Mikael Lybeck
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Karl Mikael Lybeck (18 March 1864 – 11 October 1925) was a
Finland-Swede The Swedish-speaking population of Finland (whose members are called by many names; fi, suomenruotsalainen) can be used as an attribute., group=Note—see below; sv, finlandssvenskar; fi, suomenruotsalaiset) is a linguistic minority in Finl ...
poet, novelist, and playwright.


Background and studies

Lybeck's parents were city councillor Johan Adolf Lybeck and Isabella Augusta Lindqvist. In 1875 Lybeck left his home for Helsinki, where he went to the Swedish-speaking together with his brother . Lybeck matriculated in 1882 and then studied literature at the University of Helsinki, earning his BA in 1887. After graduation, Lybeck continued his studies of literature in Germany between 1888 and 1889.


Career

After having returned from Germany, Lybeck first lived in Nykarleby and while there he published his debut book, a poem collection called ''Dikter''. He moved back to Helsinki in 1893 and worked as an amanuensis at the Helsinki University Library (now National Library) in 1893–1896. Lybeck married Louise Sanmark in 1898. In 1900, he published the novel ''Den starkare'', which became his breakthrough work. The novel criticizes religious hypocrisy through a story of struggle between charismatic preacher Kurt Hedelius and freethinker and skeptic Robert Viding that Viding prevails in even though he ends up losing both his fiancé and mother to the preacher. Lybeck's most prominent works were the 1911 novel ''Tomas Indal'' and the 1920 epistolary novel ''Breven till Cecilia''. The former's main character is a middle-aged medicine student returning to his hometown, while the latter's Sven Ingelet is an aesthetician and connoisseur of Renaissance art who commits suicide after having broken his heart because of his unfaithful lover Cecilia. Lybeck can be said to have stood, especially in his poetry (the poems ''Klockbojen'' and ''Trötta träd''), for the pessimistic movement of the turn of the century. Lybeck also wrote six plays. Of those, ''Dynastin Peterberg'' written in 1913 was the most popular, while his other plays were left largely unnoticed. ''Dynastin Peterberg'' takes place during the (1899–1905) and depicts Peterberg's family business, whose existence is threatened by Monsieur André, a chamber servant of the Russian Imperial Court. The same Monsieur André played the part of the hero in Lybeck's play ''Den röde André'', taking place during the Russian
February Revolution The February Revolution ( rus, Февра́льская револю́ция, r=Fevral'skaya revolyutsiya, p=fʲɪvˈralʲskəjə rʲɪvɐˈlʲutsɨjə), known in Soviet historiography as the February Bourgeois Democratic Revolution and somet ...
of 1917 where his opposition is the Rasputin-like Akim the Wondermaker. Lybeck had built for his family in Kauniainen between 1906 and 1907. He lived and worked there for the rest of his life. The villa was bought by the city in 1956 and was the market town, and later city, hall for more than twenty years. After 1982 it has housed a music school and a cultural center.


Works

*''Dikter''. 1890 *''Unge Hemming: Karaktärsstudie''. 1891 *''Ett mosaikarbete''. 1892 *''”Allas vår Margit”: Småstadsskildring''. 1893 *''Dikter: Andra samlingen''. 1895 *''Dagar och nätter''. 1896 *''Den starkare''. 1900 (Later published as ''Den starkaste''.) *''Dikter III''. 1903 *'' Ödlan: Ett skådespel''. 1908 *''Lyrik: En och trettio dikter i urval 1890–1910''. 1910 *''Tomas Indal: En början och ett slut''. 1911 *''Dynastin Peterberg: En stilla komedi''. 1913 *''Bror och syster: Drama''. 1915 *''Hennerson: Historien om en gårdskarl''. 1916 *''Den röde André: En upplyftande skådespel''. 1917 *''Dödsfången: En diktcykel''. 1918 *''Breven till Cecilia''. 1920 *''Samlade arbeten I–XI''. 1921–1923 *''Scopenhauer: Scener ur hans ungdom''. 1922 *''Domprosten Bomander: Samtal. Skådespel''. 1923 *''Samtal med Lackau under hans levnads sista halvår: Efterlämnade anteckningar av Klas Uggelberg.'' 1925


References


General references

* * (includes his works in Swedish) *


Further reading

*


External links


Mikael Lybeck
at '' Uppslagsverket Finland''
Works
at the collections of the National Library of Finland
Works
at ' {{DEFAULTSORT:Lybeck, Mikael Kauniainen Finnish poets in Swedish 1864 births 1925 deaths Poets from the Russian Empire People from the Grand Duchy of Finland