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'''Miklós Bátori''', pen name of Miklós Bajomi<ref name="MB"/> (1919<ref name="MB">The [http://bit.ly/2kOEfDO authority notice] of the general catalogue of the Bibliothèque nationale de France gives this date of 1919 with a question mark. Gyula Borbándi also indicates 1919 in her encyclopedia .</ref> or in 1920<ref name="4C">Back cover of his novel ''Les Briques'', Robert Laffont, reprint. 1984 .</ref> – 25 February 1992<ref> — according to ''Magyar Emigráns Írók és Műveik'' [''Les écrivains hongrois émigrés et leurs œuvres''], on ''Petőfi Irodalmi Múzeum'' (Musée de la littérature, Budapest): [http://bit.ly/2ktE8Ov "'Bajomi Miklós"].</ref>) was a Roman Catholic writer of Hungarian origin.
== Life ==
Born in [[Bátaszék]] (Hungary), in 1944 he published his first novel, '''' (literaly: "Mudflat") in Budapest, still under the name Miklós Bajomi.<ref> [http://bit.ly/2EDD7gU ''Ingovány : regény — Bajomi Miklós''], on ''Petőfi Irodalmi Múzeum'': notice of [[Endre Illés]]' copy with the dedication "À mon modèle - L'auteur, 5 mai 1944".</ref> He was taken prisoner of war in France in 1945, and enrolled at the Sorbonne after his release. He returned to Hungary in January 1947 for family reasons<ref name=lexikon/> and then went on to study at university in Budapest. He then taught in the provinces (from 1951 to 1956) in a technical high school in [[Győr]] where he was also director of the boarding school.<ref> [Lycée technique et internat Jedlik Ányos, Győr].</ref>
He fled Hungary after the crushing of the [[Hungarian Revolution of 1956]] and moved to Paris. He was a member of the editorial board of the Hungarian literary and cultural magazine in Paris ''''<ref>, "[http://bit.ly/2EDD7NW Ahogy Lehet]".</ref> and also wrote in other Hungarian emigration newspapers.<ref name=lexikon/>
In 1960, he published in Hungarian '''' in Cologne (''Calvary Road'') after the address of his high school (in French ''Un étrange paradis''), which describes the time when, as a teacher at Győr, he fled with a group of Catholics persecuted by the communist power<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2).</ref> and in 1961, '''' (literaly: "Death in the vineyard"), which evokes the effort of Christians to recover, under a hostile regime, the purity of the early Church. This last book, translated and published in French in 1965 under the title ''Le Vignoble des saints'', was awarded the [[Grand prix catholique de littérature]].
In 1963, ''Les Briques'' is a novel from the last days of the Hungarian revolution.
In 1967, ''Les Va-nu-pieds de Dieu'' features the evangelist [[Mark the Evangelist|Mark]] who tells what he has seen throughout his life.
His following works were written directly in French.
Bátori died in Paris.
== Work ==
* ''Un étrange paradis'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2EDfZzf ''Un étrange paradis''] on WorldCat</ref> [[Plon]], 1961 (translated from Hungarian) '''', Cologne 1960)
* ''Les Briques'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2XbhLyC ''Les Briques''] on WorldCat</ref> [[Éditions Robert Laffont]], 1963 (translated from the Hungarian manuscript)<ref></ref>
* ''Le Vignoble des saints'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2EzAaxW ''Le Vignoble des saints''] on WorldCat</ref> Robert Laffont, 1965 (translated from Hungarian '''', Cologne 1961, [[Grand prix catholique de littérature]].
