Janko Matúška Explained

Janko Matúška
Birth Date:10 January 1821
Birth Place:Dolný Kubín (Alsókubin), Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire (today Slovakia)
Death Date:11 January 1877 (aged 56)
Death Place:Dolný Kubín (Alsókubin), Austria-Hungary (today Slovakia)
Resting Place:Dolný Kubín
Known For:author of Slovak national anthem
Education:Evangelic Lutheran Lyceum in Pressburg (today Bratislava)
Occupation:Clerk of the Court, Orava (Árva)
Spouse:Žofia née Veselovská
Parents:Juraj Matúška
Zuzana Bencúrová

Janko Matúška (10 January 1821 – 11 January 1877) was an ethnic Slovak poet, activist, occasional playwright, and clerk of the court in the Kingdom of Hungary. He is best known as the author of the Slovak national anthem, "Nad Tatrou sa blýska" ("Lightning over the Tatras"), based on the melody of a Slovak folk song, "Kopala studienku".

Life

Janko Matúška was born into a craftsman's family in Dolný Kubín, then part of the Kingdom of Hungary.[1] He began to attend school there, then probably at the Gymnázium of Gemer (Sajógömör) and finally he studied at the prestigious Lutheran Lyceum of Pressburg (preparatory high school and college) where he took courses in the Institute of Czechoslovak Language and Literature while majoring in theology. Ľudovít Štúr, the only professor teaching courses offered by the institute at that time, was fired in December 1843 under pressure from the kingdom's authorities, who objected to his pro-Slovak activism. 23-year-old Janko Matúška wrote "Lightning over the Tatras" when he and other students were agitated about the subsequent repeated denials of their appeals to the school board to reverse Štúr's dismissal.[2] About two dozen students, including Matúška, decided to leave the lýceum in protest in March 1844. Matúška went to take his final exams at the Lutheran gymnázium in Tisovec (Tiszolc). He lived in Orava (Árva) for most of his adult life, and stopped writing after the Hungarian Revolution of 1848. He worked in government offices after 1850, and was Clerk of the County Court in Dolný Kubín from 1870 to 1875. He died the day after his 56th birthday and was buried in Dolný Kubín.

Works

He started writing at the lyceum. He focused on poetry, especially ballads and fables. He also wrote some prose and drama and translated from Polish, for instance Dziady by Adam Mickiewicz.[1]

Poetry

Prose

Selections and collections

Drama

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Brtáň, Rudo . Postavy slovenskej literatúry . 1971 .
  2. Book: Sojková, Zdenka . Knížka o životě Ľudovíta Štúra . 2005 .