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Henryk Sienkiewicz

Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Sienkiewicz (US: /ʃɛnˈkjvɪ, -jɛv-/ shen-KYAY-vitch, -⁠KYEV-itch,[1][2][3] Polish: [ˈxɛnrɨk ˈadam alɛkˈsandɛr ˈpjus ɕɛnˈkʲɛvit͡ʂ]; 5 May 1846 – 15 November 1916), also known by the pseudonym Litwos (Polish pronunciation: [ˈlitfɔs]), was a Polish writer, novelist, journalist and Nobel Prize laureate. He is best remembered for his historical novels, especially for his internationally known best-seller Quo Vadis (1896).

Henryk Sienkiewicz
Sienkiewicz in the 1880s, photograph by Stanisław Bizański
BornHenryk Adam Aleksander Pius Sienkiewicz
(1846-05-05)5 May 1846
Wola Okrzejska, Lublin Governorate, Congress Poland
Died15 November 1916(1916-11-15) (aged 70)
Vevey, Switzerland
Occupationwriter, novelist, journalist
LanguagePolish
NationalityPolish
Period19th–20th century
Notable works
Notable awardsNobel Prize in Literature
1905
Signature

Born into an impoverished Polish noble family in Russian-ruled Congress Poland, in the late 1860s he began publishing journalistic and literary pieces. In the late 1870s he traveled to the United States, sending back travel essays that won him popularity with Polish readers. In the 1880s he began serializing novels that further increased his popularity. He soon became one of the most popular Polish writers of the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, and numerous translations gained him international renown, culminating in his receipt of the 1905 Nobel Prize in Literature for his "outstanding merits as an epic writer."

Many of his novels remain in print. In Poland he is best known for his "Trilogy" of historical novels – With Fire and Sword, The Deluge, and Sir Michael – set in the 17th-century Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth; internationally he is best known for Quo Vadis, set in Nero's Rome. The Trilogy and Quo Vadis have been filmed, the latter several times, with Hollywood's 1951 version receiving the most international recognition.

Life

Early life

Sienkiewicz was born on 5 May 1846 in Wola Okrzejska, now a village in the central part of the eastern Polish region of Lubelskie, then part of the Russian Empire.[4][5] His family were impoverished Polish nobles, on his father's side deriving from Tatars who had settled in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[4][6][7][8] His parents were Józef Sienkiewicz (1813–96) of the Oszyk coat of arms and Stefania Cieciszowska (1820–73). His mother descended from an old and affluent Podlachian family.[4] He had five siblings: an older brother, Kazimierz (who died during January Uprising of 1863-1864), and four sisters: Aniela, Helena, Zofia and Maria.[4] His family were entitled to use the Polish Oszyk coat of arms.[9][10] Wola Okrzejska belonged to the writer's maternal grandmother, Felicjana Cieciszowska.[4] His family moved several times, and young Henryk spent his childhood on family estates in Grabowce Górne, Wężyczyn and Burzec.[4] In September 1858 he began his education in Warsaw, where the family would finally settle in 1861, having bought a tenement house ( kamienica) in eastern Warsaw's Praga district.[4] He received relatively poor school-grades except in the humanities, notably Polish language and history.[4]

 
Monument atop Sienkiewicz Mound at Okrzeja. At left is the writer's family's village, Wola Okrzejska, where he was born.

Due to hard times, the 19-year-old Sienkiewicz took a job as tutor to the Weyher family in Płońsk.[4] It was probably in this period that he wrote his first novel, Ofiara (Sacrifice); he is thought to have destroyed the manuscript of the never-published novel.[4] He also worked on his first novel to be published, Na marne (In Vain). He completed extramural secondary-school classes, and in 1866 he received his secondary-school diploma.[4] He first tried to study medicine, then law, at the Imperial University of Warsaw, but he soon transferred to the university's Institute of Philology and History, where he acquired a thorough knowledge of literature and Old Polish Language.[4][5] Little is known about this period of his life, other than that he moved out of his parents' home, tutored part-time, and lived in poverty.[4] His situation improved somewhat in 1868 when he became a tutor to the princely Woroniecki family.[4]

In 1867 he wrote a rhymed piece, "Sielanka Młodości" ("Idyll of Youth"), which was rejected by Tygodnik Illustrowany (The Illustrated Weekly).[4] In 1869 he debuted as a journalist; Przegląd Tygodniowy (1866–1904) (The Weekly Review) ran his review of a play on 18 April 1869, and shortly afterward The Illustrated Weekly printed an essay of his about the late-Renaissance Polish poet Mikołaj Sęp Szarzyński.[4] He completed his university studies in 1871, though he failed to receive a diploma because he did not pass the examination in Greek language.[4] Sienkiewicz also wrote for Gazeta Polska (The Polish Gazette) and Niwa (magazine), under the pen name "Litwos".[11] In 1873 he began writing a column, "Bez tytułu" ("Without a title"), in The Polish Gazette; in 1874 a column, "Sprawy bieżące" ("Current matters") for Niwa; and in 1875 the column, "Chwila obecna" ("The present moment").[11] He also collaborated on a Polish translation, published in 1874, of Victor Hugo's last novel, Ninety-Three.[11] In June that year he became co-owner of Niwa (in 1878, he would sell his share in the magazine).[11][12]

Meanwhile, in 1872, he had debuted as a fiction writer with his short novel Na marne (In Vain), published in the magazine Wieniec (Garland).[4] This was followed by Humoreski z teki Woroszyłły (Humorous Sketches from Woroszyłła's Files, 1872), Stary Sługa (The Old Servant, 1875), Hania (Sienkiewicz) (1876) and Selim Mirza (1877).[11][13] The last three are known as the "Little Trilogy".[13] These publications made him a prominent figure in Warsaw's journalistic-literary world, and a guest at popular dinner parties hosted by the actress Helena Modrzejewska.[11]

Travels abroad

 
Sienkiewicz in safari outfit, 1890s

In 1874 Henryk Sienkiewicz was briefly engaged to Maria Keller, and traveled abroad to Brussels and Paris.[11] Soon after he returned, his fiancée's parents cancelled the engagement.[11] In 1876 Sienkiewicz went to the United States with Helena Modrzejewska (soon to become famous in the U.S. as actress Helena Modjeska) and her husband.[11] He traveled via London to New York and then on to San Francisco, staying for some time in California.[11] His travels were financed by Gazeta Polska (The Polish Gazette) in exchange for a series of travel essays: Sienkiewicz wrote Listy z podróży (Letters from a Journey) and Listy Litwosa z Podróży (Litwos' Letters from a Journey), which were published in The Polish Gazette in 1876–78 and republished as a book in 1880.[11][14] Other articles by him also appeared in Przegląd Tygodniowy (The Weekly Review) and Przewodnik Naukowy i Literacki (The Learned and Literary Guide), discussing the situation of American Polonia.[12] He briefly lived in the town of Anaheim, later in Anaheim Landing (now Seal Beach, California).[11] He hunted, visited Native American camps, traveled in the nearby mountains (the Santa Ana, Sierra Madre, San Jacinto, and San Bernardino Mountains), and visited the Mojave Desert, Yosemite Valley, and the silver mines at Virginia City, Nevada.[11] On 20 August 1877 he witnessed Modjeska's U.S. theatrical debut at San Francisco's California Theatre, which he reviewed for The Polish Gazette; and on 8 September he published in the Daily Evening Post an article, translated into English for him by Modjeska, on "Poland and Russia".[11]

In America, he also continued writing fiction, in 1877 publishing Szkice węglem (Charcoal Sketches) in The Polish Gazette.[12] He wrote a play, Na przebój, soon retitled Na jedną kartę (On a Single Card), later staged at Lviv (1879) and, to better reception, at Warsaw (1881).[12] He also wrote a play for Modjeska, aimed at an American public, Z walki tutejszych partii (Partisan Struggles), but it was never performed or published, and the manuscript appears to be lost.[12]

On 24 March 1878 Sienkiewicz left the U.S. for Europe.[12] He first stayed in London, then for a year in Paris, delaying his return to Poland due to rumors of possible conscription into the Imperial Russian Army on the eve of a predicted new war with Turkey.[12]

