Antioch Kantemir
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Prince Antiokh Dmitrievich Kantemir (Антиох Дмитриевич Кантемир in Russian, Antioh Cantemir in Romanian, Antioche Cantemir in French; September 8, 1708—March 31, 1744) was a Moldavian-born Russian Enlightenment man of letters and diplomat.
Kantemir was born to the Moldavian Hospodar Dimitrie Cantemir and Princess Kassandra Cantacuzene in Iaşi.
Educated by his father and at the Saint Petersburg Academy, having spent much of his youth as a hostage in Ottoman Istanbul, Antiokh joined Dimitrie in Russia at their estate in the vicinity of Kharkov.
His work reflects the scope and purpose of Peter the Great's European-style reforms, standing out as a contribution to the integration of Russian culture into the world circuit of Classicism. In this respect, the most noticeable effort is his Petrida, an unfinished epic glorifying the Emperor.
From 1731 he was Russian envoy to London (where he brought along the manuscript to Dimitrie's History of the Growth and Decay of the Ottoman Empire, also writing the biography and bibliography of his father that accompanied the English 1756 edition). From 1736 until his death, Antiokh was minister plenipotentiary in Paris, where he was a noted intellectual figure and close friend to Montesquieu and Voltaire.
Kantemir's language seems dull and antiquated to the modern reader, because he stuck to the gallic system of rhyming, which was subsequently discarded. His best known poems are several satires in the manner of Juvenal, including To His Own Mind: On Those Who Blame Education and On the Envy and Pride of Evil-Minded Courtiers.
Kantemir translated de Fontenelle's works into Russian (1740 - Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds), although these were partly censored as heretical. He also produced a tract on old Russian versification (1744) and translated the poetry of Horace and Anacreon into Russian. His own philosophical work is the 1742 Letters on Nature and Man ("O prirode i cheloveke").
Antioch Kantemir died a bachelor in Paris, while the litigation concerning his illegitimate children dragged on for years.
[edit] Reference
- This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.
Categories: Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica | 1708 births | 1744 deaths | Alumni of St. Petersburg State University | Cantemireşti | Enlightenment philosophers | People from Iaşi | Russian diplomats | Russian essayists | Russian literary critics | Russian philosophers | Russian poets | Russian translators