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・ Miklós Mohay
・ Miklós Nagy
・ Miklós Nagy (footballer)
・ Miklós Nyiszli
・ Miklós Nyárádi
・ Miklós Németh
・ Miklós Németh (athlete)
・ Miklós Németh (cyclist)
・ Miklós Németh (footballer)
・ Miklós Palencsár
・ Miklós Perczel
・ Miklós Perényi
・ Miklós Páncsics
・ Miklós Pásztory
・ Miklós Radnai
Miklós Radnóti
・ Miklós Rajna
・ Miklós Réthelyi
・ Miklós Rózsa
・ Miklós Schweitzer Competition
・ Miklós Seszták
・ Miklós Simon
・ Miklós Simonovits
・ Miklós Sirokay
・ Miklós Steinmetz
・ Miklós Sugár
・ Miklós Szabados
・ Miklós Szabó
・ Miklós Szabó (middle-distance runner)
・ Miklós Szabó (sport shooter)


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Miklós Radnóti : ウィキペディア英語版
Miklós Radnóti

Miklós Radnóti, birth name ''Miklós Glatter'' (5 May 1909 – 10 November 1944) was a Hungarian poet who died in The Holocaust.
==Personality and early life==
Radnóti was born in Budapest into an assimilated Jewish family. His life was considerably shaped by the fact that both his mother and his twin brother died at his birth. He refers to this trauma in the title of his compilation ''Ikrek hava'' ("Month of Gemini"/"Month of the Twins").
He identifies himself very strongly as a Hungarian. His poetry mingles avant-garde and expressionist themes with a new classical style, a good example being his eclogues. His romantic love poetry is notable as well. Some of his early poetry was published in the short-lived periodical ''Haladás'' ("Progress"). His 1935 marriage to Fanni Gyarmati (1912–2014) was exceptionally happy.
Radnóti converted to Catholicism in 1943. Numerous Jewish writers converted to Christianity at that time due to the antisemitism that was pervasive in Hungarian society at the time. Radnóti also admired his former professor of literature, the Piarist priest Sándor Sík.〔http://www.poemhunter.com/miklos-radnoti/biography/〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Miklós Radnóti」の詳細全文を読む



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