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== References == == References ==
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# Skovoroda, Gregory S. Fables and Aphorisms. Translation, biography, and analysis by Dan B. Chopyk. New York: Peter Lang, 1990. Review: Wolodymyr T. Zyla, Ukrainian Quarterly, 50 (1994): 303-304. # Skovoroda, Gregory S. Fables and Aphorisms. Translation, biography, and analysis by Dan B. Chopyk. New York: Peter Lang, 1990. Review: Wolodymyr T. Zyla, Ukrainian Quarterly, 50 (1994): 303-304.
# Skovoroda, Hryhorii. Piznay v sobi ludynu. Translated by M. Kashuba with an introduction by Vasyl' Voitovych. L'viv: Svit, 1995. Selected works (Ukrainian language). # Skovoroda, Hryhorii. Piznay v sobi ludynu. Translated by M. Kashuba with an introduction by Vasyl' Voitovych. L'viv: Svit, 1995. Selected works (Ukrainian language).

Revision as of 03:37, 20 October 2006

Hryhorii Skovoroda

Hryhorii Skovoroda (Template:Lang-uk Hryhoriy Skovoroda; Template:Lang-ru, Grigorii Savvich Skovoroda) (1722 -- 1794) was a Ukrainian poet, philosopher and composer.

Life

Skovoroda was born in the family of a poor Cossack in the village of Chornukhy in the Lubny regiment (Poltavs'ka oblast') of the nominal Hetman State ("Malorossiia"), that at the time belonged to the Russian Empire, in 1722. He studied at the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy (1734-1741, 1744-1745, 1751-1753) but did not complete the full program. From 1741 to 1744 he was a member of the imperial choir in the 2 capitals of the Russian Empire, Moscow and St.Petersburg. He spent the period from 1745 to 1750 in Hungary and may have traveled elsewhere in Europe as well. In 1750-1751 he taught poetics in Pereyaslav. For most of the period from 1753 to 1759 Skovoroda was a tutor in the family of a landowner in Kovrai. From 1759 to 1769, with interruptions, he taught such subjects as poetry, syntax, Greek, and ethics at the Kharkiv College. After an attack on his course on ethics, he in 1769 decided to abandon teaching.

Skovoroda also was active as a composer of liturgical music, as well as songs to his own texts. Of the latter, several have been valued sufficiently to pass into the realm of folk music. He was described to be a proficient player on torban and kobza.

In the final quarter of his life he traveled by foot through Ukraine staying with various friends, both rich and poor, preferring not to remain in one place for too long.

Death

Three days before he died, he went to the house of one of his closest friends and told him he had come to stay permanently. Everyday he left the house early with a shovel, and it turned out that he spent three days digging his own grave. On the third day, he ate dinner, stood up and said, "my time has come." He went into the next room, lay down, and died. He requested the following epitaph to be placed on his tombstone:

The world tried to catch me, but didn't succeed.

Heritage

Skovoroda on Ukraine's largest banknote

This last period was the time of his great philosophic works. In this period as well, but particularly earlier, he wrote poetry and letters in Ruthenian (Ukrainian), Greek and Latin and did a few translations from Latin.

On September 15, 2006, his portrait was placed on the largest banknote in circulation in Ukraine, the 500-hryvnia note worth approximately $100 US.

Hryhoriy Skovoroda Institute of Philosophy, founded in 1946, operates under the auspicies of the National Academy of Science of Ukraine.<ref>Template:Uk icon "About the Institute." Hryhoriy Skovoroda Institute of Philosophy at NASU. URL accessed 19 October 2006

References


  1. Skovoroda, Gregory S. Fables and Aphorisms. Translation, biography, and analysis by Dan B. Chopyk. New York: Peter Lang, 1990. Review: Wolodymyr T. Zyla, Ukrainian Quarterly, 50 (1994): 303-304.
  2. Skovoroda, Hryhorii. Piznay v sobi ludynu. Translated by M. Kashuba with an introduction by Vasyl' Voitovych. L'viv: Svit, 1995. Selected works (Ukrainian language).
  3. Skovoroda, Hryhorii. Tvory: V dvokh tomakh, foreword by O. Myshanych, chief editor Omelian Pritsak. Kiev: Oberehy, 1994. (Ukrainian language).
  4. Skovoroda, Hryhorii (Gregory), "A Conversation Among Five Travelers Concerning Life's True Happiness"
  5. Zakydalsky, Taras, "The Theory of Man in the Philosophy of Skovoroda" (1965)
  6. "The world tried to catch him but failed — Hryhoriy Skovoroda, the 18th-century Ukrainian philosopher", Welcome to Ukraine, 2003, 1
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