Konrad Wallenrod
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''Konrad Wallenrod'' is an 1828 narrative poem, in Polish, by Adam Mickiewicz, set in the 14th-century
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. Mickiewicz wrote it, while living in St. Petersburg,
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, in protest against the late-18th-century
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of the
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by the
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, the
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, and the
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. Mickiewicz had been exiled to St. Petersburg for his participation in the
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organization at Vilnius University. The poem helped inspire the Lithuanian and Polish November 1830 Uprising against Russian rule. Though its subversive theme was apparent to most readers, the poem escaped censorship due to conflicts among the censors and, in the second edition, a prefatory homage to
Tsar Nicholas I , house = Romanov-Holstein-Gottorp , father = Paul I of Russia , mother = Maria Feodorovna (Sophie Dorothea of Württemberg) , birth_date = , birth_place = Gatchina Palace, Gatchina, Russian Empire , death_date = ...
. Though Mickiewicz later disparaged the work, its cultural influence in Poland persists.


Plot

In a preface, Mickiewicz briefly outlines the history of the region, describing the interactions among the Lithuanians, Prussians, Poles, and Russians. The following six
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s tell the story of Wallenrod, a fictional Lithuanian pagan captured and reared as a Christian by his people's long-standing enemies, the Order of
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. He rises to the position of Grand Master, but is awakened to his heritage by a mysterious minstrel singing at an entertainment event. He then seeks vengeance by deliberately leading the Knights into a major military defeat. It transpires that Wallenrod has a wife, Aldona, who has been living in seclusion. The Knights discover his treason and sentence him to death; Aldona refuses to flee with him. He then commits
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.


Cultural influences

The concept of "Wallenrodism" ( pl, Wallenrodyzm)—the striking of a treacherous, possibly suicidal, blow against an enemy—and certain powerful fragments of the poem have become an enduring part of the Lithuanian and Polish psyche and found resonance in the independence struggles of the two nations in the 19th (1831, 1863) and 20th centuries. The poem included a reference to Machiavelli's dictum that a leader must be both a lion and a fox. Its encouragement of what would later be called "patriotic treason" created controversy, since its elements of deception and conspiracy were thought incompatible with Christian and
chivalric Chivalry, or the chivalric code, is an informal and varying code of conduct developed in Europe between 1170 and 1220. It was associated with the medieval Christian institution of knighthood; knights' and gentlemen's behaviours were governed ...
values. Mickiewicz was taken aback by the strength of the public response to his poem and regretted its publication; before his death, he expressed frustration at his financial inability to buy back and burn every copy of what he described as a mere "political pamphlet." ''Konrad Wallenrod'' has twice been turned into an opera: as '' I Lituani'' (The Lithuanians), by Italian composer Amilcare Ponchielli (1874); and as ''Konrad Wallenrod'', by Polish composer Władysław Żeleński (1885). The Polish composer
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may have based his Ballade No.1 in G minor on this poem. The Polish author Joseph Conrad, who had been christened Józef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski, may have selected the second part of his
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as an hommage to the poem's protagonist. Mickiewicz's poem influenced Conrad's frequent explorations of the conflict between publicly attested loyalty and a hidden affiliation with a national cause.


See also

*
Romanticism in Poland Romanticism in Poland, a literary, artistic and intellectual period in the evolution of Polish culture, began around 1820, coinciding with the publication of Adam Mickiewicz's first poems in 1822. It ended with the suppression of the January 186 ...
* Konrad von Wallenrode * List of Poles * 1828 in poetry * Kordian


References


External links


English translation of Konrad Wallenrod
M.A. Biggs, 1882. {{Authority control 1828 poems Polish poems State of the Teutonic Order Lithuania in fiction Works by Adam Mickiewicz