Return to Poland

 
Sienkiewicz by Kazimierz Pochwalski, 1890

In April 1879 Sienkiewicz returned to Polish soil.[12] In Lviv (Lwów) he gave a lecture that was not well attended: "Z Nowego Jorku do Kalifornii" ("From New York to California").[12][15] Subsequent lectures in Szczawnica and Krynica in July–August that year, and in Warsaw and Poznań the following year, were much more successful.[12][16] In late summer 1879 he went to Venice and Rome, which he toured for the next few weeks, on 7 November 1879 returning to Warsaw.[12] There he met Maria Szetkiewicz, whom he married on 18 August 1881.[12] The marriage was reportedly a happy one.[16] The couple had two children, Henryk Józef (1882–1959) and Jadwiga Maria (1883–1969).[12] It was a short-lived marriage, however, because on 18 August 1885 Maria died of tuberculosis.[17]

In 1879 the first collected edition of Sienkiewicz's works was published, in four volumes; the series would continue until 1917, ending with a total of 17 volumes.[12] He also continued writing journalistic pieces, mainly in The Polish Gazette and Niwa.[12] In 1881 he published a favorable review of the first collected edition of works by Bolesław Prus.[16]

In 1880 Sienkiewicz wrote a historical novella, Niewola tatarska (Tartar Captivity).[12] In late 1881 he became editor-in-chief of a new Warsaw newspaper, Słowo (The Word).[16] This substantially improved his finances.[16] The year 1882 saw him heavily engaged in the running of the newspaper, in which he published a number of columns and short stories.[16] Soon, however, he lost interest in the journalistic aspect and decided to focus more on his literary work.[16] He paid less and less attention to his post of editor-in-chief, resigning it in 1887 but remaining editor of the paper's literary section until 1892.[17]

From 1883 he increasingly shifted his focus from short pieces to historical novels.[16] He began work on the historical novel, Ogniem i Mieczem (With Fire and Sword). Initially titled Wilcze gniazdo (The Wolf's Lair), it appeared in serial installments in The Word from May 1883 to March 1884.[16][17] It also ran concurrently in the Kraków newspaper, Czas (Time).[16]

Sienkiewicz soon began writing the second volume of his Trilogy, Potop (The Deluge).[17] It ran in The Word from December 1884 to September 1886.[17] Beginning in 1884, Sienkiewicz accompanied his wife Maria to foreign sanatoriums.[17] After her death, he kept on traveling Europe, leaving his children with his late wife's parents, though he often returned to Poland, particularly staying for long periods in Warsaw and Kraków beginning in the 1890s.[17][18] After his return to Warsaw in 1887, the third volume of his Trilogy appeared – Pan Wołodyjowski (Sir Michael) – running in The Word from May 1887 to May 1888.[17] The Trilogy established Sienkiewicz as the most popular contemporary Polish writer.[17]

Sienkiewicz received 15,000 rubles, in recognition of his achievements, from an unknown admirer who signed himself "Michał Wołodyjowski" after the Trilogy character.[17] Sienkiewicz used the money to set up a fund, named for his wife and supervised by the Academy of Learning, to aid artists endangered by tuberculosis.[17]

In 1886, he visited Istanbul; in 1888, Spain.[17] At the end of 1890 he went to Africa, resulting in Listy z Afryki (Letters from Africa, published in The Word in 1891–92, then collected as a book in 1893).[17] The turn of the 1880s and 1890s was associated with intensive work on several novels. In 1891 his novel Without dogma (Bez Dogmatu), previously serialized in 1889–90 in The Word, was published in book form.[18] In 1892 Sienkiewicz signed an agreement for another novel, Rodzina Połanieckich (Children of the Soil), which was serialized in The Polish Gazette from 1893 and came out in book form in 1894.[18]

Later years

Sienkiewicz had several romances, and in 1892 Maria Romanowska-Wołodkowicz, stepdaughter of a wealthy Odessan, entered his life.[18] He and Romanowska became engaged there in 1893 and married in Kraków on 11 November.[18] Just two weeks later, however, his bride left him; Sienkiewicz blamed "in-law intrigues". On 13 December 1895 he obtained papal consent to dissolution of the marriage.[18] In 1904 he married his niece, Maria Babska.[18]

Sienkiewicz used his growing international fame to influence world opinion in favor of the Polish cause (throughout his life and since the late 18th century, Poland remained partitioned by her neighbors, Russia, Austria and Prussia, later Germany).[5][19] He often criticized German policies of Germanization of the Polish minority in Germany;[19][20][21] in 1901 he expressed support of Września schoolchildren who were protesting the banning of the Polish language.[19] More cautiously, he called on Russia's government to introduce reforms in Russian-controlled Congress Poland.[22] During the Revolution in the Kingdom of Poland, he advocated broader Polish autonomy within the Russian Empire.[5][21]

Sienkiewicz maintained some ties with Polish right-wing National Democracy politicians and was critical of the socialists, but he was generally a moderate and declined to become a politician and a deputy to the Russian Duma.[21][22] In the cultural sphere, he was involved in the creation of the Kraków and Warsaw monuments to Adam Mickiewicz.[19] He supported educational endeavors and co-founded the Polska Macierz Szkolna organization.[22] "Reasonably wealthy" by 1908 thanks to sales of his books, he often used his new wealth to support struggling writers.[19] He helped gather funds for social-welfare projects such as starvation relief, and for construction of a tuberculosis sanatorium at Zakopane.[19] He was as prominent in philanthropy as in literature.[5]

In February 1895 he wrote the first chapters of Quo Vadis. The novel was serialized, beginning in March 1895, in Warsaw's Polish Gazette, Kraków's Czas (Time), and Poznań's Dziennik Poznański (Poznań Daily).[23] The novel was finished by March 1896.[23] The book edition appeared later the same year, and soon gained international renown.[23] In February 1897 he began serializing a new novel, Krzyżacy (The Teutonic Knights, or The Knights of the Cross); serialization finished in 1900, and the book edition appeared that year.[23]

In 1900, with a three-year delay due to the approaching centenary of Mickiewicz's birth, Sienkiewicz celebrated his own quarter-century, begun in 1872, as a writer.[19] Special events were held in a number of Polish cities, including Kraków, Lwów and Poznań.[19] A jubilee committee presented him with a gift from the Polish people: an estate at Oblęgorek, near Kielce,[19] where he later opened a school for children.[24]

In 1905 he won a Nobel Prize for his lifetime achievements as an epic writer.[19][25][26] In his acceptance speech, he said this honor was of particular value to a son of Poland: "She was pronounced dead – yet here is proof that she lives on.... She was pronounced defeated – and here is proof that she is victorious."[27]

 
Sienkiewicz's residence at Oblęgorek

His social and political activities resulted in a diminished literary output.[20] He wrote a new historical novel, Na polu chwały (On the Field of Glory), that was meant as the beginning of a new trilogy; it was, however, criticized as being a lesser version of his original Trilogy, and was never continued.[20] Similarly, his contemporary novel Wiry (Whirlpools), 1910, which sought to criticize some of Sienkiewicz's political opponents, received a mostly polemical and politicized response.[28] His 1910 novel for young people, W pustyni i w puszczy (In Desert and Wilderness), serialized in Kurier Warszawski (The Warsaw Courier), finishing in 1911, was much better received and became widely popular among children and young adults.[28]

After the outbreak of World War I, Sienkiewicz was visited at Oblęgorek by a Polish Legions cavalry unit under Bolesław Wieniawa-Długoszowski.[28] Soon after, he left for Switzerland.[28] Together with Ignacy Paderewski and Erazm Piltz, he established an organization for Polish war relief.[28] He also supported the work of the Red Cross.[21] Otherwise, he eschewed politics, though shortly before his death he endorsed the Act of 5th November 1916, a declaration by Emperors Wilhelm II of Germany and Franz Joseph of Austria and king of Hungary, pledging the creation of a Kingdom of Poland envisioned as a puppet state allied with, and controlled by, the Central Powers.[28]

