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Great poet of the
Hungarian Renaissance ~ the son of
János, castellan of
Zólyom and Anna Sulyok. At
the age of 11 his father sent him to
Nurnberg, later he studied under
Péter Bornemissza, famous
preacher of the era. In 1569 - on
ground of false charges - his father
and István Dobó were
suspected of conspiracy, both of
them were seized and imprisoned in
Bratislava (Pressburg). With the
help of his wife the father escaped
from the prison, went back to
Zólyom, then - with his
family - fled to Poland. It was in
Poland, where the young
Bálint Balassi came forward
with his first literary product: for
the consolation of his parents he
translated a religious work from
German, the Beteg lelkeknek
való füves kertecske
(Herbous garden for sick souls),
which - in 1572 was printed in
Cracow. In the same year the father
was pardoned in Vienna. In order to
counterbalance the prolonged
suspicion and his kinship with
István Báthori, the
new prince of Transylvania, in 1575
the father sent his son to relieve
Gáspár Bekes, who had
rebelled against Báthori.
Bálint Balassi was captured
on the way, but Báthori
refused to surrender him to the
Turkish Sultan, moreover later the
Prince took him to his court, and
then to Poland. In 1577 Balassi
participated in the siege of Dancka
(Gdańsk), which was held by the
troops of the Austrian Emperor.
There he heard the news of the
sudden death of his father, so he
returned home. He also took part in
the surprise attacks against the
border fortresses held by the
Turkish and returned to the feuds
and lawsuits his father had
`bequeathed' to him. He had several
love-affairs. He won the heart of
Anna Losonczy, the wife of
Kristóf Ungnad, governor of
Croatia and commander of the Castle
of Eger. He made an oath of
allegiance to the king, but his
Polish antecedents and princely
relations made him suspicious for
the court of Vienna for ever.
Between 1579 and 1582 he served in
Eger as a lieutenant. On account of
a quarrel of some sort he left the
town of Eger and returned to
Zólyom. At the Christmas of
1584 he married his niece, the
widowed Krisztina Dobó in the
church of Sárospatak. The new
wife was the elder sister of Ferenc
Dobó, the captain-in-chief of
Upper Hungary. His brother-in-law,
Ferenc Dobó, Lord Lieutenant
of Bars instituted legal actions
against Balassi, on grounds of
disloyalty and incest. Having been
hard pressed he catholicised in
1586, but still, the church annulled
the marriage and declared
János Balassi - the son born
at the end of 1585 - illegitimate.
In 1588 he was reprieved by the
Court and the re-legitimised
marriage was terminated by divorce.
In the same year he went into the
service of the castellan of
Érsekújvár, but
the wife of the castellan fell in
love with him, so he was forced to
leave the castle. During these years
he had been continuously besieging
the rich and widowed Anna Losonczy
through letters and poems , but by
that time his former lady
disregarded his efforts. In his last
years Bálint Balassi was
adrift. In 1589, during his stay in
Transylvania, he wrote his pastoral
and the most beautiful pieces of the
Júlia-cycle. Finally the ever
worsening financial problems,
quarrels and lawsuits drove him to
Poland. He wrote his most beautiful
poems in Ferenc Wesselényi's
castle, Dembnó and in Cracow,
where Anna Zarkándy,
Wesselényi's wife had a
house. In these poems - after
Angerianus - he calls his new Anna
Celia. In the autumn of 1591 he
returned to Hungary, but could not
win the favours of the Court or
receive a proper position, so he had
to supplement his continuously
decreasing incomes with wine
forwarding and trading. In 1593 -
accepting the invitation of
István
Illésházy - he joined
the army of Miklós
Pálffy, who set forth against
the Turkish. He took part in the
siege of Fejérvár and
the victorious battle of
Pákozd, later he re-conquered
his family fortresses, Divény
and Kékkő. During the siege
of Esztergom - the spring of 1594 -
both of his thighs were shot
through. A few days later he died of
sepsis.
Bálint
Balassi was the first prominent,
world-class representative of
Hungarian-speaking poetry, and the
user and creator of new poetic
forms. In his poetry he combined
love lyrics with the experiences of
the fight against the Turkish
conquerors. In the beginning he
adopted the clichés of the
classical love poetry, but soon his
strong personality created genuine
Hungarian poetry. For almost 300
years only his religious poems were
known to the public (his 26
God-poems - in the volume of
János Rimay's poems - were
published 40 times between the 1630s
and the beginning of the 19th
century). The secular works (love
songs and heroic poems) were found
only in 1874, on the pages of the
Radvánszky-codex in the
library of the Radvánszky
family. Bálint Balassi had
comprehensive musical education. He
was not only inspired by the
numerous tunes (Italian, German,
classical Latin, Polish, etc.) he
knew, but they also served as direct
models for his poems. The so-called
Balassi-stanza was a sung form
itself
(www.bbi.hu)
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