Category
page 119th-century poets
Abay Kunanbaiuly
Kazakh poet, philosopher and composer (1845-1904)

Ján Kollár
Slovak author writing in Czech (1793–1852)

Rainis
Jānis Pliekšāns (11 September 1865 – 11 September 1929), known by his pseudonym Rainis, was a Latvian poet, playwright, translator, and politician. Rainis' works include the classic plays Uguns un nakts (Fire and Night, 1905) and Indulis un Ārija (Indulis and Ārija, 1911), and a highly regarded translation of Goethe's Faust. His works had a profound influence on the literary Latvian language, and the ethnic symbolism he employed in his major works has been central to Latvian nationalism.

Mariano José de Larra
Spanish romantic writer (1809-1837)

Jules Laforgue
Franco-Uruguayan poet (1860–1887)

Kosta Khetagurov
Ossetian poet (1859-1906)

Svatopluk Čech
Czech poet, publicist and bookwriter (1846–1908)
Branko Radičević
Serbian poet (1824–1853)
Mah Şeref Han
Kurdish poet (1805–1848)
Bhanubhakta Acharya
The First-ever poet of Nepali Language
Mykhailo Starytskyi
Ukrainian writer (1840–1904)
Erik Johan Stagnelius
Swedish poet and playwright (1793-1823)
Simon Gregorčič
Slovenian poet (1844–1906)
Milovan Glišić
Serbian writer (1847–1908)
Yakov Polonsky
Russian writer (1819–1898)
Ivan Kuratov
Komi poet and linguist (1839-1875)
Oscar Levertin
Swedish poet, critic and literary historian (1862–1906)
Simon Jenko
Slovene poet, lyricist and writer (1835–1869)
Andrej Sládkovič
Slovak poet and translator (1820–1872)
Yevgeny Grebyonka
Russian and Ukrainian poet (1812-1848)
Ang Duong
Cambodian politician (1796–1860)
Staka Skenderova
Ottoman Bosnian writer and teacher
Josipina Turnograjska
Slovenian writer (1833–1854)
Marko Miljanov
author from Montenegro
Antoni Malczewski
Polish poet
Mirko Petrović-Njegoš
Montenegrin military commander, diplomat and poet (1820-1867)
Jacques Jasmin
Occitan poet
Yakiv Holovatsky
Ukrainian writer and academic (1814-1888)
Samo Chalupka
Slovak poet

Princess Mathilde of Bavaria
Bavarian princess and poet (1877-1906)
Alexander Dukhnovich
Ruthenian national revivalist, writer, educator and Greek Catholic priest (1802–1865)
Ventura Ruiz Aguilera
Spanish poet (1820–1881)
Georg Sauerwein
German poet and polyglot (1831–1904)
Wincenty Pol
Polish writer (1807–1872)
Josip Murn
Slovenian poet (1879-1901)
Markiian Shashkevych
Ukrainian poet, translator (1811-1843)
Dragotin Kette
Slovene Impressionist and Neo-Romantic poet
Sima Milutinović Sarajlija
Serbian writer and historian
Khwaja Ghulam Farid
19th-century sufi Punjabi poet of the punjab , polyglot, scholar and writer
Gregorio Martínez Sierra
Spanish editor, theatre director and writer (1881–1947)
Apollo Korzeniowski
Polish writer (1820–1869)
Mykola Markevych
Ukrainian composer, historian and ethnographer (1804–1860)
Matija Ban
Serbian writer (1818–1903)
Heinrich Landesmann
Austrian poet and philosopher (1821–1902)

Edmond de la Fontaine
Luxembourgian writer and national poet (1823-1891)
Terenzio, Count Mamiani della Rovere
Italian writer and statesman (1799-1885)
Judah Leib Gordon
Lithuanian poet (1830–1892)
Vojislav Ilić
Serbian poet (1860–1894)
Ivan Franjo Jukić
Bosnian Francisca and writer (1818–1857)
Ivan Vahylevych
Ukrainian poet (1811–1866)
Terézia Vansová
Slovak writer, editor (1857-1942)
Queen Tripurasundari
Nepalese Queen Mother and regent
Raja Ali Haji
Bugis poet, writer, historian, scholar, and hero | Father of Indonesian language
Makhambet Otemisuly
Kazakh poet (1803–1846)
Julie Hausmann
Baltic German poet (1826-1901)
Sinibaldo de Mas y Sanz
Spanish diplomat (1809-1868)
Georg Weerth
German writer (1822-1856)
Meher Ali Shah
Sufi scholar and a mystic Punjabi poet (1859–1937)

Nabin Chandra Sen
Bengali poet and writer (1847-1909)

Richard Chenevix Trench
Irish bishop (1807–1886)