Surjit Hans
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Surjit_Hans an entity of type: Thing
Surjit Hans (31 October 1930 – 17 January 2020), also appears as Surjeet Hans, was an Indian writer, tragedian, scholar and lecturer. He is also credited with being a "translator" for translating all the tragedies and thirty eight plays of William Shakespeare into Punjabi language. His name also appears in "historians" and "poets" for his research on history of Sikhism and writing novels and poems. Hans wrote sixty books, including Mittti Di Dheri, Loon Di Dali and Mrit Da Sapna throughout his life.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Surjit Hans
rdf:langString
Surjit Hans
rdf:langString
Surjit Hans
rdf:langString
Mohali, Punjab, India
xsd:date
2020-01-17
xsd:date
1930-10-31
xsd:integer
64040076
xsd:integer
1106577256
xsd:date
1930-10-31
rdf:langString
Nanki Hans
xsd:date
2020-01-17
rdf:langString
Professor
rdf:langString
Punjabi, English
rdf:langString
ਸੁਰਜੀਤ ਹਾਂਸ
rdf:langString
pa
rdf:langString
Punjabi translation of Macbeth, Henry VIII, The Two Noble Kinsmen, On the Origin of Species
rdf:langString
Mittti Di Dheri, Mrit Da Sapna, Loon Di Dali
rdf:langString
Teacher
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Writer
rdf:langString
Scholar
rdf:langString
Historian
rdf:langString
Poet
rdf:langString
History
rdf:langString
Language
rdf:langString
Literature
rdf:langString
Philosophy
rdf:langString
Psychology
rdf:langString
xsd:integer
1993
rdf:langString
Surjit Hans (31 October 1930 – 17 January 2020), also appears as Surjeet Hans, was an Indian writer, tragedian, scholar and lecturer. He is also credited with being a "translator" for translating all the tragedies and thirty eight plays of William Shakespeare into Punjabi language. His name also appears in "historians" and "poets" for his research on history of Sikhism and writing novels and poems. Hans wrote sixty books, including Mittti Di Dheri, Loon Di Dali and Mrit Da Sapna throughout his life. He became the recipient of a literary honor Sahitya Akademi Award twice in recognition of his contribution to the Punjabi literature and language. It is believed he spent more than twenty years living a "Bard of Avon" life since he started translation work, including Macbeth which he did in 1955. In 2013, he received an honorary appreciation by the Ealing London Borough Council for his contribution to Shakespearean tragedies.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
10100