Death

 
Sienkiewicz's tomb, St. John's Cathedral, Warsaw

Sienkiewicz died on 15 November 1916, at the Grand Hotel du Lac in Vevey, Switzerland, where he was buried on 22 November.[28] The cause of death was ischemic heart disease.[28] His funeral was attended by representatives of both the Central Powers and the Entente, and an address by Pope Benedict XV was read.[28][29]

In 1924, after Poland had regained her independence, Sienkiewicz's remains were repatriated to Warsaw, Poland, and placed in the crypt of St. John's Cathedral.[29] During the coffin's transit, solemn memorial ceremonies were held in a number of cities.[29] Thousands accompanied the coffin to its Warsaw resting place, and Poland's President Stanisław Wojciechowski delivered a eulogy.[29]

Works

Sienkiewicz's early works (e.g., the 1872 Humoreski z teki Woroszyłły) show him a strong supporter of Polish Positivism, endorsing constructive, practical characters such as an engineer.[4] Polish "Positivism" advocated economic and social modernization and deprecated armed irredentist struggle.[21] Unlike most other Polish Positivist writers, Sienkiewicz was a conservative.[21] His Little Trilogy (Stary Sługa, 1875; Hania, 1876; Selim Mirza, 1877) shows his interest in Polish history and his literary maturity, including fine mastery of humor and drama.[11][12] His early works focused on three themes: the oppression and poverty of the peasants ("Charcoal Sketches", 1877); criticism of the partitioning powers ("Z pamiętnika korepetytora", "Janko Muzykant" ["Janko the Musician"], 1879); and his voyage to the United States ("Za chlebem", "For Bread", 1880).[12] His most common motif was the plight of the powerless: impoverished peasants, schoolchildren, emigrants.[12]

His "Latarnik" ("The Lighthouse keeper", 1881) has been described as one of the best Polish short stories.[12] His 1882 stories "Bartek Zwycięzca" ("Bart the Conqueror") and "Sachem" draw parallels between the tragic fates of their heroes and that of the occupied Polish nation.[16]

His novel With Fire and Sword (1883–84) was enthusiastically received by readers (as were the next two volumes of The Trilogy), becoming an "instant classic", though critical reception was lukewarm.[16][17][21][30] The Trilogy is set in 17th-century Poland.[21] While critics generally praised its style, they noted that some historic facts are misrepresented or distorted.[16][17][30] The Trilogy merged elements of the epic and the historical novel, infused with special features of Sienkiewicz's style.[17] The Trilogy's patriotism worried the censors; Warsaw's Russian censor I. Jankul warned Sienkiewicz that he would not allow publication of any further works of his dealing with Polish history.[18]

 
Sienkiewicz's family coat-of-arms, Oszyk, was a variant of this Łabędź (Swan) coat-of-arms.

Sienkiewicz's Without dogma (Bez dogmatu, 1889–90) was a notable artistic experiment, a self-analytical novel written as a fictitious diary.[18] His works of the period are critical of decadent and naturalistic philosophies.[23] He had expressed his opinions on naturalism and writing, generally, early on in "O naturaliźmie w powieści" ("Naturalism in the Novel", 1881).[12] A dozen years later, in 1893, he wrote that novels should strengthen and ennoble life, rather than undermining and debasing it.[23] Later, in the early 1900s, he fell into mutual hostility with the Young Poland movement in Polish literature.[22]

These views informed his novel Quo Vadis (1896).[23] This story of early Christianity in Rome, with protagonists struggling against the Emperor Nero's regime, draws parallels between repressed early Christians and contemporary Poles; and, due to its focus on Christianity, it became widely popular in the Christian West.[31] The triumph of spiritual Christianity over materialist Rome was a critique of materialism and decadence, and also an allegory for the strength of the Polish spirit.[23]

His Teutonic Knights returned to Poland's history,[23] describing the Battle of Grunwald (1410), a Polish-Lithuanian victory over the Teutonic Knights in the Polish-Lithuanian-Teutonic War. Both in German and Polish culture the Teutonic Knights were incorrectly viewed as precursors to modern Germans while the Polish-Lithuanian union was regarded as a model for a future independent Polish state. These assumptions tied in well with the contemporary political context of ongoing Germanization efforts in German Poland.[23][30] So, the book quickly became another Sienkiewicz bestseller in Poland, and was received by critics better than his Trilogy had been; it was also applauded by the Polish right-wing, anti-German National Democracy political movement, and became part of the Polish school curriculum after Poland regained independence in 1918.[30][32]

It is often incorrectly asserted that Sienkiewicz received his Nobel Prize for Quo Vadis.[25][26] While Quo Vadis is the novel that brought him international fame,[33] the Nobel Prize does not name any particular novel, instead citing "his outstanding merits as an epic writer".[34]

Sienkiewicz often carried out substantial historic research for his novels, but he was selective in the findings that made it into the novels. Thus, for example, he prioritized Polish military victories over defeats.[17]

Sienkiewicz kept a diary, but it has been lost.[28]

Recognition

 
Statue of author of Quo Vadis, near Villa Borghese in Rome

About the turn of the 20th century, Sienkiewicz was the most popular writer in Poland, and one of the most popular in Germany, France, Russia, and the English-speaking world.[23] The Trilogy went through many translations; With Fire and Sword saw at least 26 in his lifetime.[23] Quo Vadis became extremely popular, in at least 40 different language translations, including English-language editions totaling a million copies.[23] The American translator Jeremiah Curtin has been credited with helping popularize his works abroad.[31] However, as Russia (of which Sienkiewicz was a citizen) was not a signatory to the Berne Convention, he rarely received any royalties from the translations.[19]

Already in his lifetime his works were adapted for theatrical, operatic and musical presentations and for the emerging film industry.[23][29] Writers and poets devoted works to him, or used him or his works as inspiration.[19] Painters created works inspired by Sienkiewicz's novels, and their works were gathered in Sienkiewicz-themed albums and exhibitions.[23] The names of his characters were given to a variety of products.[23] The popularity of Quo Vadis in France, where it was the best-selling book of 1900, is shown by the fact that horses competing in a Grand Prix de Paris event were named for characters in the book.[35] In the United States, Quo Vadis sold 800,000 copies in eighteen months.[31] To avoid intrusive journalists and fans, Sienkiewicz sometimes traveled incognito.[23]

He was inducted into many international organizations and societies, including the Polish Academy of Learning, the Russian Academy of Sciences, the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, the Royal Czech Society of Sciences, and the Italian Academy of Arcadia.[23] He received the French Légion d'honneur (1904),[19] honorary doctorates from the Jagiellonian University (1900) and Lwów University (1911), and honorary citizenship of Lwów (1902).[19][20] In 1905 he received the most prestigious award in the world of literature, the Nobel Prize, after having been nominated in that year by Hans Hildebrand, member of the Swedish Academy.[19][36][37]

Named for Sienkiewicz, in Poland, are numerous streets and squares (the first street to bear his name was in Lwów, in 1907).[20][29] Named for him is Białystok's Osiedle Sienkiewicza; city parks in Wrocław and Łódź; and over 70 schools in Poland.[29] He has statues in a number of Polish cities, including Warsaw's Łazienki Park (the first statue was erected at Zbaraż, now in Ukraine),[29] and in Rome[38] A Sienkiewcz Mound stands at Okrzeja, near his birthplace, Wola Okrzejska.[29] He has been featured on a number of postage stamps.[29]

 
Official poster for the film Quo Vadis, 1951

There are three museums dedicated to him in Poland.[29] The first, the Henryk Sienkiewicz Museum in Oblęgorek (his residence), opened in 1958.[39] The second, founded in 1966, is in his birthplace: the Henryk Sienkiewicz Museum in Wola Okrzejska.[40] The third opened in 1978 at Poznań.[29]

In Rome (Italy), in the small church of "Domine Quo Vadis", there is a bronze bust of Henryk Sienkiewicz. It is said that Sienkiewicz was inspired to write his novel Quo Vadis while sitting in this church.

