Mikhail Nikitich Muravyov or Murav'ev (Russian: Михаил Никитич Муравьёв; 5 November 1757 [O.S. 25 October] – 10 August 1807 [O.S. 29 July]) was a Russian poet and prose writer, "one of the best educated and most versatile writers of his generation in Russia".[1] He was influenced by Mikhail Kheraskov and Nikolay Novikov, who invited his contributions to the Masonic publication Utrenni svet.[2]
Works
Стихотворения [Poems], Leningrad, 1967
Institutiones rhetoricae: a treatise of a Russian sentimentalist, ed. by Andrew Kahn. Oxford: W.A. Meeuws, 1995.
References
^C. L. Drage, 'M. N. Murav'ev and the Moscow Manuscrupt of Institutiones rhetoricae ', The Slavonic and East European Review, Vol. 78, No. 2 (April 2000), pp.201-239
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