Maria Ilnicka
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Maria Ilnicka, Template:Nee Majkowska (1825–1897) was a Polish poet, novelist, translator and journalist. She was the founder and editor of the magazine Bluszca (Ivy), which documented the Polish women's movement, from 1865 to 1896.[1][2]
She took part in the January Uprising against Russia, serving as an archivist of Polish National Government. After the collapse of the uprising, for short time, she was imprisoned. Ilnicka was advocate of feminism and organic work.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
In the period between 1870 and 1890 she was active in the literary salons of Warsaw. She was author of idyllic comedy and wrote poetry as well as a novel. She also translated the work of Walter Scott and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
Personal life
Her father was a colonel in the Polish military.[1] Her husband was exiled to Siberia following the 1863 uprising.[1]
Works
- Maids Konopianki (Panny Konopianki)
- Name-day of good mother (Imieniny dobrej mamy)
- Illustrated jewel-box of Poland – the rhyming history of Poland with music by Stanisław Moniuszko (Ilustrowany skarbczyk Polski - rymowana historia Polski z muzyką Stanisława Moniuszki)
References
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See also
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- 1820s births
- 1897 deaths
- Polish women novelists
- Year of birth uncertain
- 19th-century Polish novelists
- 19th-century Polish poets
- Writers from Warsaw
- Polish feminists
- Polish women poets
- 19th-century Polish translators
- 19th-century Polish women writers
- Translators of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- Polish positivists