Whose Is Mikuláš Šubić Zrínsky? (On the Sources of Inspiration and Conceptual Background of the Historical Epic Gróf Mikuláš Šubić Zrínsky na Sihoti [Count Nikola Šubić Zrinski at Sziget] by Andrej Sládkovič) Cover Image

Komu patrí Mikuláš Šubić Zrínsky? (K inšpiračným zdrojom a ideovej koncepcii historického eposu Andreja Sládkoviča Gróf Mikuláš Šubić Zrínsky na Sihoti)
Whose Is Mikuláš Šubić Zrínsky? (On the Sources of Inspiration and Conceptual Background of the Historical Epic Gróf Mikuláš Šubić Zrínsky na Sihoti [Count Nikola Šubić Zrinski at Sziget] by Andrej Sládkovič)

Author(s): Ingrid Papp
Subject(s): Language and Literature Studies, Studies of Literature, 16th Century, 17th Century, Politics of History/Memory, Politics and Identity
Published by: Ústav slovenskej literatúry SAV
Keywords: national awareness; political ideology; Pan-Slavic identity; Nikola Šubić Zrinski (1508 – 1566); Nikola VII Zrinski (1620 – 1664); Andrej Sládkovič;

Summary/Abstract: Accounts of the character and deeds of Nikola IV Zrinski (1508 – 1566) who became renowned for preventing the fall of Szigetvár in 1566 and of the work and life of his great-grandson Nikola VII Zrinski (1620 – 1664), a 17th-century baroque poet, had long played central roles in the building of national awareness and political ideology in Hungary. The Slavic inhabitants of the Kingdom of Hungary were familiar with the general who fought against the Ottoman Empire since the 16th century, but in the 19th century, in the context of the idea of Slavic mutuality and Pan-Slavism, this historical figure became more important. In 1866, Andrej Sládkovič (1820 – 1872) wrote a historical epic Gróf Mikuláš Šubić Zrínsky na Sihoti [Count Nikola Šubić Zrinski at Sziget] in which he described Zrinski’s heroic deeds from the perspective of Pan-Slavic identity in detail. He drew on Ján Kollár’s sonnet “My sme dali Uhrům Zríniho” [We gave Zrinski to the Hungarians] included in his Slávy dcera ([The daughter of Sláva] final version published in 1852). The sonnet asserts that the Slavs left Zrinski to the Hungarians, just like they left Ján Hus to the Germans and Nicolaus Copernicus to the Italians and that they also gave up Zrinski’s legacy. In his epic poem, with the help of the poetry of his grandson, he returned Zrinski to the Slavic Pantheon.

  • Issue Year: 68/2021
  • Issue No: 4
  • Page Range: 432 - 441
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: Slovak