Sneha Girap (Editor)

Petar Preradović

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Genre
  
Poetry

Period
  
Romanticism

Language
  
Croatian

Subject
  
Patriotism

Resting place
  
Mirogoj Cemetery


Nationality
  
Croatian

Name
  
Petar Preradovic

Children
  
Dusan Preradovic

Citizenship
  
Austria-Hungary

Role
  
Poet

Petar Preradovic FilePetar Preradovi 1898 Povjest knjievnosti hrvatske i

Born
  
19 March 1818 Grabrovnica, Pitomaca, Slavonia, Austrian Empire (
1818-03-19
)

Died
  
August 18, 1872, Pottenstein, Austria

Similar People
  
Paula von Preradovic, Dragutin Tadijanovic, Slava Raskaj

Occupation
  
Poet, military officer

Grandchildren
  
Paula von Preradovic

Monument of Croatian poet Petar Preradovic on Preradovic square night timelapse and Serbian orthodox


Petar Preradović (19 March 1818 – 18 August 1872) was a Croatian poet, writer, and military general in the Austro-Hungarian Army. He was a part of the Illyrian movement which influenced much of his politics and work.

Contents

Petar Preradović FilePeter von Preradovi 1865png Wikimedia Commons

Petar preradovi pozdrav domovini


Biography

Petar Preradović Serb National Council Petar Preradovi

Preradović was born in the village of Grabrovnica near the town of Pitomača in what is today northeast Croatia, but was at the time part of the Austrian Military Frontier. He was born to Serbian Orthodox parents of Jovan (Ivan) Preradović and Pelagija Preradović, and spent his childhood in Grubišno Polje, were his father was born. Like many from the Military Frontier area, he chose to become a professional soldier. Preradović enrolled at the Austrian military academy at Wiener Neustadt where he converted to Catholicism and went on to excel as one of the school's best students.

Petar Preradović Petar Preradovi

During the training all students of this school were conducted as a Roman Catholic, that could be changed, at the express request of the soldier. However, this has rarely occurred, and the Orthodox cadets gradually, going to Catholic mass with his friends, without formal Christianization, became Roman Catholics. Thus Peter Preradović, as a boy-cadet school alumnus, tacitly written as a Roman Catholic from the Orthodox religion translated into Catholic and was performed in a formal act of conversion. His loyalty to the Roman Catholic Church, was later increased since his wife and him were both Roman Catholic.

At the academy, he began writing his first poems in German.

Petar Preradović Petar Preradovi hrvatski pjesnik Razglednice Online aukcije

After graduation he was stationed in Milan where he met Ivan Kukuljević Sakcinski, a fellow Austrian officer from Croatia, who inspired him to start writing in Croatian. After Milan, Preradović was posted to Zadar where his writings were published in the local Croatian language newspaper Zora dalmatinska in 1846. He then went to Zagreb where he met the leading figures of the Illyrian movement. The champions of Illyrism, instrumental in securing the triumph of Vuk Stefanović Karadžić and Ljudevit Gaj, were Njegoš, Branko Radičević, Bogoboj Atanacković, Stjepan Mitrov Ljubiša, Stanko Vraz, Ivan Mažuranić, and Preradović.

Petar Preradović httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In 1847 he was again stationed in Italy where he took part in the Wars of Italian Unification. When he returned to Croatia, he became a close associate of Josip Jelačić. He was posted to various Austrian military outposts and gradually rose to the rank of general.

Petar Preradović Petar Preradovic Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Preradović's poetry was written under a strong influence of national romanticism, with strong Panslavist overtones. Due to a personal tragedy - his wife, Pave, had committed suicide - he became interested in spiritism in his later years and published articles about it.

Petar Preradović PETAR PRERADOVI Na dananji dan

His life, torn between his military career, politics and literature, was also marked by gambling problems and bad health. He died in Fahrafeld, Austria at the age of 54, and his resting place at the Mirogoj Cemetery in Zagreb.

He had seven children. One of his grandchildren was Paula von Preradović, Austrian poet and the author of the Austrian national anthem.

Lyric Poetry

The romantic love for medieval traditions has complete expression in two dramas Marko Kralyevich and Vladimir i Kosara of Petar Preradović. But he achieved widespread popularity with his lyric poems. His pensive melancholy expressed itself in the allegory Putnik (The Traveler), which hides a whole life of homelessness and isolation. The same note of sadness and longing is felt in his songlet Miruy, miruy, srtse moye (Be still, my heart, be still):

In most of his poems Preradović upheld a mystic patriotism in the manner of the Polish messianists and Czech and Slovak pan-Slavists. But being too reflective, and not so keen as his progenitors, he did not exercise any decided influence on his successors.

Works

  • Pervenci collection of lyric poetry.
  • References

    Petar Preradović Wikipedia