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Jan Kochanowski

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Jan Kochanowski
Noble Family Kochanowski.
Coat of Arms
105px

Korwin

Parents Piotr Kochanowski;

Anna, née Białaczowska.

Consorts Dorota, née Podlodowska.
Children Urszula, 5 other daughters, a posthumous son.
Date of Birth 1530
Place of Birth Sycyna
Date of Death August 22 1584
Place of Death Lublin

Jan Kochanowski (1530 - August 22 1584) was a Polish Renaissance poet who established poetic patterns that would become integral to literary language [1]. He is commonly regarded as the greatest Polish poet as well as the the greatest Slavic poet prior to the 19th century.<ref name="Murray">Paul Murray, The Fourth Friend: Poetry in a Time of Affliction, Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 8.3 (2005) 19-39.</ref>

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[edit] Life

Kochanowski was born at Sycyna, near Radom, Poland. Little is known of his early education. At fourteen, however, fluent in Latin, he was sent to Kraków to study at the Jagiellonian University. After graduation in 1547 at age 17, he attended university at Koenigsberg, in Ducal Prussia, and at Padua, Italy. At Padua, Kochanowski came in contact with the great humanist scholar Francis Robortello. Kochanowski closed his fifteen-year period of studies and travels with a final visit to France, where he met the poet Pierre Ronsard.

In 1559 Kochanowski returned to Poland for good, a humanist and Renaissance poet. He spent the next fifteen years close to the court of King Sigismund II of Poland, serving for a time as royal secretary. In 1574, following the decampment of Poland's recently elected King Henryk Walezy (whose candidacy to the Polish throne Kochanowski had supported), Kochanowski settled on a family estate at Czarnolas ("Blackwood") to lead the life of a country squire. In 1575 he married Dorota Podlodowska, with whom he had seven children.

Kochanowski is sometimes referred to in Polish as "Jan of Czarnolas". It was there that he wrote his most memorable works, including The Dismissal of the Grecian Envoys and the Laments.

Kochanowski died, probably of a heart attack, in Lublin on August 22 1584.

[edit] Works

Kochanowski's earliest poems were written in Latin, but he soon turned to the vernacular, creating verse forms that made him the founder of Polish poetic literature.

His masterpieces include Treny (Threnodies, 1580, translated into English in 1995 by Stanisław Barańczak and Seamus Heaney as Laments)—a series of nineteen elegies upon the death of his beloved two-and-a-half-year-old daughter Urszula; and Odprawa posłów greckich (The Dismissal of the Grecian Envoys, 1578), a blank-verse tragedy based on an incident that had led to the Trojan War. It was the first tragedy written in Polish, and its theme of the responsibilities of statesmanship continues to resonate to this day.

Kochanowski's Laments, especially, move the reader with their unaffected sentiments, expressed with a skill worthy, in a later generation, of a Shakespeare.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

<references/>

[edit] External links

[edit] Further reading

  • David J. Welsh, Jan Kochanowski, New York, Twayne Publishers, 1974, ISBN 0805724907. Reviewed by Harold B. Segel in The Slavic Review, vol. 35, no. 3. (Sept. 1976), pp. 583-84. [2]de:Jan Kochanowski

es:Jan Kochanowski fr:Jan Kochanowski pl:Jan Kochanowski pt:Jan Kochanowski ru:Кохановский, Ян sk:Jan Kochanowski

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