Maksym Rylsky PrizeMaksym Rylsky prize is given annually recognizing outstanding literary works of translation into Ukrainian language and translation of classical or contemporary literary works from Ukrainian to other languages. Named after Maksym Rylsky, Ukrainian poet and translator. HistoryEstablished in 1972 by the Council of Ministers of the Ukrainian SSR, the monetary equivalent of which was 1,000 Soviet rubles. After the USSR split, the award was administered by National Writers' Union of Ukraine. It was reintroduced in 2013 by the State Committee for Television and Radio-broadcasting and was awarded to one nominee. Since 2019 the prize is awarded in two nominations, each with 20 000 hryvnas award.[1] Winners1973: Mykola Tereshchenko [d] for translations of French poetry 1974: Dimitr Metodiev for translation of Kobzar into Bulgarian 1975: Stepan Kovganyuk [d] for translation of the works by Russian Soviet writer Mikhail Sholokhov and works on the theory and practice of translation 1976: Dmytro Bilous [d] for translation of Bulgarian poetry 1977: Vasyl Mysyk [d] for translation of world's poetry classics 1978: Evgeny Drobyazko for translation of Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri 1979: Borys Ten [d] for translation of Odyssey and Iliad by Homer 1980: Diodor Bobir [d] for translations novel My Dagestan by Rasul Gamzatov and poetry collection 1981: Maya Kashel for translations from Vietnamese 1982: Maria Komissarova for translations into Russian of the works of Taras Shevchenko, Lesya Ukrainka and some Ukrainian Soviet poets[2] 1983: Yuriy Shkrobinets [d] for translations from Hungarian works by Sándor Petőfi, János Arany, Endre Ady, anthologies of Hungarian classical and modern poetry[3] 1984:
1985: Dmytro Pavlychko for translations of José Martí, Hristo Botev, Nikola Vaptsarov and the anthology World Sonnet 1986: Andrii Sodomora for translations of Horace, Ovid, Catullus poetry 1987: Raul Chilachava [d] for translations into Georgian works by Taras Shevchenko, Hryhoriy Skovoroda, Lesya Ukrainka, Pavlo Tychyna, Maksym Rylskyi, Volodymyr Sosiura and contemporary Ukrainian poets 1988: Mykola Lukash for translations into Ukrainian of Faust, Decameron, Imre Madách's Human Tragedies, works of Lope de Vega, Guillaume Apollinaire, Lorka, Friedrich Schiller, Robert Burns and other 1989: Hryhoriy Kochur [d] for translations of classics of European poetry 1990: Dmytro Palamarchuk for translations of classics of European literature 1991: Yuriy Lisnyak [d] for the interpretation into Ukrainian Heinrich Mann's novels Die Jugend des Königs Henri Quatre, Herman Melville's Moby Dick, Honoré de Balzac's La Peau de chagrin 1992: Yevhen Popovych [d] for translations from the German 1993:
1994:
1995: Leontiy Kir [d](Kyryakov) for the translation into Greek and Romanian 1996:
1997: Mykhailo Lytvynets [d] for translations from Spanish, French, Provençal, Basque, Italian, Polish and other languages 1998:
1999: Oleksandr Mokrovolsky [d] for translations of European literature classics 2000: Viktor Koptilov [d] for the translation of Tristan and Iseult 2001: Evgenia Horeva [d] for the translation from German "Radetsky's March" by Joseph Roth and the works of German and English children's writers 2002: Hryhoriy Filipchuk [d] for the translation from French and Spanish works of Honore de Balzac, André Malraux, Robert Merle, Fernand Braudel, Augusto Ro Bastos, Jorge Isaacs and others 2003:
2004:
2005:
2006:
2007:
2008:
2009: Viktor Shovkun [d] for translations from English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese 2010: Natalya Trokhym for the translation of Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie 2011: Yurii Popsuenko [d] for the translation of the novel Bikini by Janusz Leon Wiśniewski and other 2012: Petro Tarashchuk [d] for the translation of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's books 2013:
2014: Gamada Roman [d] for translations from Persian.[5] 2015: Maksym Strikha [d] for the translation of Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri[6] 2016: Ivan Riabchyi for Two Gentlemen of Brussels by Éric-Emmanuel Schmitt[7] 2017: Vasyl Stepanenko [d] for the translation from Greek of Erotokritos poem by of Vitsentzos Kornaros[8] 2018: Nina Balykova [d] for the literary translation from the ancient Japanese language of the collection of stories and legends of Yoshida Kenkō[9] 2019: Yuliya Dzhugastryanska [d] for the literary translation of Kim by Rudyard Kipling's[10] 2020:
2021:
2022:
References
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