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József Borovnják | |
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Born | Around February 9, 1826 Ivanovci (Ivanócz/Alsószentbenedek), Kingdom of Hungary (now Slovenia) |
Died | September 19, 1909 Cankova, Austro-Hungarian Empire (now Slovenia) |
Occupation | Writer, politician, priest |
Nationality | Hungarian Slovenian |
Genre | religious works, political works |
Literary movement | Nationalism, Catholicism |
József Borovnyák or Borovnják (Slovene: Jožef Borovnjak; 1826 – 19 September 1909) was a Prekmurje Slovene writer, politician, and Roman Catholic priest in Hungary.
Borovnják was born in the village of Ivanócz (later Alsószentbenedek, Slovenian Ivanovci). His family was originally Protestant. His father converted to Catholicism.
Borovnják first served as a priest from 1851 to 1852 at the Istvánfalvian Church in the village of Apátistvánfalva (Vas Country). He was later a priest in Felsőlendva and Cankova (where he died).
Borovnják was a defender of the local Prekmurje Slovene language. He wrote books in it; for example, a catechism and prayer books. In 1877 he posthumously reprinted Miklós Küzmics' Prekmurje Slovene translation of the gospels. He was also involved in politics.
Works
- Jezus moje poslenje (Jesus Is My Desire),
- Veliki katekizmus (Large Catechism)
- Kniga molitvena sztara szlovenszka (Old Slovene Prayer Book)
- Dühovna hrána (The House of the Soul)
- Máli politicsni vodnik (Little Political Mirror)
- Szvéti Angel Csuvár (Holy Guardian Angel)
See also
References
- Anton Trstenjak. Slovenci na Ogrskem (Hungarian Slovenes. Maribor 2006. ISBN 961-6507-09-5
Municipality of Cankova | ||
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Settlements | Administrative seat: Cankova | |
Landmarks |
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Notable people |
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