Miķelis Krogzemis

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Auseklis
File:Miķelis Krogzemis.jpg
Born (1850-09-18)18 September 1850
Ungurpils parish, Russian empire
(Now Aloja municipality  Latvia)
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St. Petersburg, Russian empire
(Now  Russia)
Occupation Poet, Teacher.
Movement Young Latvians

Miķelis Krogzemis (18 September 1850, Ungurpils – 6 February 1879, Saint Petersburg, Russia), better known under his pen name Auseklis[1] was a Latvian poet and prominent member of the Young Latvians movement.

Biography

Miķelis Krogzemis was born in Sīpoli, Ungurpils to a peasant family. He attended parochial school in Aloja and later in Ērgļi. In Ērgļi he met members of the Jurjāni family who got him in touch with the Young Latvian movement. In 1868 he was admitted to the teachers' seminary in Valka under the leadership of Latvian composer Jānis Cimze. While in Valka he studied European literature and philosophy of the Age of Enlightenment.

After graduating in 1871, Krogzemis begin his teaching career in Jaunpiebalga but soon was forced to leave the school due to conflicts with the local pastor. He then taught briefly in Cēsis before moving to Lielvārde to teach. In Lielvārde he became active in the local cultural life. He organised theater and choir and in 1873 participated in the first Latvian song festival in Riga. However, due to these activities and his anticlerical poetry, he soon found himself in conflict with the local pastor and was forced to leave.

Krogzemis moved to Vecpiebalga where he lived and worked with Atis Kronvalds, but their collaboration proved unsuccessful. He subsequently moved to Riga to seek employment. In 1874 he left for St. Petersburg where he taught in several schools and wrote literature. In St. Petersburg he became close friends with Latvian composer Baumaņu Kārlis and contributed to the satirical magazine Dunduri.

In 1879 Krogzemis became ill with typhus and died on February 6. His funeral ceremony in Aloja attracted national attention.

Literature

Miķelis Krogzemis is better known under his pen name Auseklis. His first publication was in the newspaper Baltijas Vēstnesis in 1872. In his poetry he richly used motives of folklore and became one of the leading voices of the First Latvian national awakening in poetry. In his satirical poems he stood against Baltic German landowners, germanisation and obscurantism.

References

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