Advertisement

Mieczyslaw Karlowicz
Cenotaph

Advertisement

Mieczyslaw Karlowicz Famous memorial

Birth
Belarus
Death
8 Feb 1909 (aged 32)
Slovakia
Cenotaph
Vysoké Tatry, okres Poprad, Prešovský, Slovakia Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Composer. An important representative of "Young Poland," an early 20th-century movement that combined Polish nationalist impulses with modern European techniques. His style is romantic and melancholy in character, and has a strong individual stamp. Among his notable works are the Symphony in E minor ("Revival", 1902), a Violin Concerto (1902), the "Lithuanian Rhapsody" for orchestra (1906), and symphonic poems "Eternal Songs" (1906), "The Sorrowful Tale" (1908), and "Episode at a Masquerade" (1908). Karlowicz was born into a noble family in Wiszniewo, Poland (now Vishneva, Belarus), and initially trained as a violinist; later he studied composition in Warsaw (1894) and Berlin (1895 to 1901). In the early 1900s he was director and a chief financial supporter of the Polish Music Society, which promoted new musical trends. An active outdoorsman, Karlowicz died at 32 in an avalanche during an expedition in the Tatra Mountains. A memorial stone marks the place where his body was recovered. There is also a cenotaph for him at the Tatras Symbolic Cemetery, at the foot of Mount Ostrva in neighboring Slovakia, which honors those who perished in the mountain range.
Composer. An important representative of "Young Poland," an early 20th-century movement that combined Polish nationalist impulses with modern European techniques. His style is romantic and melancholy in character, and has a strong individual stamp. Among his notable works are the Symphony in E minor ("Revival", 1902), a Violin Concerto (1902), the "Lithuanian Rhapsody" for orchestra (1906), and symphonic poems "Eternal Songs" (1906), "The Sorrowful Tale" (1908), and "Episode at a Masquerade" (1908). Karlowicz was born into a noble family in Wiszniewo, Poland (now Vishneva, Belarus), and initially trained as a violinist; later he studied composition in Warsaw (1894) and Berlin (1895 to 1901). In the early 1900s he was director and a chief financial supporter of the Polish Music Society, which promoted new musical trends. An active outdoorsman, Karlowicz died at 32 in an avalanche during an expedition in the Tatra Mountains. A memorial stone marks the place where his body was recovered. There is also a cenotaph for him at the Tatras Symbolic Cemetery, at the foot of Mount Ostrva in neighboring Slovakia, which honors those who perished in the mountain range.

Bio by: Bobb Edwards


Advertisement

Advertisement

How famous was Mieczyslaw Karlowicz ?

Current rating: 3.73333 out of 5 stars

15 votes

Sign-in to cast your vote.

  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Bobb Edwards
  • Added: Apr 1, 2012
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/87853978/mieczyslaw-karlowicz: accessed ), memorial page for Mieczyslaw Karlowicz (11 Dec 1876–8 Feb 1909), Find a Grave Memorial ID 87853978, citing Tatras Symbolic Cemetery, Vysoké Tatry, okres Poprad, Prešovský, Slovakia; Maintained by Find a Grave.