Outside Poland, Sienkiewicz's popularity declined beginning in the interbellum, except for Quo Vadis, which retained relative fame thanks to several film adaptations, including a notable American one in 1951.[29][31] In Poland his works are still widely read; he is seen as a classic author, and his works are often required reading in schools.[29] They have also been adapted for Polish films and television series.[29]

The first critical analyses of his works were published in his lifetime.[22][29] He has been the subject of a number of biographies.[29] His works have received criticism, in his lifetime and since, as being simplistic: a view expressed notably by the 20th-century Polish novelist and dramatist Witold Gombrowicz, who described Sienkiewicz as a "first-rate second-rate writer".[29][32] Vasily Rozanov described Quo Vadis as "not a work of art", but a "crude factory-made oleograph", while Anton Chekhov called Sienkiewicz's writing "sickeningly cloying and clumsy".[41] Nonetheless, the Polish historian of literature Henryk Markiewicz, writing the Polski słownik biograficzny (Polish Biographical Dictionary) entry on Sienkiewicz (1997), describes him as a master of Polish prose, as the foremost Polish writer of historical fiction, and as Poland's internationally best-known writer.[29]

Selected works

Novels

Other

  • Yanko the Musician and other stories (1893)
  • Lillian Morris and other stories (1894)
  • Hania and other stories (1897)
  • Let Us Follow Him and other stories (1897, unauthorized)
  • Sielanka, a forest picture, and other stories (1898)
  • On the Bright Shore (1898)
  • In Vain (1899)
  • Life and Death and other legends and stories (1904)
  • So Runs the World (criticism, a story, and two short dramas, "Whose Fault?" and "Win or Lose")

Filmography

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sienkiewicz". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  2. ^ "Sienkiewicz". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  3. ^ "Sienkiewicz". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 203.
  5. ^ a b c d e Ahmet Ersoy; Maciej Gorny; Vangelis Kechriotis (2010). Modernism: Representations of National Culture. Central European University Press. p. 163. ISBN 978-963-7326-64-6. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  6. ^ Lockert, Lacy (1919). "Henryk Sienkiewicz". The Sewanee Review. 27 (3): 257–283. JSTOR 27533215.
  7. ^ Andrzej Kulikowski. Heraldyka szlachecka. 1990. p. 89. Quote: "Rodzina Sienkiewiczów vel Sieńkiewiczów wywodzi się z tatarów zawołżańskich, zapisani do tzw. Chorągwi juszyńskiej – były to dolne szczeble w drabinie hierarchicznej utytułowanych rodów tatarskich. Według dokumentu wydanego w Radomiu 6 lutego 1782 protoplastą tej rodziny był Piotr Oszyk Sienkiewicz."
  8. ^ Jan Ciechanowicz. Rody rycerskie Wielkiego Księstwa Litewskiego. 2001. p. 72. Quote: "Sienkiewicz herbu Oszyk, 1775 nobilitowany: Sienkiewicze trockie, podolskie, Królestwo Polskie. Gałąź rodziny tatarskiej osiadłej na Litwie, przyjęła chrzest i uzyskała nobilitację z herbem Oszyk w osobie Michała Sienkiewicza. Z tej rodziny: Henryk 1847–1916, powieściopisarz"
  9. ^ Stefan Majchrowski (1966). Pan Sienkiewicz. Ludowa Spóldzielnia Wydawnicza. p. 456. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  10. ^ Władysław Studencki (1967). Szkice literackie: wielcy i mali. pp. 66–67. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 204.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 205.
  13. ^ a b Ewa Ihnatowicz (2000). Literatura polska drugiej połowy XIX wieku (1864–1914). Wydawn. Trio. p. 73. ISBN 978-83-85660-87-3. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  14. ^ Ireneusz Rębosz; Paweł Pierściński; Maryla Janudi (1996). Henryk Sienkiewicz i jego Oblęgorek. Wydawnictwo Voyager. p. iv. ISBN 978-83-85496-39-7. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  15. ^ Janina Kulczycka-Saloni (1960). Henryk Sienkiewicz. Państwowe Zakłady Wydawnictw Szkolnych. p. 19. Retrieved 12 May 2013.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 206.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 207.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 208.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 210.
  20. ^ a b c d e Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 212.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h Ahmet Ersoy; Maciej Gorny; Vangelis Kechriotis (2010). Modernism: Representations of National Culture. Central European University Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-963-7326-64-6. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  22. ^ a b c d e Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 211.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 209.
  24. ^ Wychowanie przedszkolne w Polsce w latach 1918–1939 (Pre-school Education in Poland in 1918–1939). Zaklad Narodowy im. Ossolińskich. 1967. p. 129. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  25. ^ a b Polish American Studies. Polish-American Historical Association. 2005. p. 76. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  26. ^ a b Sylwia Wilczak. "Quo Vadis Noblowska Pomyłka". Archiwum.wyborcza.pl. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  27. ^ "The Nobel Peace Prize 1983. Lech Wałęsa. Acceptance Speech". nobelprize.org. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 213.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Henryk Markiewicz, "Sienkiewicz, Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius", Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. XXXVII, 1997, p. 214.
  30. ^ a b c d Ahmet Ersoy; Maciej Gorny; Vangelis Kechriotis (2010). Modernism: Representations of National Culture. Central European University Press. p. 165. ISBN 978-963-7326-64-6. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  31. ^ a b c d George Thomas Kurian; James D. Smith III (2010). The Encyclopedia of Christian Literature. Scarecrow Press. p. 564. ISBN 978-0-8108-7283-7. Retrieved 28 May 2013.
  32. ^ a b Ahmet Ersoy; Maciej Gorny; Vangelis Kechriotis (2010). Modernism: Representations of National Culture. Central European University Press. p. 166. ISBN 978-963-7326-64-6. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  33. ^ Henryk Sienkiewicz (1998). Quo Vadis: A Narrative of the Time of Nero. Regnery Gateway. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-89526-345-2. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  34. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Literature 1905". nobelprize.org. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  35. ^ Janina Kulczycka-Saloni (1966). Henryk Sienkiewicz: Materiały zebrała i wstępem opatrzyła Janina Kulczycka-Saloni. Państwowe Zakłady Wydawnictw Szkołnych. p. 67. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  36. ^ "Nomination Database". Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 14 June 2016.
  37. ^ C.D. af Wirsén (1905). "Award Ceremony Speech". nobelprize.org. Retrieved 21 March 2018.
  38. ^ See Wikimedia Commons 26 March 2012 photo by user:Muhammad: [File:Sienkiewicz in rome.JPG].
  39. ^ Producer – strony www, cms, social media, producer.pl. "Muzeum Narodowe w Kielcach". Sienkiewicz.mnki.pl. Retrieved 14 June 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  40. ^ . Muzeum Sienkiewicza.pl. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  41. ^ Tabachnikova, Olga (2012). Anton Chekhov Through the Eyes of Russian Thinkers: Vasilii Rozanov, Dmitrii Merezhkovskii and Lev Shestov. Anthem Press. p. 87. ISBN 9780857282279.

External links

  • List of works
  • Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by or about Henryk Sienkiewicz at Internet Archive
  • Henryk Sienkiewicz Books Collection
  • Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)    
  • Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz at Open Library  
  • Works of Henryk Sienkiewicz at Polish Wikisource (in Polish)
  • Biography at the Polish American Center
  • Henryk Sienkiewicz at poezja.org (polish)
  • the Henryk Sienkiewicz Museum in Oblegorek
  • at culture.pl
  • Henryk Sienkiewicz on Nobelprize.org  
  • 4 Polish Writers Who Won the Nobel Prize in Literature
  • Newspaper clippings about Henryk Sienkiewicz in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW  

