Ivan Hribovšek

Ivan Hribovšek (June 19, 1923 – 1945) was a Slovene poet, philologist, and translator.

Hribovšek was born into a well-to-do family of farmers and officials in Radovljica. He spent his early youth on a farm together with his younger sisters and brother. After completing elementary school in Radovljica, in 1934 he enrolled in the St. Stanislaus Institute, the episcopal upper secondary school in Šentvid, Ljubljana. His father died in 1936. In high school, he contributed to two newsletters produced in manuscript: ''Jutranja zarja'' (The Dawn) and ''Domače vaje'' (Home Exercises). As part of the institute's Palestra cultural association, he gave presentations on Ivan Cankar, Simon Jenko, and Slovenian Expressionism. After the sixth year of the eight-year secondary school program, he transferred to the classical secondary school in Ljubljana and joined Edvard Kocbek's circle, and in 1940 he published his first two poems in the magazine ''Dejanje''.

In 1941, during the German annexation of Upper Carniola, he returned to Radovljica and joined a group of Christian Socialists affiliated with the Liberation Front. In 1941, he translated the entire text of Sophocles' play ''Antigone''. In 1942, he was the editor of an underground newspaper produced by the Christian Socialists called ''Vogelni kamen'', of which two issues were published. He continued his education in Villach, where he graduated in 1943, and the same year he went to Vienna to study classical philology. There he wrote poetry and translated ancient classics, especially the poet Catullus.

Hribovšek participated in the underground patriotic newsletter ''Dunajske Domače vaje'', under the leadership of Janez Remic, together with other Slovenian literati who were studying at the University of Vienna at the time. The magazine ceased publication due to the conscription of his colleagues into the army, but Hribovšek devoted himself intensively to editing his pseudonymous collection of manuscript poetry. The quiet, reserved, and sometimes depressed poet avoided conscription for several months by wandering between Radovljica and Vienna, but in December 1944 he had to decide between serving with the Germans, the Partisans, or the Home Guard, and he chose the Home Guard.

In 1945, he was assigned to a unit in Brezje, and later in Kamna Gorica. At the end of the war, his unit retreated from Kamna Gorica via the Loibl Pass to the camp at Viktring, where he was promoted to officer, and the Home Guard members were disarmed by the British and handed over to Yugoslavia. He disappeared from the historical record in the prison at Teharje. He was most likely murdered in the post-war massacres at the Teharje camp or Kočevje Rog. However, it was also rumored among the Home Guard that he had escaped from prison back to Carinthia, was returning to Yugoslavia to rescue his comrades, and was killed in one such action. Provided by Wikipedia
1
by Hribovšek, Ivan.
Published 1965
Book
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by Hribovšek, Ivan.
Published 1993
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by Hribovšek, Ivan.
Published 1990
Book
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by Hribovšek, Ivan, 1923-1945.
Published 2010
Other Authors: ...Hribovšek, Ivan, 1923-1945....
Book
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Other Authors: ...Hribovšek, Ivan....
Musical Score Book Chapter
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Other Authors: ...Hribovšek, Ivan....
Musical Score Book Chapter
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by Sophocles.
Published 2014
Other Authors: ...Hribovšek, Ivan....
Book