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Francišak Bahuševič (Belarusian: Францішак Багушэвіч; Polish: Franciszek Bohuszewicz; 21 March [O.S. 9 March] 1840 – 28 April [O.S. 15 April] 1900) was a Belarusian poet, writer and lawyer, considered to be one of the initiators of modern Belarusian literature.[1]
Francišak Bahuševič | |
---|---|
Born | Franciszek Benedykt Bohuszewicz 21 March 1840, Śvirany, Vilna Governorate, Russian Empire |
Died | 28 April 1900 Kušliany, Vilna Governorate, Russian Empire | (aged 60),
Resting place | Župrany near Ašmiany |
Occupation | Poet, essayist |
Language | Belarusian |
Origins
editFrancišak Bahuševič was born in the folwark of Śvirany, near Vilnius (modern-day Lithuania), into a family of minor nobility — Kazimir and Konstantsiya (née Hałaŭnia) Bahuševič. For a long time, it was believed that the folwark was rented by the poet’s father. However, Śvirany belonged to the Hałaŭnia family, from which his mother, Konstantsiya, came. She had gone to her parents and grandparents before the birth of her son (the first son was Uładzisłaŭ-Anton, four years older than Francišak).[2]
Between 1841 and 1846, the family moved to the hereditary estate of Kušliany in the Ašmiany Uyezd, which had belonged to the Bahuševič family since the mid-18th century. According to a deed recorded in the Ašmiany town court books on March 13, 1749, the poet's ancestor, Anton Bahuševič, for 450 Polish zlotys, "acquired the estate of Kušliany or Mihuciany" along with the peasants from the Kuncewicz family.
Biography
editBahuševič participated in the January Uprising of 1863–1864. After this, Bahuševič left Belarus to live in Ukraine, where he studied in Nezhin law school. He worked as a lawyer defending the rights of the peasantry. After amnesty for all participants of the revolt was announced, dated for an ascension on the throne of Alexander III, he moved with his family back to Vilna. There he worked in a law office and wrote clauses to the magazine Kraj in Polish. After dismissal of veins in Kushlyany (present-day Smarhon District), he died. He is buried in the village of Zhuprany in the Ashmyany District.
Works
editBahuševič was an initiator of critical realism in Belarusian literature. His works are closely connected with Belarusian folklore. He published two collections of poems, Dudka biełaruskaja (English: Belarusian fife) and Smyk biełaruski (English: Belarusian fiddlestick), in Austria-Hungary. Bahuševič published his works under the pseudonyms Maciej Buračok, Symon Reŭka z-pad Barysava.
He wrote mainly in Belarusian. He started when he was still in Ukraine, but he took up literary activity only after returning to Vilnius. Two collections of poems and poems were published during his lifetime. They were published abroad: Dudka biełaruskaja (Kraków, 1891) and Smyk biełaruski (Poznań, 1896). After the fall of the uprising in Belarus, the printing of Belarusian books was forbidden until 1905, which is why his works were published illegally and spread in manuscripts.[3]
Bahuszewicz's poetry is called a peasant poetry. He used the literary pseudonyms Maciej Buračok and Symon Reŭka z-pad Barysava (Symon Reuka from Barysaw). Maciej Buraczok was a resident of Kuszlan, and Symon Reŭka was from Barysaw. In this way, the pseudonyms covered the whole of Belarus. He was the first author of an all-Belarusian book of poetry and is considered the father of Belarusian realism, the creator of national romantic tendencies in Belarusian literature. He wrote the first short stories in the Belarusian literature (Traralonochka, published in a separate booklet in 1892), folk novellas (Świadek, Polesovszczik, Diadina, published after his death in the Nasha Niva newspaper in 1907). He also published in Polish and was a correspondent of the Polish magazine "Kraj". His letters to his friends, Eliza Orzeszkowa and Jan Karłowicz, have been preserved.[3]
Gallery
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Cover of the Dudka biełaruskaja, Bahuševič's first poetry book
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Grave of Bahuševič
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Memorial plaque of on a library in Savičiūnai, Vilnius district, Lithuania.
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Francišak Bahuševič library and culture center of Savičiūnai
References
edit- ^ "Figure and Heritage of Francišak Bahuševič in a New Electronic Publication of the National Library of Belarus". www.nlb.by. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
- ^ Янушкевіч Я. (2010). "Францішак Багушэвіч". In Навук. рэд. тома У. Мархель, В. Чамярыцкі (ed.). Гісторыя беларускай літаратуры XI—XIX стагоддзяў. У 2 т. Vol. 2. Новая літаратура: другая палова XVIII—XIX стагоддзе (2nd ed.). Мінск: Беларус. навука. p. 373. ISBN 978-985-08-1167-7.
- ^ a b "Францішак Бенядзікт Багушэвіч". tbm.org.by. 9 June 2004. Archived from the original on 9 June 2004. Retrieved 22 February 2023.