Juliusz Kaden-Bandrowski
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Juliusz Kaden-Bandrowski (Rzeszów, February 24, 1885 – August 8, 1944, Warsaw) was a Polish journalist and novelist.
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[edit] Life
Juliusz Kazimierz Kaden-Bandrowski studied piano at conservatories in Lwów, Kraków and Leipzig. While studying at Brussels, he switched over to philosophy.
During World War I, he served as aide to Józef Piłsudski and as chronicler to the First Brigade of the Polish Legions.
In 1907 he had begun working as a correspondent to the Polish press. After World War I, he associated with the Skamander group of Polish poets founded in 1918. In 1933–39, he was general secretary of the Polish Academy of Literature (Polska Akademia Literatury).
During World War II, Kaden-Bandrowski declined to leave German-occupied Warsaw, to which he had moved during the Interbellum. He participated in underground teaching and gave music lessons. He was arrested and interrogated by the Gestapo. He died on August 8, 1944, a week into the Warsaw Uprising.
His novels show penetrating insights and fidelity to facts; behaviorist and expressionist elements; and strikingly unusual combinations of diverse styles and literary techniques.
[edit] Family
Kaden-Bandrowski was the son of Juliusz Marian Bandrowski and his wife, Helena, née Kaden. Juliusz's brother was Jerzy Bandrowski (1883–1940), a journalist, novelist and translator from English to Polish.
He was a member of the Polish Reformed Church. By his wife, Romana, née Szpak (from her first marriage, Lewińska; 1882–1962), Kaden-Bandrowski had twin sons: Andrzej (1920–43), a Home Army second lieutenant who died in action in Warsaw in June 1943; and Paweł (1920–44), a Home Army lieutenant who fought in the Warsaw Uprising and fell in the Czerniaków neighborhood of Warsaw's Mokotów district on September 15, 1944.
Juliusz Kazimierz Kaden-Bandrowski and his sons are interred at Warsaw's Reformed Cemetery.
[edit] Bibliography
- 1911: Niezguła (The Lubber)
- 1913: Proch (Dust)
- 1915: Piłsudczycy (The Piłsudskiites); Iskry (Sparks)
- 1916: Mogiły (Tombs)
- 1919: Łuk (The Bow?; The Arch?)
- 1922: Generał Barcz (General Barcz)
- 1924: Przymierze serc (Alliance of Hearts)
- 1925: Wakacje moich dzieci (My Children's Vacation)
- 1928: Czarne skrzydła (Black Wings)
- 1933: Mateusz Bigda
[edit] References
- Polski słownik biograficzny (Polish Biographical Dictionary)
- J. i E. Szulcowie (J. and E. Szulc), Cmentarz Ewangelicko-Reformowany w Warszawie (The Lutheran Cemetery in Warsaw), Warsaw, 1989, pp. 20–21.