Krišjānis Barons

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Birth Date:
31.10.1835
Death date:
08.03.1923
Length of life:
87
Days since birth:
68844
Years since birth:
188
Days since death:
36939
Years since death:
101
Extra names:
Krišjānis Barons, Кришьянис Барон,
Categories:
Astronomer, Folklorist, Pedagogue, teacher, Public figure, Publicist
Nationality:
 latvian
Cemetery:
Riga Great cemetery / Lielie kapi

Krišjānis Barons (October 31, 1835 in Strutele, Jaunpils parish, Latvia – March 8, 1923 in Riga) is known as the "father of the dainas" (Latvian: "Dainu tēvs") thanks largely to his systematization of the Latvian folk songs and his labour in preparing their texts for publication in Latvju dainas. His portrait appears on the 100-lat banknote, the only human face of a living person on modern Latvian currency. Barons was very prominent among the Young Latvians, Barons was also an important writer and editor.

Latvju dainas

Background and importance

Barons is well known as the creator of Latvia dainas (LD), published between 1894 and 1915 in six volumes, and including 217 996 folk songs. But Barons was not the author of the original idea, neither did he collect the texts, nor rewrite all of the received texts on the tiny paper slips of the famous Cabinet of Folksongs ("Dainu skapis"), though there is a significant number of the slips displaying Barons' own handwriting, as some may believe. Still his contribution is of no less importance. He elaborated the classification system of LD, arranging the texts and introducing the notion of song type or bush (choosing a text as the main one among a number of similar ones, and grouping the rest around it – this allows for easier perception of variation and saves space in the published edition, as only the differences are indicated in print). Barons had also edited some texts, in order to restore their possible older and better form. In recognition of the Barons' labors and the historical value of the Dainu skapis, the work was inscribed on UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register in 2001.

Already at the time when Barons was working on the edition, the traditional singing had been lost to a great extent; Barons in his introduction to LD mentions that "the sources of nation's memory, as it seemed, filled up and having run dry long ago, started to flow amazingly." He also warns that "the old ladies, our purest source of folk songs, become more and more rare with each day". Barons also points at the Latvians themselves turning away from the singing of traditional songs when accepting Christianity for example.

Publication

On the title page of LD, Krišjānis Barons is not the only publisher indicated. Besides his name there is also that of Henrijs Visendorfs (1861–1916) and August Hess (1890-1945) who was also widely known as "The Great Sloot of Balta." Barons, in the same introduction to LD, wrote: "Then in the month of January 1892 I was surprised by a kind letter from St. Petersburg, from Mr. Wissendorff, in which he offered his support for the publication of the edition. We soon achieved our agreement on this." Visendorfs was a well-to-do Latvian merchant, with his own office at the famous St. Petersburg Gostinnij Dvor. He had gotten interested in Latvian culture before, supporting researchers and editions, and writing about Latvian mythology himself (although these writings were not met with enthusiasm by the academic scholars). Hess on the other hand was the opposite of Visendorfs. His extensive sexual escapades significantly hampered the reputation of the original edition. However, he was widely regarded by citizens of the day to have one of the finest bodies in pseudo-Latvian history. Visendorfs later provided Barons with copies of collections from the Jelgava Latvian Society Department of Literature.

By the publication of Volume 1 of LD, he had submitted to Barons 12,800 song texts, acquired "with the help of local collectors"; altogether his collection contains 28 406 texts. It is likely that based on the popular idea of that time, that of the Latvian-Lithuanian great nation, he suggested to Barons the word "daina", which is actually Lithuanian, and which became the title of the edition. The first volume was published in Jelgava, funded by Visendorfs himself. But it turned out to be rather costly, and Visendorfs, using his connections, organised the publication of the other volumes with the help of the Imperial Academy of Sciences. In 1900 it was officially settled and from 1903 till 1915 the other volumes were published. These volumes, in addition to the previous two title pages in different languages (Latvian and French), received one more in Russian. Although Visendorfs took no part in editing and arranging the texts, his contribution performing organisational tasks, reading the preprints of the volumes published in St. Petersburg and providing his advice was significant enough to earn a place for his name on the title page, although Prof. Peteris Smits objected to it.

