Ervin Šinko Explained

Ervin Šinko
Birth Name:Franjo Spitzer
Birth Date:1898 10, df=yes
Birth Place:Apatin, Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, Austria-Hungary
[1]
Death Place:Zagreb, SFR Yugoslavia
Occupation:Writer, poet

Ervin Šinko, also known as Ervin Sinkó, (in Hungarian pronounced as /ɛrvin ʃiŋkoː/, born Franjo Spitzer; 5 October 1898 – 26 March 1967) was a Hungarian-Yugoslav writer, publisher and poet.

Biography

Šinko was born in Apatin to a Jewish family on 5 October 1898. He attended elementary school in Apatin and gymnasium in Subotica. During World War I, in 1917, Šinko was mobilized and in 1918 he participated in the establishment of the Hungarian Soviet Republic.[1] At the center of his literary occupation were the topics and questions about the Hungarian Revolution. Šinko worked writing for many Hungarian magazines such as: A Tett,[1] Ma,[1] Internationale,[1] Tüz, Korunk, Nyugat, and others. He moved to Vienna where, in 1924, he published the magazine Testvér. Šinko also lived in Zürich, Moscow, and Paris. While in Paris, his articles were published in L'Europe, Le Monde and Ce Soir. In 1939, he moved to Zagreb, where he lived until World War II. During the war, he escaped to Dalmatia, where he was arrested and imprisoned by the Italian Fascists. After the capitulation of Italy and liberation, Šinko joined the Partisans. In 1945, he moved back to Zagreb, where stayed for the rest of his life. Šinko was member of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts from 1950 and as a regular member since 1960.[1] He also was a member of the Croatian Writers Society. In 1946, he began to devote his energies to literary studies and writings on public affairs. In 1959, he became professor and director of the Hungarian department at Novi Sad University.

Šinko died on 26 March 1967 in Zagreb and was buried in Mirogoj Cemetery.[2]

Works

Poetry

Novels

Novellas

Stories

Essays

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Laslo Pašćik . Živan Milisavac . 1971 . Jugoslovenski književni leksikon . Yugoslav Literary Lexicon . . sh . Novi Sad (SAP Vojvodina, SR Serbia). 527-528 .
  2. Gradska groblja Zagreb: Ervin Šinko, Mirogoj Ž-3-I-13