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Francysk Skaryna

(b Polack [Polotsk], c. 1485; d Prague, c. 1552). Belarusian printer, woodcutter, scholar and mystic. After early schooling in Polask, he graduated from Krak?w University in 1506 and gained his doctorate in medicine at Padua University in 1513. In the interim he became secretary to John of Denmark (1481-1513) and acquired a grounding in the liberal arts, Classical languages, botany, astronomy, law and heraldry, as well as the mysticism of Pico della Mirandola (1463-94), whom he quoted. He mastered the south German style of woodcut and studied printing in northern Italy. There he moved in circles frequented by Albrecht D?rer, Johann Reuchlin, Paulus Riccius and Agrippa of Nettesheim and, like them, enjoyed the protection of the Habsburg emperor Maximilian. He shared the prevailing interest in allegory and the cabbala that had its centre in Prague, with its erudite Staronov? (Old-New) synagogue. There, between 1517 and 1519, Skaryna translated and printed, in a Belarusian version of Old Slavonic, the Psalter and some 22 books of the Old Testament in a handsome typeface interspersed with rebuses and illustrated with a series of woodcuts and arcane decorated initials. Skaryna continued his work in Vilnius (1522-5) with the Acts of the Apostles, the Epistles and a Liber viaticus, comprising interesting prayers in Middle Belarusian and Akathistos hymns illustrative of post-Florentine spirituality and papalism. Some of his prefaces have become classics of Belarusian literature. The work of this Erasmian ecumenist was, however, impeded by bigotry, sequestration, fire and imprisonment. He returned to Prague in the mid-1530s as Gardener Royal and physician to Ferdinand I. Skaryna's Bible, which had been printed and dispersed in fascicles, was first published as a complete work, in facsimile, in Minsk in 1990.

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Wikipedia: Francysk Skaryna
Francysk Skaryna, 1517
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Francysk Skaryna, 1517

Francišak Skaryna (or Skoryna; the first name also spelled as Francis, Franciszak, Frantsiszak, Francisk, Frantzisk, Francysk; Belarusian: Франці́шак (Францыск) Скары́на) was a Belarusian famous for as the printer of the first book in an Eastern Slavic language. He was born in the historical Belarusian city of Polatsk. The exact dates of birth and death are unknown; the two most probable estimates are 1485 - 1540 and 1490 - 1551. Skaryna graduated from the arts faculty at University of Kraków in 1504 with a Bachelor of Arts. In 1512 he received doctorate in medicine at University of Padua in Italy.

Printing press

Skaryna's Bible
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Skaryna's Bible

He printed his first book entitled The Psalter, in the Old Belarusian language on August 6, 1517 in Prague; this work was followed by another twenty-three books. He continued his printing work in Vilnius. The culmination of his life's work was a printing of the Bible in Belarusian. During 1517 - 1519 he printed 23 books of the Bible.

It is difficult to determine precisely what language he used as there was no conventional Belarusian language as we know it today. Some researchers maintain that Skaryna's books were in Church Slavonic heavily saturated with Belarusian. But nevertheless there is no doubt that Skaryna laid the foundations of the Belarusian literary language.

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Minsk the capital of Belarus had two roads named Skaryny Street and Skaryny Avenue. However, under the rule of Alexander Lukashenko, both of them were renamed.

Two awards presented by Belarus were named in honor of Skaryna: Medal of Francysk Skaryna and Order of Francysk Skaryna.

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