Geo Milev
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Geo Milev | |
---|---|
Born | Georgi Milev Kasabov January 15, 1895 Radnevo, Bulgaria |
Died | (aged 30) Sofia |
Occupation | Translator, poet, journalist |
Nationality | Bulgarian |
Notable works | Septemvri |
Spouse | Mila Keranova (married 1919–1925) |
Children | Leda, Bistra |
Parents | Milyo and Anastasia Milevi |
Geo Milev[a] (born Georgi Milev Kasabov;[b] 15 January [O.S. 27 January] 1895 – 15 May 1925) was a Bulgarian poet, translator, and journalist. He is perhaps best known for his epic poem Septemvri, written during the Bulgarian September Uprising.
Life
Geo Milev was born Georgi Milev Kasabov in Radne mahale, today Radnevo, the first son in the family of school teachers Milyo[c] and Anastasia [d] Kasabovi. In 1897 the family moved to Stara Zagora, where his father started a publishing business in 1907. Geo Milev attended the town's high school from 1907 to 1911 before he went on to study at the Faculty of Philology of Sofia University.[1] From 1912 Geo Milev continued his education at the Faculty of Philosophy of Leipzig University, where he was introduced to German Expressionism. On 30 July 1914, two days after the outbreak of the First World War, he traveled from Leipzig to London, where he spent several months sightseeing and improving his English and met the Belgian Symbolist poet Émile Verhaeren. On returning to Germany, Geo Milev was detained in Hamburg on 18 October 1914 on suspicion of being an English spy. He was released after eleven days and returned to Leipzig, where he worked on his university thesis on Richard Dehmel. On 8 August 1915 he returned to Bulgaria without having obtained a degree. Beginning in 1916 he fought in World War I, where he was severely injured. After recuperating in Berlin he began to collaborate with the magazine Aktion. Upon his return to Bulgaria he started to publish the Bulgarian modernist magazine Везни (Scales), in Sofia. He contributed to the publication as a translator, theatre reviewer, director and editor of anthologies.
Death
On May 15, 1925, in the course of government reprisals following the St Nedelya Church assault, Geo Milev, a member of the Bulgarian Communist party, was taken to a police station for a "short interrogation" from which he never returned. His fate remained unknown for 30 years. In 1954 during the trial of General Ivan Valkov and a group of former police and military executioners, one of the defendants confessed how victims of the 1925 purge had been executed and where they were buried. Geo Milev had been strangled with wire and then buried in a mass grave in Ilientsi, near Sofia. His skull was found in the mass grave. His body was identified by the glass eye he was wearing after he lost his right eye in World War I.
Family
His daughter was the writer and diplomat Leda Mileva.
Works
He published his most famous poem September in his magazine Пламък (Flame) in 1924. It describes the brutal suppression of the Bulgarian uprising of September 1923 against the military coup d'état of June 1923.
Selected bibliography
- Milev, Geo, September, Brussel, 1984
- In Bulgarian
- Жестокият пръстен (1920), The Cruel Ring
- Експресионистично календарче за 1921 (1921), A Little Expressionist Calendar for the Year 1921
- Панахида за поета П. К. Яворов (1922), The Commemoration Ceremony for the Poet P. K. Javorov
- Иконите спят, (1922), The Icons Sleep
Honour
Milev Rocks in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica are named after Geo Milev.
Notes
References
- ^ "Кратък летопис на живота и творчеството на Гео Милев". Къща Музей "Гео Милев" Стара Загора (in Bulgarian). 5 April 2020. Archived from the original on 30 September 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
External links
- 20th-century Bulgarian poets
- Bulgarian male poets
- 1895 births
- 1925 deaths
- Prisoners who died in Bulgarian detention
- Bulgarian military personnel of World War I
- Jewish Bulgarian history
- People from Radnevo
- Bulgarian World War I poets
- Deaths by strangulation
- People murdered in Bulgaria
- Bulgarian people who died in prison custody
- Executed Bulgarian people
- 20th-century Bulgarian male writers
- Leipzig University alumni