Nicholas Bátós – Wikipedia

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A wikipedia article, free l’encyclopéi.

Nicholas , nom de plume de Miklós Bajomi [ first ] , is a Catholic writer of Hungarian origin, born the [ first ] , [ 2 ] à Bátaszék en Hongrie et mort off trappes [ 3 ] .

Miklós Bajomi published in 1944 in Budapest his first novel, Ingredient (Literally: “Bourbier”), still under his civil status name [ 4 ] .

He was taken prisoner of war in France in 1945, and registered at the Sorbonne after his release. He returned to Hungary in for family reasons [ 5 ] , and then studied higher in Budapest. He then taught in the provinces (from 1951 to 1956 in a technical high school in Győr where he was also director of boarding school [ 6 ] ). He participated in Budapest in a group of avant-garde writers.

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He fled Hungary after the crushing of the 1956 revolution and took refuge in Paris. He is a member of the editorial committee of the Hungarian literary and cultural journal of Paris As you can [ 7 ] , and also written in other Hungarian emigration newspapers [ 5 ] .

He published in Hungarian in Cologne, in 1960, Calvary (“(Route du) Calvaire” according to the address of his high school, in French A strange paradise ), who describes the time when, a professor at Győr, he fled with a group of Catholics persecuted by the communist power [ 8 ] , a one 1961, The death in the vineyard (Literally: “Death in the vineyard”), which evokes the effort of Christians to find, under a hostile regime, the purity of the primitive Church. This last work, translated and published in French in 1965 under the title The vineyard of saints , obtains the Catholic Grand Prix of Literature.

In 1963, they are Roman The bricks tells the last days of the Hungarian revolution.

In 1967, God’s va-no-pieds Stages the evangelist Marc who tells what he saw throughout his life.

His following works are written directly in French.

Around 1968, he was a general supervisor and professor of mathematics at La Masters de Montmartre, from the time when Christian de Chergé was the director, then general supervisor at the Lycée Saint-Louis-de-Gonzague. He is then known as “Mr. Bajomi”.

  • A strange paradise , Plon, 1961 (translated from (hu) Calvary , Cologne 1960)
  • The bricks , Robert Laffont, 1963 (translated from the Hungarian manuscript [ 9 ] )
  • The vineyard of saints , Robert Laffont, 1965 (translated from (hu) The death in the vineyard , Cologne 1961 [ read online ] ) Catholic Grand Prix of Literature.
  • God’s va-no-pieds , Robert Laffont, 1967 (translated from the Hungarian manuscript [ ten ] ), Claire-Virenque Prize of the French Academy
  • The hare cried , Robert Laffont, 1969
  • Life is an ocean , Robert Laffont, 1973
  • Bakfitty , Fayard, 1977
  • Our friend, Lazarus (Chronicle), Le Cerf, 1983 [ 5 ]
  1. a et b The Authority notice of the general catalog of the National Library of France gives this date of 1919 with a question mark. Gyula Borbándi also indicates 1919 in his encyclopedia (Borbándi 1992).
  2. Civil status on the file of deceased in France since 1970
  3. according Hungarian emigrant writers and their works [“Hungarian emigrant writers and their works”], on the site Petőfi (Petőfi literature museum, Budapest): (hu) «Miklós Bajomi» .
  4. (hu) «Swamp: novel – Miklós Bajomi» , on Petőfi : Notice of the exemplary of Endre illeles with the dedication “to my model – the author, May 5, 1944”.
  5. A B and C (hu) Gyula Borband , Western Hungarian Literary Lexicon and Bibliography [“Encyclopedia and bibliography of Hungarian literature to the west”], Budapest, Hitel, , 826 p. (ISBN  963-04-1859-2 , read online ) , «Miklós Bátori» .
  6. (hu) Lady Luck , Az internátustól a kollégiumig» , on Ányos Jedlik High School and College of Mechanical Engineering and Informatics [Lycée Technique et Internat Jedlik Ányos, Győr].
  7. Borbándi 1992, « As you can ».
  8. Philippe Brindet, Bibliography of Miklo’s works [s] BATORI » , on Thomas review , .
  9. (BNF  34747254 )
  10. (BNF  32915054 )

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