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The Knights of the Cross by Henryk Sienkiewicz, Fiction, Historical
Contributor(s): Sienkiewicz, Henryk (Author), Binion, Samuel A. (Translator)
ISBN: 0809595729     ISBN-13: 9780809595723
Publisher: Wildside Press
OUR PRICE:   $55.05  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: January 2004
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Romance - Historical - General
- Fiction | Classics
- Fiction | Literary
Dewey: FIC
Physical Information: 1.38" H x 6" W x 9" (2.17 lbs) 568 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

A historical novel by the eminent Polish Positivist writer and the 1905 Nobel laureate, Henryk Sienkiewicz. Its first English translation was published in the same year as the original. Before its first complete printed edition appeared in 1900. The book was first translated into English by Jeremiah Curtin, a contemporary of Sienkiewicz. The Teutonic Knights has since been translated into 25 languages. It was the first book to be printed in Poland at the end of the Second World War in 1945, due to its relevance in the context of Nazi German destruction of Poland followed by mass population transfers.

Written in 1900 when the Polish state--after being partitioned between Russian, Austrian and German empires at the end of the 18th century--did not exist and the majority of Poles were living in the Russian occupation zone named Vistula Land, formerly Congress Poland.

One of Sienkiewicz's goals in writing The Knights of the Cross was to encourage and strengthen Polish national confidence against the occupying powers. In order to circumvent the Russian censorship, he placed the plot in the Middle ages, around Prussia (region) and the State of the Teutonic Order. The story exhibits with splendid force the collision of race passions and fierce, violent individualities which accompanied that struggle. Those who read it will, in addition to their thrilling interest in the tragical and varied incidents, gain no little insight into the origin and working of the inextinguishable race hatred between Teuton and Slav. It was an unfortunate thing surely, that the conversion of the heathen Lithuanians and Zmudzians was committed so largely to that curious variety of the missionary, the armed knight, banded in brotherhood, sacred and military. To say the least, his sword was a weapon dangerous to his evangelizing purpose. He was always in doubt whether to present to the heathen the one end of it, as a cross for adoration, or the other, as a point to kill with. And so, if Poland was made a Catholic nation, she was also made an undying and unalterable hater of the German, the Teutonic name and person.


Contributor Bio(s): Sienkiewicz, Henryk: - "Henryk Adam Aleksander Pius Sienkiewicz (1846 - 1916) was a Polish journalist, novelist and the Nobel Prize laureate. He is best remembered for his historical novels, especially for his internationally known best-seller Quo Vadis (1896). Born into an impoverished Polish noble family in Russian-ruled Congress Poland, in the late 1860s Sienkiewicz began publishing journalistic and literary pieces. In the late 1870s he traveled to the United States, sending back travel essays that won him popularity with Polish readers. In the 1880s he began serializing novels that further increased his popularity. He soon became one of the most popular Polish writers at the turn of the 20th century and numerous translations gained him international renown, culminating in his receipt of the 1905 Nobel Prize in Literature for his "outstanding merits as an epic writer.""