Difference between revisions of "Prešeren House"
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| opening hours = 10am–6pm Tue–Sun. Closed Mon, 1.1., 1.5., 1.11. | | opening hours = 10am–6pm Tue–Sun. Closed Mon, 1.1., 1.5., 1.11. | ||
| contacts = {{Contact | | contacts = {{Contact | ||
− | | name = | + | | name = Marija Ogrin |
− | | role = Director | + | | role = Acting Director |
| telephone = 386 (0) 4 201 3956 | | telephone = 386 (0) 4 201 3956 | ||
− | |||
}} | }} | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 09:43, 21 October 2010
Background
The building in the historic centre of Kranj, in which Prešeren lived from autumn 1846 until February 1849, consists of two Late Gothic sections with a shared courtyard, which were joined into one building with a wooden hallway in the 17th century. After the great fire in Kranj in 1811, an arched hallway replaced the wooden one.
Exhibitions
The memorial collection of Dr France Prešeren occupies the entire upper floor of the house, showing the poet’s life in Vrba, his schooling in Vienna, life in Ljubljana and last years in Kranj. Two rooms are furnished with authentic furniture: Prešeren's bedroom is on a long-term loan from the National Museum of Slovenia and his lawyer's office was purchased by the Museum in 1963. The other rooms are used exclusively for a museological presentation of Prešeren as a poet, lawyer and human being.
The exhibits include a censored printer's manuscript of the collection Poezije ('Poems'), an original copy of Poezije from 1847, an original and facsimile of the poem The Baptism at the Savica and a facsimile of some other important poems as well as newspapers and other publications in which his poems were published. The poet's personal archive is particularly interesting. There is also a translation of Prešeren's poems in Bengali and a photocopy of a page with his poems in Chinese.
The gallery on the ground floor of Prešeren House is used for occasional exhibitions and on the 8 February national holiday of 1981 a cycle of exhibitions was launched entitled 'Recipients of the Prešeren Award' (see Prešeren Award and Prešeren Foundation Awards). Each year on the anniversaries of the poet's birth and death, exhibitions are staged in connection with his life and work, covering themes such as literary history, cultural history and the fine arts.
In 1977 a memorial room dedicated to poet Simon Jenko (1835–1869), who died in Kranj, was opened on the ground floor of the Prešeren House.
See also
- Gorenjska Museum, Kranj
- Birthplace of Dr France Prešeren, Vrba
- Prešeren.net
- Prešeren Award and Prešeren Foundation Awards
- Romanticism and Prešeren in the Literature Section