Jovan Avakumović (poet)

For the 19th-century Prime Minister of Serbia, see Jovan Avakumović.
Jovan Avakumović
Native name Јован Авакумовић
Born 1748
Szentendre
Died 1810
Residence Szentendre
Other names Pašhalija
Ethnicity Serb
Citizenship Hungarian
Education Bratislava, Trnava, Wien, Leipzig
Occupation Lawyer, Poet
Religion Serbian Orthodox Christian
Relatives Nikola Avakumović

Jovan Avakumović (Serbian: Јован Авакумовић, ca. 1748 – 1810), also known by his nickname Pašhalija, was a Serbian poet, nobleman and lawyer.

Life

Jovan was born in 1748 into the prominent family of Nikola Avakumović, a merchant of Szentendre and judge whom Emperor Leopold II named a nobleman in charters. He was schooled in Bratislava, Trnava, Wien and Leipzig. He was a lawyer of the Temišvar Eparchy. As a poet he was famed in his time and known as a representative of the Serbian folk poetry of the 18th century, even if he only wrote a few poems which were part of handwritten poem books. In 1775 he composed song Pašhalija (Serbian: Пашхалија новаја), later also recorded by Avram Miletić.[1] Avakumović died in 1810.

As a poet Avakumović came to hold definite theories of purposes and values of poetics and orthography, which he set forth in poems collected after his death in Pesme Jovana Avakumovića (Poems of Jovan Avakumović). Besides Dositej Obradović, he was among the first to produce works in verse in Serbian vernacular, anticipating the 19th century language reforms of Vuk Karadžić.

References

  1. Zbornik Matice srpske za književnost i jezik, Book 40, Issues 1-2 (in Serbian). Novi Sad: Matica Srpska. 1992. p. 335. Retrieved 16 January 2012. варијанти Авакумовићеве песме Пашхалија новаја....текст ове песме сачуван је у врло малом броју записа: 1) у Песмарици Аврама Милетића

Sources


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