Marijan Lipovšek
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Marijan Lipovšek
Summary
Marijan Lipovšek is a human[1]. His place of birth was Ljubljana[2]. He was born on January 26, 1910[3]. He passed away in Ljubljana[4]. He died on December 25, 1995[5]. He worked as a pianist[6], photographer[7], composer[8], university teacher[9], and essayist[10]. He has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[11]
Key Facts
- Born in Ljubljana[2], Marijan Lipovšek…
- Marijan Lipovšek passed away in Ljubljana[4].
- Marijan Lipovšek was born on January 26, 1910[3].
- Marijan Lipovšek died on December 25, 1995[5].
- A child of Marijan Lipovšek was Barbka Lipovšek - Ščetinin[12].
- A child of Marijan Lipovšek was Bor Turel[13].
- Marijan Lipovšek held citizenship in Slovenia[14].
- Marijan Lipovšek held citizenship in Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia[15].
- Marijan Lipovšek held citizenship in Kingdom of Yugoslavia[16].
- Marijan Lipovšek held citizenship in Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes[17].
- Marijan Lipovšek held citizenship in Cisleithania[18].
- Marijan Lipovšek's professions included pianist[6].
- Marijan Lipovšek worked as a photographer[7].
- Marijan Lipovšek's professions included composer[8].
- Marijan Lipovšek's professions included university teacher[9].
- Marijan Lipovšek worked as an essayist[10].
- Marijan Lipovšek worked as a translator[19].
- Marijan Lipovšek's field of work was classical music[20].
- Marijan Lipovšek's field of work was piano performance[21].
- Marijan Lipovšek's field of work was music education[22].
- Marijan Lipovšek's field of work was opinion journalism[23].
- Marijan Lipovšek's field of work was translation[24].
- Marijan Lipovšek's field of work was music criticism[25].
- Marijan Lipovšek was employed by University of Ljubljana[26].
- Marijan Lipovšek received the Prešeren Award[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
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Type: Person[28]
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Country: SI[29]
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Began / founded: 1910-01-26[30]
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Ended / dissolved: 1995-12-25[31]
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MusicBrainz ID: 1e49c5b3-810d-43a4-b5ff-040b087cdf6a[32]
Body
Origins and Family
Marijan Lipovšek's place of birth was Ljubljana[2]. He was born on January 26, 1910[3].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include pianist[6], photographer[7], composer[8], university teacher[9], essayist[10], and translator[19]. Fields of work include classical music[20], a music genre[33], founded in 0500[34]; piano performance[21], a field of study[35]; music education[22], a branch of education[36]; opinion journalism[23], a journalism genre[37]; translation[24], an academic major[38]; and music criticism[25], an academic discipline[39]. Among Marijan Lipovšek's employers was University of Ljubljana[26].
Recognition
Awards received include Prešeren Award[27], an art prize[40], in Slovenia[41], founded in 1946[42]; Order of Freedom of the Republic of Slovenia[43], an order[44], in Slovenia[45], founded in 1992[46]; and Župančič Award[47], a cultural prize[48], in Slovenia[49], founded in 1965[50].
Personal Life
Children include Barbka Lipovšek - Ščetinin[12], a mountaineer[51], 1941–1975[52], of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia[53], awarded the Bloudek badge[54] and Bor Turel[13], a musician[55], b. 1954[56], of Slovenia[57], awarded the Prešeren Fund Awards[58].
Death and Burial
Marijan Lipovšek died on December 25, 1995[5]. He died in Ljubljana[4].
Why It Matters
Marijan Lipovšek has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[11]
FAQs
Where was Marijan Lipovšek born?
Marijan Lipovšek was born in Ljubljana[2].
Where did Marijan Lipovšek die?
Marijan Lipovšek passed away in Ljubljana[4].
What did Marijan Lipovšek do for work?
Marijan Lipovšek worked as pianist[6], photographer[7], composer[8], university teacher[9], and essayist[10].
What awards did Marijan Lipovšek receive?
Honors received include Prešeren Award[27], Order of Freedom of the Republic of Slovenia[43], and Župančič Award[47].