Vodnik Monument

Coordinates: 46°3′2.9″N 14°30′34.33″E / 46.050806°N 14.5095361°E / 46.050806; 14.5095361
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Front side
Front side
Back side
Back side
The Vodnik Monument at Vodnik Square in Ljubljana
Commemoration of the 110th anniversary of Vodnik's death in 1929. For the occasion, Vodnik Square in Ljubljana was adorned with Yugoslav and French flags.

The Vodnik Monument (Slovene: Vodnikov spomenik) or Valentin Vodnik Monument (Spomenik Valentinu Vodniku), is dedicated to the Carniolan priest, poet and journalist Valentin Vodnik (1758−1819). It stands at Vodnik Square (Vodnikov trg) in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, in the immediate vicinity of the Ljubljana Central Market.[1]

The idea for the statue was put forward by the politician Lovro Toman on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the poet's birth and was organised by the Writers' Support Society in collaboration with the Slovene Society. It was made from 1887 to 1889 in bronze and with a simple stone pedestal in Vienna by the young sculptor Alojz Gangl [sl] (1859−1935)[1] and was unveiled on 30 June 1889 with a three-day celebration as the first public Slovene national monument.[2][3] The monument has a bronze verse by Vodnik on its back side and the bronze inscription Vodnik on its front side. The verse is written in Slovene and says: "No daughter no son, to come after me, enough memory done, my songs sing of me."[1]

Because Vodnik was an ardent supporter of the Illyrian Provinces, which he saw as fostering Slovene linguistic development, the letters R and F, meaning République Française (a reference to the First French Republic), as well as a laurel wreath, a sheaf and a swearing arm above it, and the inscription A Vodnik below the wreath, were added to the pedestal in 1929, soon after the 120th anniversary of the establishment of the Provinces.[1] These are all made of bronze. They were a gift by France and were also decorated with the French tricolour.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Spomeniki zaslužnim možem" [Monuments to Deserving Men] (in Slovenian). Government Communication Office, Republic of Slovenia. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  2. ^ Žitko Durjava, Sonja (1992). "Spomeniki 19. stoletja na Slovenskem" [The Monuments of the 19th Century in the Slovene Lands]. Kronika (in Slovenian). 40 (1). Section for the History of Places, Association of Historical Societies of Slovenia: 23–28.
  3. ^ Mesesnel, France (2009). "Gangl Alojz". In Vide Ogrin, Petra (ed.). Slovenski biografski leksikon (in Slovenian). ISBN 978-961-268-001-5.
  4. ^ "Vodnikov spomenik" [Vodnik Monument]. Slovenec: političen list za slovenski narod [Slovenec: the Political Newspaper for the Slovene Nation] (in Slovenian). Vol. 57, no. 237. 1929-10-17. p. 4. ISSN 1408-2381.

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46°3′2.9″N 14°30′34.33″E / 46.050806°N 14.5095361°E / 46.050806; 14.5095361