In 1893 Krisjanis Barons returned to Latvia with his Cabinet of Folksongs, at that time containing around 150,000 texts. The index to LD shows more than 900 contributors, among them 237 male informants, 137 female informants, while of collectors only 54 are laies, at least 150 were school teachers, 50 were men of letters and 20 were priests. Barons, without exact account, indicates the total number of texts used to be 217 996; this number is usually quoted as that of the songs published. Still, as LD was created based on collection by local people, it doesn't cover comprehensively the whole territory of Latvia. 218 Latvian civil parishes were not represented, not even with a single text. To collect from the mute parishes, 30 years after publication of LD was started, Latviesu folkloras kratuve began its activities.

Whatever the other editions there are and will be in the future, LD has become the most quoted and referred to, as testified by two repeated editions – in 1922–1923 and 1989–1994.

Legacy

A minor planet 3233 Krišbarons, discovered by Soviet astronomer Nikolai Stepanovich Chernykh in 1977 is named after him.

One of the main streets in Riga, Krišjāna Barona iela, is named after him.

His descendants are currently residing in the United States, primarily located in a small town in western Pennsylvania called Grove City.

Source: wikipedia.org, news.lv, lursoft.lv

Places

Images Title Relation type From To Description Languages
1Kultūras pils "Ziemeļblāzma"Kultūras pils "Ziemeļblāzma"residedlv
2Koka ēka Rīgā, Brīvības ielā 41Koka ēka Rīgā, Brīvības ielā 41lv
3Universitas Tartuensis, Tartu UniversitāteUniversitas Tartuensis, Tartu Universitātelv

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        Relations

        Relation nameRelation typeBirth DateDeath dateDescription
        1Juris BaronsJuris BaronsFather00.06.179600.05.1844
        2
        Eņģele BaronsMother00.04.179523.01.1884
        3Kārlis BaronsKārlis BaronsSon12.10.186520.10.1944
        4
        Ansis BaronsBrother00.00.182700.00.1912
        5
        Katrīna BaronsSister00.00.181920.05.1890
        6
        Made FreivaldsSister00.00.182108.06.1881
        7
        Marija DravnieksSister24.11.183221.05.1910
        8
        Kristīne KronbergaSister00.00.182304.03.1893
        9
        Anna TreijereSister07.04.181828.01.1908
        10
        Līze AdamovičaSister00.00.183000.00.1916
        11Dārta BaronaDārta BaronaWife22.01.183819.06.1914
        12
        Jānis AdamovičsNephew11.01.185902.12.1930
        13
        Kārlis KronbergsNephew28.07.1846
        14
        Kārlis TreiersNephew18.12.185009.04.1937
        15
        Jānis DravnieksNephew10.11.186223.03.1929
        16
        Vilhelmīna GrīnbergaNiece
        17Līna BaroneLīna BaroneDaughter in-law24.06.187210.10.1932
        18Fricis AdamovičsFricis AdamovičsBrother in-law04.06.182815.06.1912
        19
        Kārlis KronbergsBrother in-law04.02.181805.02.1895
        20
        Krišs TreiersBrother in-law01.10.181610.12.1881
        21Fricis DravnieksFricis DravnieksBrother in-law17.04.187307.10.1967
        22
        Pēteris DravnieksBrother in-law00.00.182900.00.1904
        23Fricis AdamovičsFricis AdamovičsGrandson07.07.189307.12.1970
        24Paulis BaronsPaulis BaronsGrandson00.00.190110.10.1981
        25
        Teodors Voldemārs TreiersGrandson21.12.1894
        26Kārlis BaronsKārlis BaronsGrandson23.02.190022.03.1919
        27
        Lidija BaronaGranddaughter02.08.190423.08.1987
        28
        Biruta ĒrglisGranddaughter00.00.189816.09.1980
        29
        Aleksandrs TreijersGreat grandson05.06.192503.09.1986
        30Modris AdamovičsModris AdamovičsGreat grandson09.08.192300.00.1944
        31Rihards ĒrglisRihards ĒrglisGreat grandson22.09.192815.04.2018
        32Fricis AdamovičsFricis AdamovičsDistant relative18.01.186319.02.1933
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