Shevchenko, Taras Hryhorovych
As his political views evolved, he began writing bitterly against serfdom and Russian autocracy. He was criticized for writing in Ukrainian (rather than Russian, which was considered the only proper literary language in the Russian Empire) and for writing poetry about Ukraine's history under Russian subjugation. Marked as a person of interest and potential political danger, he was arrested in 1947 due to his association with members of the Brotherhood of Saints Cyril and Methodius—a secret society suspected to be a subversive organization by Tsar Nicholas I. Shevchenko was eventually sentenced to permanent exile in Central Asia. He was prohibited from returning to either Russia or Ukraine. He wrote exquisite lyric poetry and numerous novels during his decade in exile. In 1857, Shevchenko was released from exile but remained under police surveillance. During a trip to Ukraine in 1859, Shevchenko was arrested for "subversive" speech and advised to return to St. Petersburg, where he became ill and died on March 10, 1861.
Buried in a St. Petersburg cemetery, his remains were later moved to a hill outside of Kyiv. A mound was erected over his grave and the site is now the location of the Shevchenko Memorial Museum. Criticized and denounced during his lifetime by the Tsarist authorities, Shevchenko earned prominence and respect among Ukrainians, especially for his poetry, and his stature as the national poet of Ukrainian grew after his death. Shevchenko had tremendous influence on Ukrainian literature. His life and work served as an inspiration for some of the protesters during the 2013 Euromaidan demonstrations in Kyiv.
See G. G. Grabowi,
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