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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1901.
Events

Anton Chekhov with Olga Knipper, on their honeymoon
- January 31 – Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters (Три сeстры, Tri sestry) opens at the Moscow Art Theatre, directed by Constantin Stanislavski and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko with Stanislavski as Vershinin, Olga Knipper as Masha, Margarita Savetskaya as Olga, Maria Andreyeva as Irina, and Maria Lilina (Stanislavsky's wife) as Natasha.
 - February 22 – Leo Tolstoy is excommunicated from the Russian Orthodox Church.[1]
 - May 1 – Publication of Maurice Maeterlinck's The Life of the Bee in Belgium.[2]
 - May 6 – Swedish dramatist August Strindberg, 52, marries his third wife, the Swedish-Norwegian actress Harriet Bosse, 23, after an engagement in March during rehearsals for his play Easter (Påsk).
 - May 25 – Chekhov marries Olga Knipper in a quiet ceremony.[3]
 - May 28 – Cherry v. Des Moines Leader is decided in the Iowa Supreme Court, upholding the right to publish critical reviews.
 - June 28 – G. K. Chesterton marries Frances Blogg at St Mary Abbots, Kensington.
 - July – The first modern performances of Everyman, the 15th-century morality play, are given by William Poel's Elizabethan Stage Society outdoors at the Charterhouse in London.[4][5]
 - July 24 – O. Henry is released from prison in Columbus, Ohio after serving three years for embezzlement.
 - October 
- Thomas Mann's first novel, Buddenbrooks, is published in Berlin.
 - The Irish Literary Theatre project gives its final performance.[6]
 
 - October 23 – Mark Twain receives an honorary doctorate of literature from Yale University. In the same month he moves to Riverdale, New York.
 - December 2 – The Romanian literary review Sămănătorul is founded.[7]
 - December 10 – The first Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded, to French poet Sully Prudhomme.[8]
 - unknown date – World's Classics series of publications is founded by Grant Richards in England.
 
New books
Fiction
- Ignacio Manuel Altamirano – El Zarco[9][10]
 - Leonid Andreyev – «повести» (stories)
 - E.F. Benson – The Luck of the Vails
 - René Boylesve – La Becquée
 - Samuel Butler – Erewhon Revisited
 - Hall Caine – The Eternal City
 - Winston Churchill – The Crisis
 - Colette – Claudine à Paris
 - Joseph Conrad and Ford Madox Ford – The Inheritors
 - Victoria Cross – Anna Lombard
 - Patrick S. Dinneen – Cormac Ó Conaill (first novel in Irish published complete in book form)
 - George Douglas – The House with the Green Shutters
 - Miles Franklin – My Brilliant Career
 - Géza Gárdonyi – A láthatatlan ember (The Invisible Man)
 - George Griffith – A Honeymoon in Space
 - Henry James – The Sacred Fount
 - Johannes V. Jensen – The Fall of the King
 - Rudyard Kipling – Kim
 - Jean Lorrain
- Monsieur de Phocas
 - Le Vice errant
 
 - George Barr McCutcheon – Graustark: The Story of a Love Behind a Throne
 - Thomas Mann – Buddenbrooks
 - George Moore – Sister Theresa
 - Frank Norris – The Octopus
 - Charles-Louis Philippe – Bubu de Montparnasse
 - Luigi Pirandello – L'Esclusa (The Excluded Woman)
 - Liane de Pougy – Idylle Saphique
 - José Maria de Eça de Queiroz – A Cidade e as Serras
 - M. P. Shiel
- Lord of the Sea[11]
 - The Purple Cloud
 
 - Bram Stoker and Valdimar Ásmundsson – Makt Myrkranna (Powers of Darkness, Icelandic language adaptation of Stoker's Dracula)
 - Rabindranath Tagore – Nastanirh (নষ্টনীড়, The Broken Nest)
 - William Alexander Taylor – Intermere
 - Jules Verne
- The Sea Serpent (Les Histoires de Jean-Marie Cabidoulin)
 - The Village in the Treetops (Le Village aérien)
 
 - H. G. Wells – The First Men in the Moon
 - Émile Zola – Travail
 
Children and young people
- John Kendrick Bangs – Mr. Munchausen
 - L. Frank Baum
 - Evelyn Everett-Green – True Stories of Girl Heroines
 - Mary Catherine Judd, illustrated by Angel De Cora – Wigwam stories
 
