Pavlo Hrabovsky
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Pavlo Hrabovsky | |
|---|---|
| Born | 11 September 1864 |
| Died | 12 December 1902 (aged 38) Tobolsk, Tobolsk Governorate, Russian Empire |
| Occupation | Poet, translator, essayist, publicist |
| Signature | |
Pavlo Arsenovych Hrabovsky (Ukrainian: Павло Арсенович Грабовський; 11 September [O.S. 30 August] 1864 – 12 December [O.S. 29 November] 1902) was a Ukrainian poet, journalist, translator and revolutionary.
Hrabovsky was in to the family of a village sexton. His father died while he was at a young age and was raised by his mother. He was educated at the church school in Okhtyrka and at the theological seminary in Kharkov, in the third year he was expelled for participating in the Narodnik movement (in the organization of Black Repartition) and distributing banned literature, then arrested and exiled to his native village under police supervision.[1]

In 1885 he went to Kharkov, where he worked as a proofreader in the newspaper "Yuzhny Krai", in the autumn of the same year he was mobilized into the army and sent to serve in the Turkestan Military District. In 1886 in Orenburg he was arrested again for distribution of illegal literature, later he was imprisoned in Izium and Kharkov.[2] In 1888 he was sentenced to 5 years of exile in the Irkutsk Governorate. In 1889, he took part in the drafting and distribution of the "Statement to the Russian Government" against the brutal massacre of prisoners on March 22, 1889. After the text of the statement appeared in the foreign press, he was arrested and accused of drafting a political appeal. In 1889 he was arrested again and imprisoned in Irkutsk for 3.5 years.[3]
Later he was in exile in Vilyuysk and Yakutsk, and then in Tobolsk, where he died of tuberculosis and was buried at the Zavalnoye Cemetery.[1]