henryk, sienkiewicz, sienkiewicz, redirects, here, others, sienkiewicz, surname, henryk, adam, aleksander, pius, sienkiewicz, shen, kyay, vitch, kyev, itch, polish, ˈxɛnrɨk, ˈadam, alɛkˈsandɛr, ˈpjus, ɕɛnˈkʲɛvit, 1846, november, 1916, also, known, pseudonym, l. Sienkiewicz redirects here For others see Sienkiewicz surname Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Sienkiewicz US ʃ ɛ n ˈ k j eɪ v ɪ tʃ j ɛ v shen KYAY vitch KYEV itch 1 2 3 Polish ˈxɛnrɨk ˈadam alɛkˈsandɛr ˈpjus ɕɛnˈkʲɛvit ʂ 5 May 1846 15 November 1916 also known by the pseudonym Litwos Polish pronunciation ˈlitfɔs was a Polish writer novelist journalist and Nobel Prize laureate He is best remembered for his historical novels especially for his internationally known best seller Quo Vadis 1896 Henryk SienkiewiczSienkiewicz in the 1880s photograph by Stanislaw BizanskiBornHenryk Adam Aleksander Pius Sienkiewicz 1846 05 05 5 May 1846Wola Okrzejska Lublin Governorate Congress PolandDied15 November 1916 1916 11 15 aged 70 Vevey SwitzerlandOccupationwriter novelist journalistLanguagePolishNationalityPolishPeriod19th 20th centuryNotable worksIn Desert and Wilderness Janko Muzykant Quo Vadis Sir Michael The Deluge The Knights of the Cross With Fire and SwordNotable awardsNobel Prize in Literature 1905SignatureBorn into an impoverished Polish noble family in Russian ruled Congress Poland in the late 1860s he began publishing journalistic and literary pieces In the late 1870s he traveled to the United States sending back travel essays that won him popularity with Polish readers In the 1880s he began serializing novels that further increased his popularity He soon became one of the most popular Polish writers of the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries and numerous translations gained him international renown culminating in his receipt of the 1905 Nobel Prize in Literature for his outstanding merits as an epic writer Many of his novels remain in print In Poland he is best known for his Trilogy of historical novels With Fire and Sword The Deluge and Sir Michael set in the 17th century Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth internationally he is best known for Quo Vadis set in Nero s Rome The Trilogy and Quo Vadis have been filmed the latter several times with Hollywood s 1951 version receiving the most international recognition Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 Travels abroad 1 3 Return to Poland 1 4 Later years 1 5 Death 2 Works 3 Recognition 4 Selected works 4 1 Novels 4 2 Other 5 Filmography 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksLife EditEarly life Edit Sienkiewicz was born on 5 May 1846 in Wola Okrzejska now a village in the central part of the eastern Polish region of Lubelskie then part of the Russian Empire 4 5 His family were impoverished Polish nobles on his father s side deriving from Tatars who had settled in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania 4 6 7 8 His parents were Jozef Sienkiewicz 1813 96 of the Oszyk coat of arms and Stefania Cieciszowska 1820 73 His mother descended from an old and affluent Podlachian family 4 He had five siblings an older brother Kazimierz who died during January Uprising of 1863 1864 and four sisters Aniela Helena Zofia and Maria 4 His family were entitled to use the Polish Oszyk coat of arms 9 10 Wola Okrzejska belonged to the writer s maternal grandmother Felicjana Cieciszowska 4 His family moved several times and young Henryk spent his childhood on family estates in Grabowce Gorne Wezyczyn and Burzec 4 In September 1858 he began his education in Warsaw where the family would finally settle in 1861 having bought a tenement house kamienica in eastern Warsaw s Praga district 4 He received relatively poor school grades except in the humanities notably Polish language and history 4 Monument atop Sienkiewicz Mound at Okrzeja At left is the writer s family s village Wola Okrzejska where he was born Due to hard times the 19 year old Sienkiewicz took a job as tutor to the Weyher family in Plonsk 4 It was probably in this period that he wrote his first novel Ofiara Sacrifice he is thought to have destroyed the manuscript of the never published novel 4 He also worked on his first novel to be published Na marne In Vain He completed extramural secondary school classes and in 1866 he received his secondary school diploma 4 He first tried to study medicine then law at the Imperial University of Warsaw but he soon transferred to the university s Institute of Philology and History where he acquired a thorough knowledge of literature and Old Polish Language 4 5 Little is known about this period of his life other than that he moved out of his parents home tutored part time and lived in poverty 4 His situation improved somewhat in 1868 when he became a tutor to the princely Woroniecki family 4 In 1867 he wrote a rhymed piece Sielanka Mlodosci Idyll of Youth which was rejected by Tygodnik Illustrowany The Illustrated Weekly 4 In 1869 he debuted as a journalist Przeglad Tygodniowy 1866 1904 The Weekly Review ran his review of a play on 18 April 1869 and shortly afterward The Illustrated Weekly printed an essay of his about the late Renaissance Polish poet Mikolaj Sep Szarzynski 4 He completed his university studies in 1871 though he failed to receive a diploma because he did not pass the examination in Greek language 4 Sienkiewicz also wrote for Gazeta Polska The Polish Gazette and Niwa magazine under the pen name Litwos 11 In 1873 he began writing a column Bez tytulu Without a title in The Polish Gazette in 1874 a column Sprawy biezace Current matters for Niwa and in 1875 the column Chwila obecna The present moment 11 He also collaborated on a Polish translation published in 1874 of Victor Hugo s last novel Ninety Three 11 In June that year he became co owner of Niwa in 1878 he would sell his share in the magazine 11 12 Meanwhile in 1872 he had debuted as a fiction writer with his short novel Na marne In Vain published in the magazine Wieniec Garland 4 This was followed by Humoreski z teki Woroszylly Humorous Sketches from Woroszylla s Files 1872 Stary Sluga The Old Servant 1875 Hania Sienkiewicz 1876 and Selim Mirza 1877 11 13 The last three are known as the Little Trilogy 13 These publications made him a prominent figure in Warsaw s journalistic literary world and a guest at popular dinner parties hosted by the actress Helena Modrzejewska 11 Travels abroad Edit Sienkiewicz in safari outfit 1890s In 1874 Henryk Sienkiewicz was briefly engaged to Maria Keller and traveled abroad to Brussels and Paris 11 Soon after he returned his fiancee s parents cancelled the engagement 11 In 1876 Sienkiewicz went to the United States with Helena Modrzejewska soon to become famous in the U S as actress Helena Modjeska and her husband 11 He traveled via London to New York and then on to San Francisco staying for some time in California 11 His travels were financed by Gazeta Polska The Polish Gazette in exchange for a series of travel essays Sienkiewicz wrote Listy z podrozy Letters from a Journey and Listy Litwosa z Podrozy Litwos Letters from a Journey which were published in The Polish Gazette in 1876 78 and republished as a book in 1880 11 14 Other articles by him also appeared in Przeglad Tygodniowy The Weekly Review and Przewodnik Naukowy i Literacki The Learned and Literary Guide discussing the situation of American Polonia 12 He briefly lived in the town of Anaheim later in Anaheim Landing now Seal Beach California 11 He hunted visited Native American camps traveled in the nearby mountains the Santa Ana Sierra Madre San Jacinto and San Bernardino Mountains and visited the Mojave Desert Yosemite Valley and the silver mines at Virginia City Nevada 11 On 20 August 1877 he witnessed Modjeska s U S theatrical debut at San Francisco s California Theatre which he reviewed for The Polish Gazette and on 8 September he published in the Daily Evening Post an article translated into English for him by Modjeska on Poland and Russia 11 In America he also continued writing fiction in 1877 publishing Szkice weglem Charcoal Sketches in The Polish Gazette 12 He wrote a play Na przeboj soon retitled Na jedna karte On a Single Card later staged at Lviv 1879 and to better reception at Warsaw 1881 12 He also wrote a play for Modjeska aimed at an American public Z walki tutejszych partii Partisan Struggles but it was never performed or published and the manuscript appears to be lost 12 On 24 March 1878 Sienkiewicz left the U S for Europe 12 He first stayed in London then for a year in Paris delaying his return to Poland due to rumors of possible conscription into the Imperial Russian Army on the eve of a predicted new war with Turkey 