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149:- Ætius, the last of the Romans) that made him popular in Poland. Thanks to a scholarship he received for that novel in 1936, Parnicki spent several years in Bulgaria, Turkey and Greece, where he devoted himself to studies on the Byzantine heritage of those states. He returned to Poland shortly before the outbreak of
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community. He was sent to a local Polish school, where he had to learn his mother tongue almost from the beginning, having been brought up in German and
Russian towns. His father joined him in Manchuria, but died soon afterwards. Upon graduating from the school and passing his
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and
Parnicki was left without a job. He remained in Mexico and made his living publishing some of his works in small issues for the Polish exiles and received a small pension from the local
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200:, where he assumed the same post he had earlier in Kuybyshev. However, the following year Mexico withdrew its recognition of the
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94:. Tired of the military drill, at the age of 12 Parnicki escaped from the cadet school and reached
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Teodor
Parnicki was born March 5, 1908, to a Polish father and a Polish Jewish mother, in
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38:. He is especially renowned for works related to the early medieval
218:, a four-volume novel. It was published in 2003 under the title of
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62:, where his father, Bronisław Parnicki, had been studying at the
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There he studied Polish literature under the tutelage of Prof.
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145:, was published in 1931. However, it was his fourth work (
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for alleged anti-Soviet conspiracy. Set free after the
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252:"List Teodora Parnickiego do Jerzego Giedroycia"
208:. In 1967 he returned to Poland and settled in
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349:Recipients of the State Award Badge (Poland)
180:and was delegated to the Polish embassy in
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359:People associated with Kultura (magazine)
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294:Cultural Fusion: Poles in Latin America
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324:German people of Polish-Jewish descent
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364:Technische Universität Berlin alumni
279:"Teodor Parnicki - unofficial page"
344:Polish people detained by the NKVD
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164:and sentenced to 8 years in a
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339:20th-century Polish novelists
68:Technische Universität Berlin
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202:Polish Government in Exile
170:Sikorski-Mayski Agreement
147:Æcjusz, ostatni Rzymianin
30:(1908–1988) was a Polish
277:K. Kożuchowski (2004).
172:of 1941, he joined the
143:Trzy minuty po trzeciej
66:in Charlottenburg (now
196:. In 1944 he moved to
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64:Technische Hochschule
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192:and then settled in
158:Polish Defensive War
334:Polish male writers
319:Writers from Berlin
222:- the last novel.
136:Russian literature
34:, notable for his
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354:Cultural attachés
329:Writers from Lviv
141:His first novel,
48:Byzantine Empires
36:historical novels
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258:. Archived from
256:www.republika.pl
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220:Ostatnia powieść
184:as its cultural
178:Władysław Anders
132:Chinese language
128:Juliusz Słowacki
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28:Teodor Parnicki
23:Teodor Parnicki
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16:Polish writer
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151:World War II
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314:1988 deaths
309:1908 births
281:(in Polish)
215:opus magnum
198:Mexico City
174:Polish Army
92:Vladivostok
84:cadet corps
76:World War I
42:, the late
40:Middle East
303:Categories
156:After the
86:school in
285:March 14,
194:Jerusalem
182:Kuybyshev
100:Manchuria
90:and then
226:See also
46:and the
206:Polonia
186:attache
104:Polonia
210:Warsaw
190:Tehran
109:matura
96:Harbin
72:Moscow
60:Berlin
32:writer
238:Notes
166:gulag
44:Roman
287:2006
162:NKVD
134:and
113:Lwów
88:Omsk
54:Life
176:of
98:in
80:Ufa
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