Anna Brigadere (October 1, 1861, in TÃÂrvete â June 25, 1933, in TÃÂrvete) was a writer, playwright and poet from Latvia.
Her first story was published in 1896. In 1897, she turned her focus exclusively to literary work, and her first book VecàKarlëne/Old Karlëna was published. Six years later, her first and most popular play Sprëdëtis/The Tale of Sprëdëtis was written for the Riga Latvian Theatre director JÃÂkabs Duburs, who staged the play in 1903. In 1985, the story was adapted for cinema, translated in several languages. World War I would lead her to emigrate to Moscow. In 1918, she returned to Riga and continued there her literary creation.
She wrote comedy and drama, among which The Tale of Sprëdëtis, a young boy from a Latvian peasant family and his fantastic adventures in a nearby forest. She also wrote four autobiographies, among which Dievs, daba, darbs (God, Nature, Work) about the life of a Latvian woman in the late 19th century.