12 Return to Poland Edit Sienkiewicz by Kazimierz Pochwalski 1890 In April 1879 Sienkiewicz returned to Polish soil 12 In Lviv Lwow he gave a lecture that was not well attended Z Nowego Jorku do Kalifornii From New York to California 12 15 Subsequent lectures in Szczawnica and Krynica in July August that year and in Warsaw and Poznan the following year were much more successful 12 16 In late summer 1879 he went to Venice and Rome which he toured for the next few weeks on 7 November 1879 returning to Warsaw 12 There he met Maria Szetkiewicz whom he married on 18 August 1881 12 The marriage was reportedly a happy one 16 The couple had two children Henryk Jozef 1882 1959 and Jadwiga Maria 1883 1969 12 It was a short lived marriage however because on 18 August 1885 Maria died of tuberculosis 17 In 1879 the first collected edition of Sienkiewicz s works was published in four volumes the series would continue until 1917 ending with a total of 17 volumes 12 He also continued writing journalistic pieces mainly in The Polish Gazette and Niwa 12 In 1881 he published a favorable review of the first collected edition of works by Boleslaw Prus 16 In 1880 Sienkiewicz wrote a historical novella Niewola tatarska Tartar Captivity 12 In late 1881 he became editor in chief of a new Warsaw newspaper Slowo The Word 16 This substantially improved his finances 16 The year 1882 saw him heavily engaged in the running of the newspaper in which he published a number of columns and short stories 16 Soon however he lost interest in the journalistic aspect and decided to focus more on his literary work 16 He paid less and less attention to his post of editor in chief resigning it in 1887 but remaining editor of the paper s literary section until 1892 17 From 1883 he increasingly shifted his focus from short pieces to historical novels 16 He began work on the historical novel Ogniem i Mieczem With Fire and Sword Initially titled Wilcze gniazdo The Wolf s Lair it appeared in serial installments in The Word from May 1883 to March 1884 16 17 It also ran concurrently in the Krakow newspaper Czas Time 16 Sienkiewicz soon began writing the second volume of his Trilogy Potop The Deluge 17 It ran in The Word from December 1884 to September 1886 17 Beginning in 1884 Sienkiewicz accompanied his wife Maria to foreign sanatoriums 17 After her death he kept on traveling Europe leaving his children with his late wife s parents though he often returned to Poland particularly staying for long periods in Warsaw and Krakow beginning in the 1890s 17 18 After his return to Warsaw in 1887 the third volume of his Trilogy appeared Pan Wolodyjowski Sir Michael running in The Word from May 1887 to May 1888 17 The Trilogy established Sienkiewicz as the most popular contemporary Polish writer 17 Sienkiewicz received 15 000 rubles in recognition of his achievements from an unknown admirer who signed himself Michal Wolodyjowski after the Trilogy character 17 Sienkiewicz used the money to set up a fund named for his wife and supervised by the Academy of Learning to aid artists endangered by tuberculosis 17 In 1886 he visited Istanbul in 1888 Spain 17 At the end of 1890 he went to Africa resulting in Listy z Afryki Letters from Africa published in The Word in 1891 92 then collected as a book in 1893 17 The turn of the 1880s and 1890s was associated with intensive work on several novels In 1891 his novel Without dogma Bez Dogmatu previously serialized in 1889 90 in The Word was published in book form 18 In 1892 Sienkiewicz signed an agreement for another novel Rodzina Polanieckich Children of the Soil which was serialized in The Polish Gazette from 1893 and came out in book form in 1894 18 Later years Edit Sienkiewicz had several romances and in 1892 Maria Romanowska Wolodkowicz stepdaughter of a wealthy Odessan entered his life 18 He and Romanowska became engaged there in 1893 and married in Krakow on 11 November 18 Just two weeks later however his bride left him Sienkiewicz blamed in law intrigues On 13 December 1895 he obtained papal consent to dissolution of the marriage 18 In 1904 he married his niece Maria Babska 18 Sienkiewicz used his growing international fame to influence world opinion in favor of the Polish cause throughout his life and since the late 18th century Poland remained partitioned by her neighbors Russia Austria and Prussia later Germany 5 19 He often criticized German policies of Germanization of the Polish minority in Germany 19 20 21 in 1901 he expressed support of Wrzesnia schoolchildren who were protesting the banning of the Polish language 19 More cautiously he called on Russia s government to introduce reforms in Russian controlled Congress Poland 22 During the Revolution in the Kingdom of Poland he advocated broader Polish autonomy within the Russian Empire 5 21 Nobel laureate 1905 Sienkiewicz maintained some ties with Polish right wing National Democracy politicians and was critical of the socialists but he was generally a moderate and declined to become a politician and a deputy to the Russian Duma 21 22 In the cultural sphere he was involved in the creation of the Krakow and Warsaw monuments to Adam Mickiewicz 19 He supported educational endeavors and co founded the Polska Macierz Szkolna organization 22 Reasonably wealthy by 1908 thanks to sales of his books he often used his new wealth to support struggling writers 19 He helped gather funds for social welfare projects such as starvation relief and for construction of a tuberculosis sanatorium at Zakopane 19 He was as prominent in philanthropy as in literature 5 In February 1895 he wrote the first chapters of Quo Vadis The novel was serialized beginning in March 1895 in Warsaw s Polish Gazette Krakow s Czas Time and Poznan s Dziennik Poznanski Poznan Daily 23 The novel was finished by March 1896 23 The book edition appeared later the same year and soon gained international renown 23 In February 1897 he began serializing a new novel Krzyzacy The Teutonic Knights or The Knights of the Cross serialization finished in 1900 and the book edition appeared that year 23 In 1900 with a three year delay due to the approaching centenary of Mickiewicz s birth Sienkiewicz celebrated his own quarter century begun in 1872 as a writer 19 Special events were held in a number of Polish cities including Krakow Lwow and Poznan 19 A jubilee committee presented him with a gift from the Polish people an estate at Oblegorek near Kielce 19 where he later opened a school for children 24 In 1905 he won a Nobel Prize for his lifetime achievements as an epic writer 19 25 26 In his acceptance speech he said this honor was of particular value to a son of Poland She was pronounced dead yet here is proof that she lives on She was pronounced defeated and here is proof that she is victorious 27 Sienkiewicz s residence at Oblegorek His social and political activities resulted in a diminished literary output 20 He wrote a new historical novel Na polu chwaly On the Field of Glory that was meant as the beginning of a new trilogy it was however criticized as being a lesser version of his original Trilogy and was never continued 20 Similarly his contemporary novel Wiry Whirlpools 1910 which sought to criticize some of Sienkiewicz s political opponents received a mostly polemical and politicized response 28 His 1910 novel for young people W pustyni i w puszczy In Desert and Wilderness serialized in Kurier Warszawski The Warsaw Courier finishing in 1911 was much better received and became widely popular among children and young adults 28 After the outbreak of World War I Sienkiewicz was visited at Oblegorek by a Polish Legions cavalry unit under Boleslaw Wieniawa Dlugoszowski 28 Soon after he left for Switzerland 28 Together with Ignacy Paderewski and Erazm Piltz he established an organization for Polish war relief 28 He also supported the work of the Red Cross 21 Otherwise he eschewed politics though shortly before his death he endorsed the Act of 5th November 1916 a declaration by Emperors Wilhelm II of Germany and Franz Joseph of Austria and king of Hungary pledging the creation of a Kingdom of Poland envisioned as a puppet state allied with and controlled by the Central Powers 28 Death Edit Sienkiewicz s tomb St John s Cathedral Warsaw Sienkiewicz died on 15 November 1916 at the Grand Hotel du Lac in Vevey Switzerland where he was buried on 22 November 28 The cause of death was ischemic heart disease 28 His funeral was attended by representatives of both the Central Powers and the Entente and an address by Pope Benedict XV was read 28 29 In 1924 after Poland had regained her independence Sienkiewicz s remains were repatriated to Warsaw Poland and placed in the crypt of St John s Cathedral 