Box 5
Contains 170 Results:
Letter. Gabriel Superfin, Bremen (Germany), to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1998 July 9
Correspondence. Grigorii Svirskii, Jerusalem, with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1972 May-July
Grigorii Svirskii (b. 1921) is a Russian-Canadian writer. Svirskii was born in Russia and served as a pilot in World War II. After the war, he became a journalist and published several books, but was forced to emmigrate to Israel by the Soviet government. In 1975, Svirskii moved to Canada and published a number of novels, short stories and plays and taught Russian literature at the University of Toronto.
Correspondence. Grigorii Svirskii, Jerusalem, with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1972 August-December
Correspondence. Grigorii Svirskii, Jerusalem, with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1973
Correspondence. Grigorii Svirskii with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1974-1980
Correspondence. Grigorii Svirskii with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, undated
Correspondence. Vladislav Svitelskii, Voronezh (USSR) with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1979-1982
Vladislav Anatolevich Svitelskii (1940-2005) was a literary specialist and professor of Russian literature at Voronezh State U.
Correspondence. Vladislav Svitelskii, Voronezh (USSR), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1983-1990
Correspondence. Vladislav Svitelskii, Voronezh (Russia), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1991
Letter. Vladislav Svitelskii, Voronezh (Russia), to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1992-1993
Letter. Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, to Vladislav Svitelskii, undated
Letters. Vladislav and Nina Svitelskii to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, circa 1989-1992
Correspondence. Richard Sylvester with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1976-1980
Richard Sylvester is a professor emeritus in Slavic Languages at Colgate University.
Letters. Richard Sylvester to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1985-1987
Letters. Richard Sylvester to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1997-2000
Letter. Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, to Lena Szilárd, Venice, 1997 January 2
Lena Szilárd (b. 1933) is a professor of Russian literature and culture at the U. of Budapest.
Letters. Robert Szucsich, Moscow, to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1998
Robert Szucsich (1940-2015) was a journalist, ethnologist, and diplomat.
Letter. Elzbieta Tabakovska, Kraków, to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1992 January 13
Elzbieta Tabakovska (b. 1942) is a Polish scholar and head of the UNESCO Chair for Translation Studies and Intercultural Communication at the Jagiellonian University.
Letter. Paul Tesarek, Vienna, to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 2002 October 26
Letters. Claudia Thome to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 2002-2005
Correspondence. Tilmann with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1988-1999
Letter. Alexandrina Tobos, Ditzingen (Germany) to [Elisabeth Markstein], 2004 April 27
Tobos sent this generic letter on behalf of the publisher, Philipp Reclam Junior Verlag.
Letters. Gerald Trageiser, Munich, to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1990
Letter. Ernst Trummer to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, undated
Letter. Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, to Ms. Tyberg-Shake, Innsbruck, 1978 October 16
Letter. Thomas Überhoff, Hamburg, to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1991 May 16
Letters. Rudi Ullrich to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1999
Letters. Harald Ulrich, Berlin, to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, circa 1993
Letter. Alexander Ungar, Eisentadt (Austria), to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1974 February 18
Correspondence. Frederick Ungar, New York, with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1971-1972
Frederick Ungar (1898-1988) was the founder of the Frederick Ungar Publishing Company.