Knowledge

Lumír

Source 📝

26: 126:, 1976: "These artistic leanings revealed the Lumir adherents as Neo-Romantics. Their enthusiasm for "restoring old paintings" was Romantic; Romantic was their ambition to integrate epic fragments into a unified "legend of an era;" Romantic was ..." 113:, 1929, p.15: "The rallying-point of Vrchlicky and his followers was the Lumir, a literary periodical which was founded in the ... Celtic, Spanish, and Oriental legends, from the Charlemagne cycle, and from the early history of his native country." 76:
The magazine's followers were known by the same name as the magazine. The writers and artists involved started a new direction in Czech culture. Previously culture was seen as coming from Germans and sources in German. German poets like
89:
the focus turned towards Latin roots and the Anglo Saxon countries in particular. This cultural focus is said to have led other Czech intellectuals to also look in the same direction for scientific, economic and social ideas.
183: 198: 163: 188: 193: 81:
were translated poem by poem from German to Czech. With the emergence of the Lumir group, writers like Vrchlický,
147: 47: 19: 142:(1st ed.). Bratislava: VEDA, Pub. House of the Slovak Academy of Sciences. p. 308. 58: 8: 157: 143: 139:
Geopolitics of the Central European region : the view from Prague and Bratislava
43: 137: 78: 135: 177: 86: 51: 106: 82: 62: 25: 70: 66: 55: 184:Literary magazines published in the Czech Republic 175: 162:: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( 199:1851 establishments in the Austrian Empire 122:Arne Novák & William Edward Harkins, 24: 111:An Anthology of Czechoslovak Literature 176: 129: 13: 65:followers. Lumír is the name of a 14: 210: 50:. It was the focal point of the 46:that was established in 1851 by 136:Krejčí ; , Oskar (2005). 116: 100: 1: 189:Magazines established in 1851 93: 7: 48:Ferdinand Břetislav Mikovec 10: 215: 17: 194:Czech-language magazines 34: 20:Lumír (disambiguation) 28: 18:For other uses, see 29:The first issue of 59:Jaroslav Vrchlický 35: 44:literary magazine 206: 168: 167: 161: 153: 133: 127: 124:Czech literature 120: 114: 104: 214: 213: 209: 208: 207: 205: 204: 203: 174: 173: 172: 171: 155: 154: 150: 134: 130: 121: 117: 105: 101: 96: 23: 12: 11: 5: 212: 202: 201: 196: 191: 186: 170: 169: 148: 128: 115: 98: 97: 95: 92: 79:Heinrich Heine 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 211: 200: 197: 195: 192: 190: 187: 185: 182: 181: 179: 165: 159: 151: 145: 141: 140: 132: 125: 119: 112: 108: 103: 99: 91: 88: 84: 80: 74: 72: 68: 64: 60: 57: 53: 49: 45: 41: 40: 32: 27: 21: 16: 138: 131: 123: 118: 110: 102: 87:Julius Zeyer 75: 54:nationalist 52:neo-romantic 42:is a weekly 38: 37: 36: 30: 15: 107:Paul Selver 178:Categories 149:8022408522 94:References 83:Viktor Dyk 158:cite book 69:in Czech 63:Ossianic 61:and his 146:  71:legend 39:Lumír 31:Lumír 164:link 144:ISBN 85:and 67:bard 56:poet 33:1851 180:: 160:}} 156:{{ 109:, 73:. 166:) 152:. 22:.

Index

Lumír (disambiguation)

literary magazine
Ferdinand Břetislav Mikovec
neo-romantic
poet
Jaroslav Vrchlický
Ossianic
bard
legend
Heinrich Heine
Viktor Dyk
Julius Zeyer
Paul Selver
Geopolitics of the Central European region : the view from Prague and Bratislava
ISBN
8022408522
cite book
link
Categories
Literary magazines published in the Czech Republic
Magazines established in 1851
Czech-language magazines
1851 establishments in the Austrian Empire

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.