Branislaw Tarashkyevich
Template:Short description Template:Family name hatnote Template:Expand Belarusian Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Branislaw Adamavich TarashkyevichTemplate:Efn (Template:Langx; 20 January 1892 – 29 November 1938) was a Belarusian public figure, politician, and linguist.
He first standardized the modern Belarusian language in the early 20th century.[1] The standard was later Russified by the Soviet authorities. However, the pre-Russified (classical) standard version was and still is actively used by intellectuals and the Belarusian diaspora and is informally referred to as Taraškievica, named after Branislaw Tarashkyevich.
Tarashkyevich was a member of the underground Communist Party of Western Belorussia (KPZB) in Poland and was imprisoned for two years (1928–1930). Also, as a member of the Belarusian Deputy Club (Беларускі пасольскі клуб, Byelaruski pasol’ski klub), he was a deputy to the Polish Parliament (Sejm) in 1922–1927. Among others, he translated Pan Tadeusz into Belarusian, and in 1969 a Belarusian-language high school in Bielsk Podlaski was named after him.
In 1933 he was set free due to a Polish-Soviet prisoner release in exchange for Frantsishak Alyakhnovich, a Belarusian journalist and playwright imprisoned in a Gulag, and lived in Soviet exile since then.
He was shot at the Kommunarka shooting ground outside Moscow in 1938 during the Great Purge[2] and was posthumously rehabilitated in 1957.
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External links
- Template:Commonscatinline
- 2 pages from original Belarusian grammar by Branislaw Tarashkevich
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- 1892 births
- 1938 deaths
- People from Vilnius District Municipality
- People from Vilensky Uyezd
- Belarusian Socialist Assembly politicians
- Communist Party of Western Belorussia politicians
- Belarusian Peasants' and Workers' Union politicians
- Members of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic
- Members of the Sejm of the Second Polish Republic (1922–1927)
- Foreign nationals imprisoned in Poland
- 20th-century Belarusian scientists
- Great Purge victims from Belarus