Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Karel_Havlíček_Borovský> ?p ?o }
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský abstract "Karel Havlíček Borovský (Czech pronunciation: [ˈkarɛl ˈɦavliːtʃɛk ˈborofskiː]; Borová, today Havlíčkova Borová; 31 October 1821 - 29 July 1856) was a Czech writer, poet, critic, politician, journalist, and publisher.He lived and studied at the Gymnasium in Německý Brod (today Havlíčkův Brod), and his house on the main square is today the Havlíček Museum. In 1838 he moved to Prague to study philosophy at Charles University and, influenced by the revolutionary atmosphere before the Revolutions of 1848, decided on the objective of becoming a patriotic writer. He devoted himself to studying Czech and literature. After graduating he began studying theology because he thought the best way to serve the nation would be as a priest. He was expelled, however, after one year for \"showing too little indication for spiritual ministry\".After failing to find a teacher's job in Bohemia, he left for Moscow becoming a tutor in a Russian teacher's family: he was recommended by Pavel Josef Šafařík. He became a Russophile and a Pan-Slav, but after recognizing the true reality of the Russian society he took the pessimistic view that \"Pan-Slavism is a great, attractive but feckless idea\". His memories on the Russian stay were published first in magazines and then as a book Obrazy z Rus (Pictures from Russia).After he returned to Bohemia in 1844, he used his writing skill to criticize the public habit of embracing everything written in the recently reborn Czech language. His attack was aimed specifically at a novel by Josef Kajetán Tyl. František Palacký helped Havlíček get a job as Editor of the Pražské noviny newspaper in 1846.In April 1848 he changed the name of the newspaper to Národní noviny (National News). This paper became one of the first newspapers of the Revolutionary-era Czech liberals. He was concerned with the preparations of the Congress of the Slavs in Prague. In July he was elected a member of Austrian Empire Constituent Assembly in Vienna and later in Kroměříž. He finally gave up the seat to focus on his journalism. Národní noviny became popular especially for his sharp-tongued epigrams and his wit.Havlíček was, politically, a \"liberal nationalist.\" However, he refused to allow a \"party line\" to inform his opinions. Often, he would criticize those that agreed with him as much as those that disagreed. He exoriated revolutionaries for their radicalism, but also advocated ideas like universal suffrage-a concept altogether too radical for most of his fellow liberals. He was a pragmatist, and had little patience for those that spent their time romanticizing the Czech nationality without helping it achieve political or cultural independence. He used much of the space in his newspapers to educate the people on important issues-stressing areas like economics, which were sorely neglected by other nationalist writers.The Revolution in the Austro-Bohemian portion of the Habsburg monarchy was defeated in March 1849 with dissolution of the Kroměříž assembly, but Havlíček continued to criticize the new regime. He was brought to court for his criticism (there was no freedom of the press in the Habsburg's territory) but he was found not guilty by a sympathetic jury. Národní noviny had to cease publication in January 1850, but Havlíček did not end his activities. In May 1850 he began publishing the magazine Slovan in Kutná Hora. The magazine was a target of censorship from its start. It had to stop publication in August 1851, and Havlíček stood again at the court to answer on charges of dissent. Again, he was found not guilty by a sympathetic jury of Czech commoners.Havlíček translated and introduced some satirical and critical authors into the Czech language culture including Nikolai Gogol (1842) and Voltaire (1851).Against the law he was arrested by the police on the night of December 16, 1851, and forced into exile in Brixen, Austria (present-day Italy). He was depressed from the exile, but continued writing. While in exile, he wrote some of his best work: Tyrolské elegie (Tirol Laments), Křest svatého Vladimíra (Baptism of St.Vladimir) and Král Lávra (King Lavra). When he returned from Brixen in 1855, he learned that his wife had died a few days earlier. Most of his former friends, afraid of the Bach system, stood aloof from him. Only a few publicly declared support for him. He died from tuberculosis, aged 35. Božena Němcová put a crown of thorns on his head in the coffin. His funeral was attended by a procession of about 5,000 Czechs.".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský almaMater Gymnasium_(school).
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský almaMater Havlíčkův_Brod.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthDate "1821-10-31".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthName "Karel Havlíček".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthPlace Austrian_Empire.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthPlace Bohemia.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthPlace Havlíčkova_Borová.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský deathDate "1856-07-29".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský deathPlace Austrian_Empire.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský deathPlace Bohemia.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský deathPlace Prague.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský genre Literary_realism.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský nationality Czechs.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský thumbnail Havlíček.jpg?width=300.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageExternalLink search.php?zp=10&name=HAVL%CD%C8EK+BOROVSK%DD+KAREL.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageID "2126676".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageLength "8208".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageOutDegree "68".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageRevisionID "705234058".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Adler_Planetarium.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Austrian_Empire.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Bohemia.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Božena_Němcová.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Brixen.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:1821_births.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:1856_deaths.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:19th-century_journalists.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:19th-century_poets.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:Czech_Roman_Catholics.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:Czech_journalists.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:Czech_male_writers.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:Czech_poets.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:Czech_politicians.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:Czech_satirists.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:Male_journalists.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:Male_poets.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Havlíčkův_Brod_District.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_the_Kingdom_of_Bohemia.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Censorship.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Charles_University_in_Prague.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Chicago.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Columbia_University_Press.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Congress_of_the_Slavs.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Constituent_assembly.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Crown_of_thorns.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Czech_language.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Czechs.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Douglas_Park_(Chicago).
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Epigram.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink František_Palacký.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Gymnasium_(school).
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Habsburg_Monarchy.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Havlíčkova_Borová.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Havlíčkův_Brod.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Josef_Kajetán_Tyl.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Karel_Havlíček_Borovský_(film).
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Kroměříž.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Kroměříž_assembly.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Kutná_Hora.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Liberalism.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Literary_realism.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Masaryk.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Moscow.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Museum_Campus.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Nikolai_Gogol.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Pan-Slavism.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Pavel_Jozef_Šafárik.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Philosophy.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Prague.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Revolutions_of_1848.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Russophilia.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Suffrage.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Theology.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Vienna.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink Voltaire.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink File:Czech_Bronze_Medal_Havel_Borovský_150th_Anniversary.jpg.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink File:Havlíčkův_domek.jpg.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLink File:Karel_Havlíček_Borovský_statue.jpg.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLinkText "Havliček".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLinkText "Havlíček's".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLinkText "Karel Havlíček Borovský".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský wikiPageWikiLinkText "Karel Havlíček".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský almaMater "Gymnasium in Německý Brod".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthDate "1821-10-31".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthName "Karel Havlíček".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthPlace Austrian_Empire.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthPlace Bohemia.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský birthPlace Havlíčkova_Borová.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský caption "Karel Havlíček Borovský".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský deathDate "1856-07-29".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský deathPlace Austrian_Empire.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský deathPlace Bohemia.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský deathPlace Prague.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský genre Literary_realism.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský name "Karel Havlíček Borovský".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský nationality Czechs.
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský notableworks "Duch Národních novin".
- Karel_Havlíček_Borovský notableworks "Epigramy".