Kálmán Mikszáth
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- The native form of this personal name is kiscsoltói Mikszáth Kálmán. This article uses the Western name order.
Kálmán Mikszáth de Kiscsoltó (January 16, 1847—May 28, 1910) was a major Hungarian novelist, journalist, and politician.
[edit] Biography
Mikszáth was born in Szklabonya into a family of the lesser nobility. He studied Law at the University of Budapest from 1866 to 1869, although he did not apply for any exam, and became involved in journalism, writing for many Hungarian newspapers including the Pesti Hírlap.
His early short stories were based on the lives of peasants and artisans, and had little appeal. However, they demonstrated his skill in crafting humorous anecdotes, which would be developed in his later, more popular works. Many of his novels contained social commentary and satire, and towards the end of his life they became increasingly critical of the aristocracy and the he believed the latter placed on Hungarian society.
Mikszáth was a member of the Liberal Party, and in 1887 was elected to the National Assembly of Hungary (one of the two top legislatures in Austria-Hungary). Until 1879 he was the representative for the Illyefalva District in Transylvania, and from 1892 until his death he represented the Fogaras District.
He was buried in Kerepesi Cemetery in Budapest.
[edit] Selected works
- The Slovak Relations (1881)
- The Good People of Palóc (1882)
- The Grass of Lohina (1885)
- Two Beggar-Students (1886)
- The Magic Caftan (1889)
- St. Peter’s Umbrella (1895)
- The Siege of Beszterce (1896)
- The Gentry (1897)
- Two Elections in Hungary (1896, 1899)
- New Zrínyiád (1898)
- A Strange Marriage (1900)
- The Women of Szelistye (1901)
- The Young Noszty’s Affair with Mary Tóth (1908)
- The Black Town (1908-1910) ( set in the town of Löcse, today Levoča)
[edit] References
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