29 During the coffin s transit solemn memorial ceremonies were held in a number of cities 29 Thousands accompanied the coffin to its Warsaw resting place and Poland s President Stanislaw Wojciechowski delivered a eulogy 29 Works EditSienkiewicz s early works e g the 1872 Humoreski z teki Woroszylly show him a strong supporter of Polish Positivism endorsing constructive practical characters such as an engineer 4 Polish Positivism advocated economic and social modernization and deprecated armed irredentist struggle 21 Unlike most other Polish Positivist writers Sienkiewicz was a conservative 21 His Little Trilogy Stary Sluga 1875 Hania 1876 Selim Mirza 1877 shows his interest in Polish history and his literary maturity including fine mastery of humor and drama 11 12 His early works focused on three themes the oppression and poverty of the peasants Charcoal Sketches 1877 criticism of the partitioning powers Z pamietnika korepetytora Janko Muzykant Janko the Musician 1879 and his voyage to the United States Za chlebem For Bread 1880 12 His most common motif was the plight of the powerless impoverished peasants schoolchildren emigrants 12 His Latarnik The Lighthouse keeper 1881 has been described as one of the best Polish short stories 12 His 1882 stories Bartek Zwyciezca Bart the Conqueror and Sachem draw parallels between the tragic fates of their heroes and that of the occupied Polish nation 16 His novel With Fire and Sword 1883 84 was enthusiastically received by readers as were the next two volumes of The Trilogy becoming an instant classic though critical reception was lukewarm 16 17 21 30 The Trilogy is set in 17th century Poland 21 While critics generally praised its style they noted that some historic facts are misrepresented or distorted 16 17 30 The Trilogy merged elements of the epic and the historical novel infused with special features of Sienkiewicz s style 17 The Trilogy s patriotism worried the censors Warsaw s Russian censor I Jankul warned Sienkiewicz that he would not allow publication of any further works of his dealing with Polish history 18 Sienkiewicz s family coat of arms Oszyk was a variant of this Labedz Swan coat of arms Sienkiewicz s Without dogma Bez dogmatu 1889 90 was a notable artistic experiment a self analytical novel written as a fictitious diary 18 His works of the period are critical of decadent and naturalistic philosophies 23 He had expressed his opinions on naturalism and writing generally early on in O naturalizmie w powiesci Naturalism in the Novel 1881 12 A dozen years later in 1893 he wrote that novels should strengthen and ennoble life rather than undermining and debasing it 23 Later in the early 1900s he fell into mutual hostility with the Young Poland movement in Polish literature 22 These views informed his novel Quo Vadis 1896 23 This story of early Christianity in Rome with protagonists struggling against the Emperor Nero s regime draws parallels between repressed early Christians and contemporary Poles and due to its focus on Christianity it became widely popular in the Christian West 31 The triumph of spiritual Christianity over materialist Rome was a critique of materialism and decadence and also an allegory for the strength of the Polish spirit 23 His Teutonic Knights returned to Poland s history 23 describing the Battle of Grunwald 1410 a Polish Lithuanian victory over the Teutonic Knights in the Polish Lithuanian Teutonic War Both in German and Polish culture the Teutonic Knights were incorrectly viewed as precursors to modern Germans while the Polish Lithuanian union was regarded as a model for a future independent Polish state These assumptions tied in well with the contemporary political context of ongoing Germanization efforts in German Poland 23 30 So the book quickly became another Sienkiewicz bestseller in Poland and was received by critics better than his Trilogy had been it was also applauded by the Polish right wing anti German National Democracy political movement and became part of the Polish school curriculum after Poland regained independence in 1918 30 32 It is often incorrectly asserted that Sienkiewicz received his Nobel Prize for Quo Vadis 25 26 While Quo Vadis is the novel that brought him international fame 33 the Nobel Prize does not name any particular novel instead citing his outstanding merits as an epic writer 34 Sienkiewicz often carried out substantial historic research for his novels but he was selective in the findings that made it into the novels Thus for example he prioritized Polish military victories over defeats 17 Sienkiewicz kept a diary but it has been lost 28 Recognition Edit Statue of author of Quo Vadis near Villa Borghese in Rome About the turn of the 20th century Sienkiewicz was the most popular writer in Poland and one of the most popular in Germany France Russia and the English speaking world 23 The Trilogy went through many translations With Fire and Sword saw at least 26 in his lifetime 23 Quo Vadis became extremely popular in at least 40 different language translations including English language editions totaling a million copies 23 The American translator Jeremiah Curtin has been credited with helping popularize his works abroad 31 However as Russia of which Sienkiewicz was a citizen was not a signatory to the Berne Convention he rarely received any royalties from the translations 19 Already in his lifetime his works were adapted for theatrical operatic and musical presentations and for the emerging film industry 23 29 Writers and poets devoted works to him or used him or his works as inspiration 19 Painters created works inspired by Sienkiewicz s novels and their works were gathered in Sienkiewicz themed albums and exhibitions 23 The names of his characters were given to a variety of products 23 The popularity of Quo Vadis in France where it was the best selling book of 1900 is shown by the fact that horses competing in a Grand Prix de Paris event were named for characters in the book 35 In the United States Quo Vadis sold 800 000 copies in eighteen months 31 To avoid intrusive journalists and fans Sienkiewicz sometimes traveled incognito 23 He was inducted into many international organizations and societies including the Polish Academy of Learning the Russian Academy of Sciences the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts the Royal Czech Society of Sciences and the Italian Academy of Arcadia 23 He received the French Legion d honneur 1904 19 honorary doctorates from the Jagiellonian University 1900 and Lwow University 1911 and honorary citizenship of Lwow 1902 19 20 In 1905 he received the most prestigious award in the world of literature the Nobel Prize after having been nominated in that year by Hans Hildebrand member of the Swedish Academy 19 36 37 Named for Sienkiewicz in Poland are numerous streets and squares the first street to bear his name was in Lwow in 1907 20 29 Named for him is Bialystok s Osiedle Sienkiewicza city parks in Wroclaw and Lodz and over 70 schools in Poland 29 He has statues in a number of Polish cities including Warsaw s Lazienki Park the first statue was erected at Zbaraz now in Ukraine 29 and in Rome 38 A Sienkiewcz Mound stands at Okrzeja near his birthplace Wola Okrzejska 29 He has been featured on a number of postage stamps 29 Official poster for the film Quo Vadis 1951 There are three museums dedicated to him in Poland 29 The first the Henryk Sienkiewicz Museum in Oblegorek his residence opened in 1958 39 The second founded in 1966 is in his birthplace the Henryk Sienkiewicz Museum in Wola Okrzejska 40 The third opened in 1978 at Poznan 29 In Rome Italy in the small church of Domine Quo Vadis there is a bronze bust of Henryk Sienkiewicz It is said that Sienkiewicz was inspired to write his novel Quo Vadis while sitting in this church Outside Poland Sienkiewicz s popularity declined beginning in the interbellum except for Quo Vadis which retained relative fame thanks to several film adaptations including a notable American one in 1951 29 31 In Poland his works are still widely read he is seen as a classic author and his works are often required reading in schools 29 They have also been adapted for Polish films and television series 29 The first critical analyses of his works were published in his lifetime 22 29 He has been the subject of a number of biographies 29 His works have received criticism in his lifetime and since as being simplistic a view expressed notably by the 20th century Polish novelist and dramatist Witold Gombrowicz who described Sienkiewicz as a first rate second rate writer 29 32 Vasily Rozanov described Quo Vadis as not a work of art but a crude factory made oleograph while Anton Chekhov called Sienkiewicz