1. Pushkin’s death is related to Tsar Nicholas I. In other words: Pushkin's death was completely a conspiracy.
2. Reason:
Tsar Nicholas I coveted the beauty of Pushkin’s wife Goncharova. Dantes was instructed by the Tsar to lure Goncharova in various public places, deliberately angering Pushkin, causing her to duel with him, and took the opportunity to kill Pushkin. In addition, this incident was widely publicized by the Tsar in the upper class society, causing Pushkin to be slandered many times and his reputation was greatly damaged, which also provoked this bloody duel.
Pushkin was a famous Russian poet in the 19th century. In February 1837, he died in a duel with his love rival Dantes, and the Russian literary world lost a superstar. The poet's untimely death shocked the Russian people. People held activities to commemorate the great poet, and at the same time they were thinking about the real reasons behind Pushkin's death.
The young Pushkin was suave and talented, and his talent as a poet was revealed very early. After he met the stunning beauty Natalia Nikolayevna Goncharova in Moscow, the two fell in love at first sight and fell in love together. They got married soon after.
A few years later, George Dantes, an officer of the Tsarist Guards and a French dandy, met Goncharova by chance at a dance and launched a fierce offensive against her. Pushkin was extremely angry at this third party. He cannot tolerate other people's attempts to steal his love. In order to safeguard his dignity and reputation, Pushkin decided to fight Dantes. The cunning Dantes shot Pushkin in the vital part before Pushkin was ready. Due to serious gunshot wounds, a generation of poets finally died.
3. Introduction to Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin:
Alexander Sergeyevich Pushkin (June 6, 1799 - February 1837) 10th) is a famous Russian litterateur, considered by many to be Russia's greatest poet and the founder of modern Russian literature. The main representative of Russian romantic literature in the 19th century. Known as the "Father of Russian Novels". His works were a literary response to the rise of Russian national consciousness and the aristocratic revolutionary movement. Representative works include the poems "Ode to Freedom", "To the Sea", "To Chadayev", "If Life Deceived You", etc., the poetic novel "Eugene Onegin", and the novel "The Captain's Daughter" "Queen of Spades" etc.