Related Papers
Mickiewicz, Księgi Narodu Polskiego and the Struggle for Irish Independence
2013 •
Mark Ó Fionnáin
This article looks at the development of the Irish language translations of Adam Mickiewicz’s Ksiegi Narodu Polskiego i Pielgrzymstwa Polskiego which appeared between 1916-1920. It first traces some of the references in English to Poland, and the comparisons made between the situation that both Poland and Ireland found themselves in, that appeared in the Irish national— and nationalistic—press at that time. It looks at how a chance remark in a footnote to a newspaper article about Mickiewicz gave rise to not one, but two translations of the Ksiegi , by the same translator, Liam O Rinn (1886-1943), both based on French translations of the original Polish text. Each of these translations were to appear at a time of Irish national upheaval, namely the Easter Rising in 1916 and the Anglo-Irish War of Independence (1919-1921), and they had as their aim to encourage those fighting for Ireland’s freedom and language.
Studia Celtica Posnaniensia
Shane Leslie and the Irish Support for Language Struggle in Poland
2018 •
Katarzyna Gmerek
This paper tells a little known story of the collecting and delivery of signatures of Irish school children from the northern part of Ireland as an act of moral support for Polish students on strike in defense of the Polish language at schools in the Prussian partition of Poland, in the first decade of the 20th century (Płygawko 1991). The bound signatures are in the Czartoryski Museum in Cracow, Poland, but the information about the action has not been found in Irish sources, and the Polish signatures collected in response seem to be missing. The role of the organizer of the initiative, Shane Leslie, is emphasized in this paper. It describes the background of this exchange of sympathy, and discusses possible reasons why the story remains obscure.
Studi irlandesi. A Journal of Irish Studies
From High Hopes of the Celtic Twilight to Last Hurrahs in Inter-war Warsaw: the Plays of Casimir Dunin-Markievicz
2018 •
Barry Keane
Recent reassessments have done much to show that Casimir Marki-evicz's cultural activism in Ireland made unique contributions to its renascent cultural nationalism: his portraiture recorded key moments and personages of the age; whereas his role as a dramatist and theatrical impresario in thrall to Shaw, theatrical naturalism and social engagement represented a supplementation of the Celtic Literary Revival. As a further contribution to what is a growing awareness of the importance of Markievicz as a historical, artistic and literary gure, this article will seek to show that, following the breakdown of his marriage and his return to Poland in 1914, Markievicz would also play a meaningful if short-lived role in the emerging moderni-ty of Warsaw's postwar theatrical world. It will also look to assess why his career foundered, with consequences for his own literary legacy here in Poland.
2019, The Irish Polish Society Yearbook Vol. VI
Daniel Keszycki. Insurgent of the Wielkopolska Uprising and diplomat of Irish origin
2019 •
Katarzyna Gmerek
This article explores the story of Daniel Kęszycki (1884–1936), his family ties with Great Britain and Ireland and his activities for the reinstatement of the Polish state in the years 1918–1922. Keszycki, a landowner from Błociszewo near Śrem, took part in the Wielkopolska Uprising, later he worked as an interpreter for the Supreme People’s Council (Naczelna Rada Ludowa – NRL), and then was the Polish diplomat in Silesia and Gdańsk. He discovered Poland as an adult and became involved in the struggle for its freedom. He is little known beyond Wielkopolska, and the knowledge of his Irish roots and cosmopolitan upbringing have so far been rather limited.
Polish Emigration in Ireland in the 20 th and early 21 st Centuries
Jaroslaw Plachecki
Irish Studies Review, 23:3, 2015
Review of: Magdalena Kay, 'Knowing One’s Place in Contemporary Irish and Polish Poetry: Zagajewski, Mahon, Heaney, Hartwig',
Aidan O'Malley
Studia Celto-Slavica 5: Dimensions and Categories of Celticity Studies in Literature and Culture, Łódź University Press
Celtic Countries from the Perspective of Polish Romantics and Exiles
2010 •
Katarzyna Gmerek
Studia i Analizy Nauk o Polityce
Polish Organizations in Ireland. A Stimulus for Research on the National Security of the Republic of Poland
2023 •
Cezary Smuniewski
Book review
Monika Tomkiewicz, Ponary były miejscem największej zbrodni dokonanej przez Niemców na północno-wschodnich kresach II RP w okresie II wojny światowej, Warszawa, 2022. 432 p. ISBN 978-83-8229-459-0
2023 •
Zigmas Vitkus
Jeannie Łabno, "Commemorating the Polish Renaissance Child". Book rewiev
Michał Kurzej