Tatyana Larina

E468781

Tatyana Larina is the introspective and emotionally sincere heroine of Alexander Pushkin’s novel in verse "Eugene Onegin," often regarded as one of Russian literature’s most iconic female characters.

Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf female character
fictional character
literary character
appearsIn Eugene Onegin NERFINISHED
associatedWith romanticism in Russian literature
centralThemeInvolvement conflict between feeling and duty
fate and choice
unrequited love
characterInWorkType novel in verse
characterTrait reserved
romantic
shy
thoughtful
countryOfOrigin Russian Empire
createdBy Alexander Pushkin NERFINISHED
culturalSignificance one of the most famous heroines in Russian literature
symbol of Russian feminine ideal in 19th-century literature
familyName Larina NERFINISHED
fictionalUniverse Eugene Onegin universe NERFINISHED
firstPublicationDateOfWork 1833
gender female
genre novel in verse
realist literature
givenName Tatyana NERFINISHED
inspiredAdaptation Tatyana in Tchaikovsky's opera Eugene Onegin NERFINISHED
literaryMovement Golden Age of Russian literature
literaryRole heroine
protagonist
loveInterest Eugene Onegin NERFINISHED
moralCharacteristic faithful to her marital vows
narrativeFunction contrast to Eugene Onegin’s cynicism
nationalityInFiction Russian
notableFor emotional sincerity
iconic status in Russian literature
introspective nature
occupationInFiction noblewoman
originalLanguage Russian
placeOfResidenceInFiction Russian countryside
Saint Petersburg NERFINISHED
portrayedIn opera Eugene Onegin by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky NERFINISHED
relative Madame Larina NERFINISHED
settingPeriodInFiction early 19th century
sibling Olga Larina NERFINISHED
socialClassInFiction landed gentry
spouseInFiction unnamed general
writes love letter to Eugene Onegin

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

opera "Eugene Onegin" centralCharacter Tatyana Larina
subject surface form: Eugene Onegin