French Provençal poet and Nobel laureate, born near Maillane, Bouches-du-Rhône Department. In 1854 Mistral and other writers founded the Félibrige, a society to revive the use of the Provençal language. His pastoral poem Mirèio (1859; trans. 1868), written in his native Provençal dialect, gained for him the poet's prize of the Académie Française. He also wrote and compiled a Provençal-French dictionary (1878-1886) and wrote several volumes of poetry, including Lis isclo d'or (The Golden Isles, 1876) and the dramatic poem La Reino Jano (Queen Joan, 1890). He shared the 1904 Nobel Prize with the Spanish writer José Echegaray y Eizaguirre.

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