József Borovnyák
József Borovnyák or Borovnják (Slovene: Jožef Borovnjak; 1826 – 19 September 1909) was a Prekmurje Slovene writer, politician, and Roman Catholic priest in Hungary.
József Borovnják | |
---|---|
Born | Around February 9, 1826 Ivanovci (Ivanócz/Alsószentbenedek), Kingdom of Hungary (now Slovenia) |
Died | September 19, 1909 Cankova, Austro-Hungarian Empire (now Slovenia) |
Occupation | Writer, politician, priest |
Nationality | Hungarian Slovenian |
Genre | religious works, political works |
Literary movement | Nationalism, Catholicism |
Borovnják was born in the village of Ivanócz (later Alsószentbenedek, Slovenian Ivanovci). His family was originally Protestant. His father converted to Catholicism.
Borovnják first served as a priest from 1851 to 1852 at the Istvánfalvian Church in the village of Apátistvánfalva (Vas Country). He was later a priest in Felsőlendva and Cankova (where he died).
Borovnják was a defender of the local Prekmurje dialect. He wrote books in it; for example, a catechism and prayer books. In 1877 he posthumously reprinted Miklós Küzmics' Prekmurje dialect translation of the gospels. He was also involved in politics.
Works
- Jezus moje poslenje (Jesus Is My Desire),
- Veliki katekizmus (Large Catechism)
- Kniga molitvena sztara szlovenszka (Old Slovene Prayer Book)
- Dühovna hrána (The House of the Soul)
- Máli politicsni vodnik (Little Political Mirror)
- Szvéti Angel Csuvár (Holy Guardian Angel)
See also
References