Bashkirtseff

Lord Byron

Basic Aktualizováno: 2025-12-07

Research Status: Basic Last Updated: 2025-12-07 Diary Coverage: Book 00 (1884 preface)

Identity

George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron (1788-1824), known as Lord Byron, was a British Romantic poet and one of the most influential literary figures of the 19th century. Marie describes her maternal grandfather as "byronien" (Byronic).

Biography

Life:

  • Born 1788 in London
  • Inherited barony at age 10
  • Educated at Cambridge
  • Traveled extensively in Mediterranean and Near East
  • Died in 1824 in Greece, supporting Greek independence

Literary Fame:

  • Major works: "Childe Harold's Pilgrimage," "Don Juan," "The Corsair"
  • Created the archetype of the "Byronic hero" - brooding, rebellious, passionate
  • Scandalous personal life enhanced his literary fame
  • Became symbol of Romantic individualism and rebellion

Influence on Russian Culture

Byron had enormous influence on Russian literature and culture:

  • Read avidly by Russian nobility in 1820s-1830s
  • Influenced Pushkin and Lermontov profoundly
  • "Byronic" became a cultural type in Russia
  • Symbolized opposition to social constraints
  • Associated with liberal political sympathies

The "Byronic" Type

To be "byronien" in Marie's grandfather's generation meant:

  • Romantic, melancholic temperament
  • Rebellious against social conventions
  • Cultured, well-read, cosmopolitan
  • Often wrote poetry as self-expression
  • Combined aristocratic privilege with individualistic spirit
  • Sometimes politically liberal or oppositional

Connection to Bashkirtseff Family

Marie describes her maternal grandfather as "Il a été byronien, poète, militaire lettré." This characterization reveals:

  • He embraced Byronic Romanticism
  • Wrote poetry in the Romantic style
  • Combined military career with literary interests
  • Part of the educated Russian nobility
  • Likely shared Byron's rebellious spirit
  • This was fashionable among his generation (1820s-1840s)

The Byronic influence helps explain his character as Marie describes it - both cultured and despotic, literary yet authoritarian.

Historical Context

Byron's death in 1824 fighting for Greek independence made him a Romantic martyr. For Russian liberals of the 1820s-1840s, Byron represented:

  • Freedom from tyranny
  • Individual passion over social convention
  • Cosmopolitan European culture
  • Heroic sacrifice for ideals

This context was part of Marie's family heritage and cultural background.

Related Entries

%% 2025-12-07T12:20:00 RSR: Created entry to explain cultural context of Marie's grandfather as "byronien" %%