Jerolim Kavanjin, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Jerolim Kavanjin

Croatian poet

Date of Birth: 04-Feb-1641

Place of Birth: Split, Split-Dalmatia County, Croatia

Date of Death: 29-Nov-1714

Profession: poet

Zodiac Sign: Aquarius


Show Famous Birthdays Today, World

👉 Worldwide Celebrity Birthdays Today

About Jerolim Kavanjin

  • Jerolim Kavanjin (Italian: Girolamo Cavagnini) (February 4, 1641 – November 29, 1714), was a Croatian language poet from Split then in Republic of Venice, today in Croatia. He was born into a wealthy and noble family of Split, as a descendant of Croaticised Italian family of Cavagnini.
  • Kavanjin rose to prominence at the same time as Ignjat Ðurdevic: at the beginning of the 18th century.
  • He was married to the sister of John Peter Marchi.
  • In 1703 Kavanjin became a member of the Illyrian Academy Marchi founded in 1703.In his summer mansion on Sutivan, on the island of Brac, where he retired after military and legislative career, Kavanjin wrote the most voluminus poetical work in the whole Croatian literature (approx.
  • 32 500 verses): Poviest vandelska bogatoga a nesretna Epuluna i ubogoga a cestita Lazara, usually referred to by the later editors, according to the subtitle in the original, as Bogatstvo i uboštvo.
  • This religious-philosophical epic is poetically inconsistent but stylistically marked (it is written, beside Split Cakavian, in Ijekavian–Ikavian Štokavian). Expressing the spirit of philosophical movements of the 17th and 18th centuries, this "encyclopædia in verses" (Josip Aranza) directs its Baroque spirituality towards the cogitation on life and human essentiality in the dual nature of the human and the divine. Beside the classical humanistic, Latinate and Italian literatures (Dante), the Bible and other religious writings, and beside the historical authors (Constantine Porphyrogenitus, priest of Duklja, Mavro Orbini), writings of the Old Dubrovnik have constituted the basic Kavanjin's reading list, above others Junije Palmotic and Ivan Gundulic. Kavanjin identified with Slavs and Dalmatia, and John Fine interprets his pan-Slavism and Dalmatianism close to have been an ethnic notion.Kavanjin died in Split, aged 73.

Read more at Wikipedia