Czeslaw Milosz Memorial Plaque at Vilnius University, photo Katarzyna Węglicka
Licencja: CC BY-SA 4.0, Źródło: Instytut Polonika, Warunki licencji
Fotografia przedstawiająca Czeslaw Milosz Memorial Plaque at Vilnius University
Czeslaw Milosz Memorial Plaque at Vilnius University, photo Katarzyna Węglicka
Licencja: CC BY-SA 4.0, Źródło: Instytut Polonika, Warunki licencji
Fotografia przedstawiająca Czeslaw Milosz Memorial Plaque at Vilnius University
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ID: POL-002206-P

Czeslaw Milosz Memorial Plaque at Vilnius University

ID: POL-002206-P

Czeslaw Milosz Memorial Plaque at Vilnius University

Czesław Miłosz (born 30 June 1911 - died 14 August 2004) - poet, essayist, prose writer, translator, lecturer, Nobel Prize winner in literature (1980). The son of Aleksander Miłosz (coat-of-arms Lubicz) and Veronika (née Kunat) of the coat-of-arms Topór, he was born in the Russian partition, in Szetejnie, on the Niewiaż river in the Kiejdański district. He was baptised in Svoboda. He came from the Polish nobility that had settled in the heart of Lithuania since the 16th century. He belonged to a world that was very much linked to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and in which, according to Miłosz's term, "home patriotism" was cultivated - attachment to the native area, to the land of the ancestors. In his Nobel lecture delivered in Stockholm on 8 December 1980, he said: "It is good to be born in a small country where nature is human, to the measure of man, where different languages and different religions have coexisted over the centuries. I am thinking of Lithuania, the land of myths and poetry. And although my family has spoken Polish since the 16th century [...] as a result of which I am a Polish, not a Lithuanian, poet, the landscapes and perhaps the spirits of Lithuania have never left me. [...] It is a blessing if one has received from fate such a city of school and university studies as Vilnius was [...]".

Commemoration of Czeslaw Milosz at Vilnius University

In September 2011, the Vilnius University reading room for fiction was named after Czeslaw Milosz. The idea to name the emerging reading room after the Nobel laureate had been conceived six months earlier. It was at this university that the future poet studied in 1921-1929.

In June 2011, a commemorative plaque was unveiled at Vilnius University, where the future Nobel Prize winner studied, inaugurating the Polish-Lithuanian celebrations of the poet's 100th birthday under the slogan 'Milosz Route'.

The granite plaque was placed in the Maciej Kazimierz Sarbiewski courtyard on the wall of the Faculty of Philology at Vilnius University. In addition to the poet's biography and bas-relief, the granite plaque carves the opening fragment of a poem from 1963: "Never from you, city, could I depart...".

At the unveiling ceremony, Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaitė said that the poet's work uniting the two nations testifies to how fruitful and close cooperation between our countries can be. The ceremony was followed by a literary and musical concert at St John's Academic Church.

Time of origin:
2011
Supplementary bibliography:
  • "Traces of Milosz at Vilnius University", http://www.wilnoteka.lt/video/slady-milosza-na-uniwersytecie-wilenskim [accessed: 20.08.2024].
  • "A plaque in memory of the "last citizen of WKL"", http://www.wilnoteka.lt/artykul/tablica-pamieci-quotostatniego-obywatela-wklquot [accessed: 20.08.2024].
  • "Vilnius commemorated its outstanding citizen Czeslaw Milosz", https://kurierwilenski.lt/2011/06/08/wilno-upamietnilo-swego-wybitnego-obywatela-czeslawa-milosza/ [accessed: 20.08.2024].
  • "Nobel Lecture", [in:] Cz. Miłosz, "Zaczynając od moich ulic", Kraków 2006, p. 482.
Keywords:
Publikacja:
08.10.2024
Ostatnia aktualizacja:
22.10.2024
Author:
Katarzyna Węglicka
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