* ''Les Va-nu-pieds de Dieu'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2Xaz03l ''Les Va-nu-pieds de Dieu''] on WorldCat)</ref> Robert Laffont, 1967 (translated from the Hungarian manuscript<ref></ref> (crowned by the [[Académie française]])<ref></ref>
* ''Le lièvre a pleuré'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2Xaz17p ''Le lièvre a pleuré''] on WorldCat</ref> Robert Laffont, 1969,
* ''La vie est un océan'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2EEjANp ''La vie est un océan''] on WorldCat</ref> Robert Laffont, 1973
* ''Bakfitty'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2XbtP2U ''Bakfitty''] on WorldCat</ref> [[Fayard]], 1977
* ''Notre ami, Lazare (chronique)'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2ECVT8e ''Notre ami, Lazare (chronique)''] on WorldCat</ref> [[Éditions du Cerf]], 1983)<ref name="4C"/><ref name=lexikon>.</ref>
== References ==
== External links ==
[[Category:20th-century Hungarian writers]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic writers]]
[[Category:People from Hungary]]
[[Category:1992 deaths]]
== Life ==
Born in [[Bátaszék]] (Hungary), in 1944 he published his first novel, '''' (literaly: "Mudflat") in Budapest, still under the name Miklós Bajomi.<ref> [http://bit.ly/2EDD7gU ''Ingovány : regény — Bajomi Miklós''], on ''Petőfi Irodalmi Múzeum'': notice of [[Endre Illés]]' copy with the dedication "À mon modèle - L'auteur, 5 mai 1944".</ref> He was taken prisoner of war in France in 1945, and enrolled at the Sorbonne after his release. He returned to Hungary in January 1947 for family reasons<ref name=lexikon/> and then went on to study at university in Budapest. He then taught in the provinces (from 1951 to 1956) in a technical high school in [[Győr]] where he was also director of the boarding school.<ref> [Lycée technique et internat Jedlik Ányos, Győr].</ref>
He fled Hungary after the crushing of the [[Hungarian Revolution of 1956]] and moved to Paris. He was a member of the editorial board of the Hungarian literary and cultural magazine in Paris ''''<ref>, "[http://bit.ly/2EDD7NW Ahogy Lehet]".</ref> and also wrote in other Hungarian emigration newspapers.<ref name=lexikon/>
In 1960, he published in Hungarian '''' in Cologne (''Calvary Road'') after the address of his high school (in French ''Un étrange paradis''), which describes the time when, as a teacher at Győr, he fled with a group of Catholics persecuted by the communist power<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (1 for 2).</ref> and in 1961, '''' (literaly: "Death in the vineyard"), which evokes the effort of Christians to recover, under a hostile regime, the purity of the early Church. This last book, translated and published in French in 1965 under the title ''Le Vignoble des saints'', was awarded the [[Grand prix catholique de littérature]].
In 1963, ''Les Briques'' is a novel from the last days of the Hungarian revolution.
In 1967, ''Les Va-nu-pieds de Dieu'' features the evangelist [[Mark the Evangelist|Mark]] who tells what he has seen throughout his life.
His following works were written directly in French.
Bátori died in Paris.
== Work ==
* ''Un étrange paradis'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2EDfZzf ''Un étrange paradis''] on WorldCat</ref> [[Plon]], 1961 (translated from Hungarian) '''', Cologne 1960)
* ''Les Briques'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2XbhLyC ''Les Briques''] on WorldCat</ref> [[Éditions Robert Laffont]], 1963 (translated from the Hungarian manuscript)<ref></ref>
* ''Le Vignoble des saints'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2EzAaxW ''Le Vignoble des saints''] on WorldCat</ref> Robert Laffont, 1965 (translated from Hungarian '''', Cologne 1961, [[Grand prix catholique de littérature]].
* ''Les Va-nu-pieds de Dieu'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2Xaz03l ''Les Va-nu-pieds de Dieu''] on WorldCat)</ref> Robert Laffont, 1967 (translated from the Hungarian manuscript<ref></ref> (crowned by the [[Académie française]])<ref></ref>
* ''Le lièvre a pleuré'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2Xaz17p ''Le lièvre a pleuré''] on WorldCat</ref> Robert Laffont, 1969,
* ''La vie est un océan'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2EEjANp ''La vie est un océan''] on WorldCat</ref> Robert Laffont, 1973
* ''Bakfitty'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2XbtP2U ''Bakfitty''] on WorldCat</ref> [[Fayard]], 1977
* ''Notre ami, Lazare (chronique)'',<ref>[http://bit.ly/2ECVT8e ''Notre ami, Lazare (chronique)''] on WorldCat</ref> [[Éditions du Cerf]], 1983)<ref name="4C"/><ref name=lexikon>.</ref>
== References ==
== External links ==
[[Category:20th-century Hungarian writers]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic writers]]
[[Category:People from Hungary]]
[[Category:1992 deaths]]
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