Drama
- Gabriele D'Annunzio – Francesca da Rimini
 - J. M. Barrie – Quality Street
 - Roberto Bracco – Lost in the Dark (Sperduti nel buio)
 - Hall Caine – The Eternal City
 - Anton Chekhov – Three Sisters
 - Clyde Fitch – The Climbers
 - Haralamb Lecca – Quinta. Suprema forță
 - Wilhelm Meyer-Förster – Old Heidelberg (Alt Heidelberg)
 - Louis N. Parker – The Cardinal
 - August Strindberg – A Dream Play (Ett drömspel, published)
 - Stanisław Wyspiański
- Warszawianka (Varsovian Anthem, stage première)
 - The Wedding (Wesele)
 
 
Poetry
- Henry Ames Blood – Selected Poems of Henry Ames Blood
 - Maxim Gorky – The Song of the Stormy Petrel (Песня о Буревестнике)
 - Thomas Hardy – Poems of the Past and the Present
 - Akiko Yosano (与謝野 晶子) – Midaregami (みだれ髪, Tangled Hair)
 
Non-fiction
- Annie Besant, Charles Webster Leadbeater – Thought-Forms: A Record of Clairvoyant Investigation
 - Sigmund Freud – The Psychopathology of Everyday Life (Zur Psychopathologie des Alltagslebens)
 - Seebohm Rowntree – Poverty, A Study of Town Life
 - Edith Helen Sichel – Women and Men of the French Renaissance
 - Rudolf Steiner – Die Mystik im Aufgange des neuzeitlichen Geisteslebens, und ihr Verhältnis zur modernen Weltan-schauung (Mysticism at the Dawn of Modern Spiritual Life, and its Relationship with Modern World-views)
 - A. E. Waite – The Life of Louis Claude de Saint-Martin
 - Booker T. Washington – Up from Slavery
 - H. G. Wells – Anticipations of the Reaction of Mechanical and Scientific Progress Upon Human Life and Thought
 
Births
- January 31 – Marie Luise Kaschnitz (Marie Luise von Holzing-Berslett), German story writer, novelist and poet (died 1974)
 - February 13 – Lewis Grassic Gibbon (James Leslie Mitchell), Scottish novelist (died 1935)
 - February 23 – Ivar Lo-Johansson, Swedish novelist and journalist (died 1990)
 - March 4 (or 1903) – Jean-Joseph Rabearivelo (Joseph-Casimir Rabearivelo), Malagasy Francophone poet (suicide 1937)
 - April 10 – Anna Kavan (Helen Emily Woods, Helen Ferguson), French-born English novelist and short story writer (died 1968)
 - May 1 – Antal Szerb, Hungarian writer (died 1945)
 - May 15 – Xavier Herbert, Australian novelist (died 1984)
 - June 1 – John Van Druten, English-born American dramatist (died 1957)
 - June 23 – Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar, Turkish novelist and essayist (died 1962)
 - July 9 – Barbara Cartland, English romantic novelist, historian and playwright (died 2000)
 - July 20 – Dilys Powell, English film critic (died 1995)
 - July 25 – Ruth Krauss, American children's author and poet (died 1993)
 - August 10 – Sergio Frusoni, Cape Verde poet and promoter of Cape Verdean Creole language (died 1975)
 - August 17 – Heðin Brú, Faroese fiction writer and translator (died 1987)
 - August 20 – Salvatore Quasimodo, Italian poet and translator (died 1968)
 - October 25 – Samuil Lehtțir, Soviet Moldovan poet, critic and literary theorist (shot 1937)
 - November 3 – André Malraux, French author (died 1976)
 - November 4 – Ernest Elmore (John Bude), English crime writer and theatre director (died 1957)
 - December 9 – Ödön von Horváth, Austro-Hungarian dramatist and novelist (died 1938)
 - December 16 – Margaret Mead, American anthropologist and author (died 1978)[12]
 
