Bernhard Linde (pseudonym Pärt Pärn; 4 April 1886 Järvakandi Parish – 23 August 1954 Tallinn) was an Estonian literary and theatre personnel, critic and essayist.[1]
In 1927 he graduated from Tartu University in Slavic philology.
Linde was a founding member of the Noor-Eesti (Young Estonia) group of writers.[2] 1912-1915 he was the chief of Young Estonia's publishing house. During the First World War, he worked as an official of the tsarist army in Minsk and Vilnius. He later stayed at the Estonian settlements in Siberia and the Far East and returned to Estonia in 1919.[2] 1919-1924 Linde was the executive director of the publishing house Varrak which he founded upon his return. 1940-1941 and 1944-1949 he taught at Tallinn University of Technology.[1] In the years of the German occupation, 1941–1944, he stayed on his father’s farm.[2]
Linde was imprisoned in 1951 because of ideological accusations. He spent three years in the prison camps of Narva and Vasalemma, was released in 1954 being terminally ill and died in Tallinn shortly afterwards.[2]
Works
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- "Heitlikud ilmad" (novel, 1913)
- "Omad ja võõrad" (collection of essays, 1927)
- "Kenad naised" (collection of novels, 1928)
- "Loova Kesk-Euroopa poole" (collection of essays, 1930)
References
edit- ^ a b "Linde, Bernhard - Eesti Entsüklopeedia". entsyklopeedia.ee. Retrieved 8 July 2021.
- ^ a b c d "Bernhard Linde – Estonian Writers Online Dictionary". sisu.ut.ee. Retrieved 2024-10-29.