Štefan Marko Daxner: Difference between revisions
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== Philosophical views == |
== Philosophical views == |
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Lukáš Perný emphasizes that Daxner transformed [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau|Rousseau]]'s idea of |
Lukáš Perný emphasizes that Daxner transformed [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau|Rousseau]]'s idea of [[Political equality|equality]] between people into the idea of equality between nations and also adds that Daxner was one of the most advanced social and philosophers of law in the Slovak 19th century. <ref>PERNÝ, Lukáš. Štefan Marko Daxner. Matica slovenská, 2022-04-11. https://matica.sk/stefan-marko-daxner/</ref> |
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Dalimír Hajko states that "all of Daxner's political considerations published in the press were directly connected primarily with questions of practical ethics and philosophical questions of law, because it was these problem areas that most recently connected with the national emancipation process…" <ref>HAJKO, D.: Slovenské provokácie. Bratislava : Vydavateľstvo Spolku slovenských spisovateľov, 2018.</ref> |
Dalimír Hajko states that "all of Daxner's political considerations published in the press were directly connected primarily with questions of practical ethics and philosophical questions of law, because it was these problem areas that most recently connected with the national emancipation process…" <ref>HAJKO, D.: Slovenské provokácie. Bratislava : Vydavateľstvo Spolku slovenských spisovateľov, 2018.</ref> |
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Rudolf Dupkala recalls that Daxner followed the [[Ľudovít Štúr|Štúr]]´s understanding of the [[nation]], the concept of the [[social contract]] according to [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau|J. J. Rousseau]] and [[French Revolution|the French Revolution]]. <ref>DUPKALA, R. (jr): Sociálno-politické myslenie Š. M. Daxnera. In: SPOŁECZEŃSTWO I EDUKACJA Międzynarodowe Studia Humanistyczne 1/2012, s. 99-105.</ref> |
Rudolf Dupkala recalls that Daxner followed the [[Ľudovít Štúr|Štúr]]´s understanding of the [[nation]], the concept of the [[social contract]] according to [[Jean-Jacques Rousseau|J. J. Rousseau]] and [[French Revolution|the French Revolution]]. <ref>DUPKALA, R. (jr): Sociálno-politické myslenie Š. M. Daxnera. In: SPOŁECZEŃSTWO I EDUKACJA Międzynarodowe Studia Humanistyczne 1/2012, s. 99-105.</ref> |
Revision as of 10:48, 22 April 2022
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (July 2015) |
Štefan Marko Daxner, Template:Lang-hu (22 December 1822, Tiszolcz (Template:Lang-de, Template:Lang-sk), Gömör-Kis-Hont, Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire – 11 April 1891, Tiszolc, Kingdom of Hungary) was an ethnic Slovak lower nobleman, politician, lawyer, and poet in the Kingdom of Hungary. He was a member of what became known as the Ľudovít Štúr generation.
His family (Template:Lang-hu) is an old lower noble family, which emigrated from Switzerland to the Kingdom of Hungary in the 14th century.
Biography
Daxner studied at the Lutheran Lyceum (preparatory high school plus freshmen college) of Pressburg (Pozsony, today's Bratislava) and at the College of Prešov (Eperjes). Between 1846-72 he was a lawyer in Tisovec (Tiszolc), an official of several counties and an associate judge of the Commercial Court of Debrecen.
In 1847, just before the 1848-1849 Revolution, Daxner outlined a program unifying the requests for national (Slovak), cultural, political and social liberties. He was sentenced to death by Hungarian authorities in 1848, but was freed by the Austrian Imperial and Royal Army (which was fighting together with Slovaks against the Hungarians) and became a captain of Slovak volunteer campaigns during the 1848-1849 revolution. His German surnames and German blood ancestors became the most significant consideration by the Austrian Imperial to help him.
He was a co-author of the Slovak Requests of Liptovský Mikuláš (Liptószentmiklós, 1848), Requests of the Slovak Nation (1848), Memorandum of the Slovak Nation in 1861, and was one of the founders of the Matica slovenská (Slovak Foundation) in 1863. He was also a founder of the first Slovak Gymnasium in Revúca (Nagyrőce) in 1862.
He is buried at the National Cemetery in Martin.
Philosophical views
Lukáš Perný emphasizes that Daxner transformed Rousseau's idea of equality between people into the idea of equality between nations and also adds that Daxner was one of the most advanced social and philosophers of law in the Slovak 19th century. [1] Dalimír Hajko states that "all of Daxner's political considerations published in the press were directly connected primarily with questions of practical ethics and philosophical questions of law, because it was these problem areas that most recently connected with the national emancipation process…" [2] Rudolf Dupkala recalls that Daxner followed the Štúr´s understanding of the nation, the concept of the social contract according to J. J. Rousseau and the French Revolution. [3]
Sources
- Brief Biography @ Osobnosti.
- Biographical notes @ O Škole.
- Brief biography @ the Prešov website.
External links
Media related to Štefan Marko Daxner at Wikimedia Commons
References
- ^ PERNÝ, Lukáš. Štefan Marko Daxner. Matica slovenská, 2022-04-11. https://matica.sk/stefan-marko-daxner/
- ^ HAJKO, D.: Slovenské provokácie. Bratislava : Vydavateľstvo Spolku slovenských spisovateľov, 2018.
- ^ DUPKALA, R. (jr): Sociálno-politické myslenie Š. M. Daxnera. In: SPOŁECZEŃSTWO I EDUKACJA Międzynarodowe Studia Humanistyczne 1/2012, s. 99-105.
- 1822 births
- 1891 deaths
- People from Tisovec
- People from the Kingdom of Hungary
- Hungarian nobility
- Slovak nobility
- Hungarian people of Swiss descent
- Slovak people of Swiss descent
- Slovak National Party (historical) politicians
- 19th-century Hungarian writers
- 19th-century Slovak people
- Hungarian lawyers
- Slovak writers
- Slovak lawyers
- Burials at National Cemetery in Martin