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Arthur Conan Doyle
Life Time
22 May 1859 - 7 July 1930
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Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle was born in Edinburgh, Scotland on 22 May 1859. Over the years, the author has created adventure and science fiction books about Professor Challenger. Conan Doyle also wrote humorous works (the main character is Brigadier Geraret) and historical novels (The White Squad, etc.), he did not refrain from creating autobiographical essays and household novels, but the writer’s world fame belongs to the plays Waterloo, Angels of Darkness, Lights of Destiny, The Motley Ribbon
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Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle was born in Edinburgh, Scotland on 22 May 1859. Over the years, the author has created adventure and science fiction books about Professor Challenger. Conan Doyle also wrote humorous works (the main character is Brigadier Geraret) and historical novels (The White Squad, etc.), he did not refrain from creating autobiographical essays and household novels, but the writer’s world fame belongs to the plays Waterloo, Angels of Darkness, Lights of Destiny, The Motley Ribbon and poems (collections of ballads “Songs of Action” (1898) and “Songs of the Road”), he did not refrain from creating autobiographical essays and household novels, but the world fame of this Scottish and English writer brought his detective about Sherotheson and Dr. The most famous among them are “Dancing Men”, “Motley Ribbon”, “Humpback”, “Dog of the Baskervilles”.
Like his literary character, a friend of Holmes, Conan Doyle was a professional doctor. In this capacity, he boarded the whaling ship Hope in February 1880, and later, after earning a bachelor's degree, was engaged in private practice and was a military field surgeon during the Anglo-Burke War. Much had to see Sir Arthur in his lifetime, and this experience could find a single splash - in literary work, which, in the end, became dominant in the fate of Conan Doyle.
When during the First World War, the writer apologized for enlisting volunteers at the front, he was refused. Arthur Conan Doyle expressed his patriotic and civic mood in journalistic essays: he was shocked by the tortures to which the Germans subjected British prisoners, and many other events that accompanied the hostilities. Taking advantage of this opportunity, the author still went to the combat positions of British soldiers to support them, and recorded everything he saw in his book On Three Fronts.
The famous writer died on July 7, 1930 in Crowborough (Sussex). /