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Leon M. Negruzzi (August 17, 1899–October 6, 1987) was a Romanian poet, prose writer and translator. Born in the Austrian city of Wiener Neustadt, his parents were Mihail L. Negruzzi, a general in the Romanian Army, and his wife Lucia (née Miclescu). His great-grandfather was Constantin Negruzzi, while Iacob Negruzzi was his great-uncle. In 1916, he graduated from the Iași Boarding High School. Following World War I, he obtained a degree from the law faculty of Iași University. He settled in France in 1925, and worked at Éditions Albin Michel. Following World War II and the onset of a communist regime in his native country, he was active in informing the Western public about he situation in Soviet-occupied Romania. In February 1952, he presented a Mémorandum des refugiés roumains adressé a

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  • Leon M. Negruzzi (en)
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  • Leon M. Negruzzi (August 17, 1899–October 6, 1987) was a Romanian poet, prose writer and translator. Born in the Austrian city of Wiener Neustadt, his parents were Mihail L. Negruzzi, a general in the Romanian Army, and his wife Lucia (née Miclescu). His great-grandfather was Constantin Negruzzi, while Iacob Negruzzi was his great-uncle. In 1916, he graduated from the Iași Boarding High School. Following World War I, he obtained a degree from the law faculty of Iași University. He settled in France in 1925, and worked at Éditions Albin Michel. Following World War II and the onset of a communist regime in his native country, he was active in informing the Western public about he situation in Soviet-occupied Romania. In February 1952, he presented a Mémorandum des refugiés roumains adressé a (en)
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  • Leon M. Negruzzi (August 17, 1899–October 6, 1987) was a Romanian poet, prose writer and translator. Born in the Austrian city of Wiener Neustadt, his parents were Mihail L. Negruzzi, a general in the Romanian Army, and his wife Lucia (née Miclescu). His great-grandfather was Constantin Negruzzi, while Iacob Negruzzi was his great-uncle. In 1916, he graduated from the Iași Boarding High School. Following World War I, he obtained a degree from the law faculty of Iași University. He settled in France in 1925, and worked at Éditions Albin Michel. Following World War II and the onset of a communist regime in his native country, he was active in informing the Western public about he situation in Soviet-occupied Romania. In February 1952, he presented a Mémorandum des refugiés roumains adressé a l’Organisation des Nations Unies to the United Nations General Assembly; the document was signed by a number of Romanian writers, including Aron Cotruș, Mircea Eliade, Claudiu Isopescu and . Negruzzi published travel accounts, novels and poems. His prose was Voltairesque and he observed humankind without illusions. He also translated Romanian novels into French. He died in Paris. (en)
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