s writing sickeningly cloying and clumsy 41 Nonetheless the Polish historian of literature Henryk Markiewicz writing the Polski slownik biograficzny Polish Biographical Dictionary entry on Sienkiewicz 1997 describes him as a master of Polish prose as the foremost Polish writer of historical fiction and as Poland s internationally best known writer 29 Selected works EditNovels Edit The Trilogy Trylogia With Fire and Sword Ogniem i mieczem 1884 depicts the 17th century Khmelnytsky Uprising of Ukraine s Cossacks against Poland the novel has been made into a feature film of the same title and inspired the video game Mount amp Blade With Fire amp Sword The Deluge Potop 1886 depicts the 17th century Swedish invasion of Poland the Deluge the novel has been made into a feature film of the same title Sir Michael Pan Wolodyjowski 1888 depicts Poland s struggle against the Ottoman Empire invading Poland in 1668 72 the novel has been made into a feature film Colonel Wolodyjowski Without dogma Bez dogmatu 1891 The Polaniecki Family a k a Children of the Soil Rodzina Polanieckich 1894 Quo Vadis 1895 a story of St Peter in Rome in the reign of Emperor Nero The Teutonic Knights a k a The Knights of the Cross Krzyzacy 1900 relates to the Battle of Grunwald the novel was made into a 1960 feature film of the same title by Aleksander Ford On the Field of Glory Na polu chwaly 1906 a story of King John III Sobieski and the Battle of Vienna Whirlpool novel Wiry 1910 In Desert and Wilderness W pustyni i w puszczy 1912 the adventures of a Polish boy Stas and a younger English girl Nell in Africa during the Mahdist War of 1881 99 Other Edit Yanko the Musician and other stories 1893 Lillian Morris and other stories 1894 Hania and other stories 1897 Let Us Follow Him and other stories 1897 unauthorized Sielanka a forest picture and other stories 1898 On the Bright Shore 1898 In Vain 1899 Life and Death and other legends and stories 1904 So Runs the World criticism a story and two short dramas Whose Fault and Win or Lose Filmography EditQuo Vadis dir Enrico Guazzoni 1913 Obrona Czestochowy dir Edward Puchalski 1913 Quo Vadis dir Gabriellino D Annunzio and Georg Jacoby 1924 Quo Vadis dir Mervyn LeRoy 1951 Szkice weglem dir Antoni Bohdziewicz 1957 Knights of the Teutonic Order dir Aleksander Ford 1960 Invasion 1700 dir Fernando Cerchio 1962 Colonel Wolodyjowski dir Jerzy Hoffman 1969 In Desert and Wilderness dir Wladyslaw Slesicki 1973 The Deluge dir Jerzy Hoffman 1974 Quo Vadis TV miniseries dir Franco Rossi 1985 With Fire and Sword dir Jerzy Hoffman 1999 In Desert and Wilderness dir Gavin Hood 2001 Quo Vadis dir Jerzy Kawalerowicz 2001 See also EditOnufry Zagloba Polish literature List of Poles List of Polish Nobel laureatesReferences Edit Sienkiewicz The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 16 August 2019 Sienkiewicz Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 16 August 2019 Sienkiewicz Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 16 August 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 203 a b c d e Ahmet Ersoy Maciej Gorny Vangelis Kechriotis 2010 Modernism Representations of National Culture Central European University Press p 163 ISBN 978 963 7326 64 6 Retrieved 24 May 2013 Lockert Lacy 1919 Henryk Sienkiewicz The Sewanee Review 27 3 257 283 JSTOR 27533215 Andrzej Kulikowski Heraldyka szlachecka 1990 p 89 Quote Rodzina Sienkiewiczow vel Sienkiewiczow wywodzi sie z tatarow zawolzanskich zapisani do tzw Choragwi juszynskiej byly to dolne szczeble w drabinie hierarchicznej utytulowanych rodow tatarskich Wedlug dokumentu wydanego w Radomiu 6 lutego 1782 protoplasta tej rodziny byl Piotr Oszyk Sienkiewicz Jan Ciechanowicz Rody rycerskie Wielkiego Ksiestwa Litewskiego 2001 p 72 Quote Sienkiewicz herbu Oszyk 1775 nobilitowany Sienkiewicze trockie podolskie Krolestwo Polskie Galaz rodziny tatarskiej osiadlej na Litwie przyjela chrzest i uzyskala nobilitacje z herbem Oszyk w osobie Michala Sienkiewicza Z tej rodziny Henryk 1847 1916 powiesciopisarz Stefan Majchrowski 1966 Pan Sienkiewicz Ludowa Spoldzielnia Wydawnicza p 456 Retrieved 12 May 2013 Wladyslaw Studencki 1967 Szkice literackie wielcy i mali pp 66 67 Retrieved 12 May 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 204 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 205 a b Ewa Ihnatowicz 2000 Literatura polska drugiej polowy XIX wieku 1864 1914 Wydawn Trio p 73 ISBN 978 83 85660 87 3 Retrieved 8 May 2013 Ireneusz Rebosz Pawel Pierscinski Maryla Janudi 1996 Henryk Sienkiewicz i jego Oblegorek Wydawnictwo Voyager p iv ISBN 978 83 85496 39 7 Retrieved 12 May 2013 Janina Kulczycka Saloni 1960 Henryk Sienkiewicz Panstwowe Zaklady Wydawnictw Szkolnych p 19 Retrieved 12 May 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 206 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 207 a b c d e f g h i Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 208 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 210 a b c d e Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 212 a b c d e f g h Ahmet Ersoy Maciej Gorny Vangelis Kechriotis 2010 Modernism Representations of National Culture Central European University Press p 164 ISBN 978 963 7326 64 6 Retrieved 24 May 2013 a b c d e Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 211 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 209 Wychowanie przedszkolne w Polsce w latach 1918 1939 Pre school Education in Poland in 1918 1939 Zaklad Narodowy im Ossolinskich 1967 p 129 Retrieved 18 May 2013 a b Polish American Studies Polish American Historical Association 2005 p 76 Retrieved 8 May 2013 a b Sylwia Wilczak Quo Vadis Noblowska Pomylka Archiwum wyborcza pl Retrieved 8 May 2013 The Nobel Peace Prize 1983 Lech Walesa Acceptance Speech nobelprize org Retrieved 8 May 2013 a b c d e f g h i j Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 213 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Henryk Markiewicz Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Polski slownik biograficzny vol XXXVII 1997 p 214 a b c d Ahmet Ersoy Maciej Gorny Vangelis Kechriotis 2010 Modernism Representations of National Culture Central European University Press p 165 ISBN 978 963 7326 64 6 Retrieved 24 May 2013 a b c d George Thomas Kurian James D Smith III 2010 The Encyclopedia of Christian Literature Scarecrow Press p 564 ISBN 978 0 8108 7283 7 Retrieved 28 May 2013 a b Ahmet Ersoy Maciej Gorny Vangelis Kechriotis 2010 Modernism Representations of National Culture Central European University Press p 166 ISBN 978 963 7326 64 6 Retrieved 24 May 2013 Henryk Sienkiewicz 1998 Quo Vadis A Narrative of the Time of Nero Regnery Gateway p 10 ISBN 978 0 89526 345 2 Retrieved 8 May 2013 The Nobel Prize in Literature 1905 nobelprize org Retrieved 8 May 2013 Janina Kulczycka Saloni 1966 Henryk Sienkiewicz Materialy zebrala i wstepem opatrzyla Janina Kulczycka Saloni Panstwowe Zaklady Wydawnictw Szkolnych p 67 Retrieved 18 May 2013 Nomination Database Nobelprize org Retrieved 14 June 2016 C D af Wirsen 1905 Award Ceremony Speech nobelprize org Retrieved 21 March 2018 See Wikimedia Commons 26 March 2012 photo by user Muhammad File Sienkiewicz in rome JPG Producer strony www cms social media producer pl Muzeum Narodowe w Kielcach Sienkiewicz mnki pl Retrieved 14 June 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Muzeum Henryka Sienkiewicza w Woli Okrzejskiej Muzeum Sienkiewicza pl Archived from the original on 19 August 2014 Retrieved 14 March 2012 Tabachnikova Olga 2012 Anton Chekhov Through the Eyes of Russian Thinkers Vasilii Rozanov Dmitrii Merezhkovskii and Lev Shestov Anthem Press p 87 ISBN 9780857282279 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henryk Sienkiewicz Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Henryk Sienkiewicz Wikiquote has quotations related to Henryk Sienkiewicz List of works Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz at Project Gutenberg Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Henryk Sienkiewicz at Internet Archive Henryk Sienkiewicz Books Collection Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Works by Henryk Sienkiewicz at Open Library Works of Henryk Sienkiewicz at Polish Wikisource in Polish Biography at the Polish American Center Henryk Sienkiewicz at poezja org polish the Henryk Sienkiewicz Museum in Oblegorek Henryk Sienkiewicz at culture pl Henryk Sienkiewicz on Nobelprize org 4 Polish Writers Who Won the Nobel Prize in Literature Newspaper clippings about Henryk Sienkiewicz in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henryk Sienkiewicz amp oldid 1133912387, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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