Deaths
- January 1 – Ignatius L. Donnelly, American politician and writer (born 1831)
 - January 14 – Víctor Balaguer, Catalan Spanish dramatist and poet (born 1824)
 - January 17 – Frederic W. H. Myers, British poet (born 1843)
 - January 26 – Grigore Sturdza, Moldavian and Romanian adventurer, literary sponsor and philosopher (pneumonia, born 1821)
 - February 2 – John Cordy Jeaffreson, English novelist and non-fiction writer (born 1831)
 - February 7 – Rowena Granice Steele, first female novelist in California (born 1824)
 - February 15 – Maurice Thompson, American novelist (born 1844)
 - February 18 – Anna Gardner, American author, abolitionist, teacher, reformer (born 1816)
 - March 19 – Philippe Gille, French dramatist (born 1831)
 - April 6 – George Murray Smith, English publisher (born 1824)
 - April 10 — Harriet Newell Kneeland Goff, reformer and author (born 1828)
 - April 12 – Louis Auguste Sabatier, French theologian (born 1839)
 - April 26 – Harriett Ellen Grannis Arey, American educator, author, editor, and publisher (born 1819)
 - May 24 – Charlotte Mary Yonge, English novelist (born 1823)
 - June 4 – Charlotte Fowler Wells, American phrenologist and publisher (born 1814)
 - June 5 – Dagny Juel, Norwegian writer and artists' model (shot, born 1867)
 - June 9 – Walter Besant, English novelist and historian (born 1836)[13]
 - June 10 – Robert Williams Buchanan, Scottish poet, novelist and dramatist (born 1841)
 - July 7 – Johanna Spyri, Swiss children's writer (born 1827)
 - July 18 – Jan ten Brink, Dutch novelist (born 1834)
 - July 20 – William Cosmo Monkhouse, English poet and critic (born 1840)
 - July 27 – Brooke Foss Westcott, English theologian (born 1825)
 - August 4 – Harriet Pritchard Arnold, American author (born 1858)
 - August 9 – Vishnudas Bhave, Indian dramatist (unknown birth year)
 - October 28 – Paul Rée, German author and philosopher (born 1849)
 - October 31 – Julien Leclercq, French Symbolist poet and art critic (born 1865)
 - November 6 – Kate Greenaway, English children's illustrator and writer (born 1846)[14]
 - November 21 – V. A. Urechia, Romanian historian, writer and politician (born 1834)[15]
 - December 28 – Mary K. Buck, Bohemian-born American author (born 1849)
 
Awards
References
- ↑ Decree of Excommunication of Leo Tolstoy.
 - ↑ Legrand, Jacques (1987). Chronicle of the 20th Century. Ecam Publication. p. 27. ISBN 0-942191-01-3.
 - ↑ "I have a horror of weddings, the congratulations and the champagne, standing around, glass in hand with an endless grin on your face." Letter to Olga Knipper, April 19, 1901.
 - ↑ Stephen G. Kuehler (2008).
 - ↑ Concealing God: The "Everyman" revival, 1901–1903. Tufts University Ph.D. thesis, p. 108.
 - ↑ William Butler Yeats (30 June 2008). The Collected Works of W.B. Yeats Volume VIII: The Irish Dramatic Movement. Simon and Schuster. p. 11. ISBN 978-1-4391-0612-9.
 - ↑ Râpeanu, Valeriu (December 2001). "Sămănătorul acum 100 de ani". Magazin Istoric.
 - ↑ Nobel Prize official website: From the First Nobel Prize Award Ceremony, 1901. Accessed March 11, 2013.
 - ↑ "Altamirano, Ignacio Manuel". Escritores.org. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
 - ↑ "Resumen de El Zarco (Ignacio Manuel Altamirano)". 28 June 2017. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
 - ↑ Sutherland, John (2007). Bestsellers: a very short introduction. Oxford University Press. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-19-921489-1.
 - ↑ "Margaret Mead | Biography, Theory, Books, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
 - ↑ Charles Wells Moulton (1966). The mid-nineteenth century to Edwardianism. F. Ungar Publishing Company. p. 416.
 - ↑ Clark; Mary Bruccoli; Richard Layman; Gale Cengage; Clark Bruccoli; Mary Layman Richard (1994). British Children's Writers, 1880-1914. Gale Research. p. 141. ISBN 978-0-8103-5555-2.
 - ↑ George Călinescu, Istoria literaturii române de la origini până în prezent, Editura Minerva, Bucharest, 1986. Page 529
 
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