George Zorbas
George Zorbas | |
---|---|
![]() The grave of Zorbas in 2008 | |
Native name | Γεώργιoς Ζορμπάς |
Born |
Georgios Zorbas 1865[1] Kolindros, Pieria, Ottoman Empire (now Greece) |
Died |
September 16, 1941 75–76) Skopje, Greater Skopje, Kingdom of Bulgaria (now Republic of Macedonia) | (aged
Occupation | Miner |
Georgios Zorbas (Greek: Γεώργιoς Ζορμπάς; 1865 – September 16, 1941) was a Greek miner upon whom Nikos Kazantzakis based Alexis Zorbas, the protagonist of his 1946 novel Zorba the Greek.[2]
Biography
He was born in 1865 or in 1869 in the village of Kolindros in Sanjak of Salonica, Ottoman Empire. He was the son of Photios Zorbas, a wealthy landowner and sheep-owner and had three siblings; a sister, Katerina, and two brothers, Ioannis and Xenophon. He worked in his fields and flocks at Katafygi, became a woodcutter, and later left for Palaiochori, Chalkidiki, where he spent the most decisive years of his life, 1889–1911. He worked as a miner for a French company in Gisvoro (Γήσβορο) and became friends with the foreman, Giannis Kalkounis (Γιάννης Καλκούνης). He eloped with Kalkounis's daughter Eleni and eventually had eight children. By the end of this period, war and the death of his wife brought great unhappiness to his family.
After all this, he left Palaiochori for Eleftherohori, Pieria, only 8 km from Kolindros, where his brother Ioannis, a doctor, lived. In 1915, he decided to become a monk and left for Mount Athos. It was there that he met Nikos Kazantzakis and they become close friends. They went to Mani together, where they worked as miners in Prastova. It was their experiences here that Kazantzakis later wrote into The Life and Times of Alexis Zorbas, later translated as Zorba the Greek and also adapted into Zorba musical (1968) and an Academy Award-nominated film, Zorba the Greek (1964) wherein his role was played by Anthony Quinn.[2] His eventful life continued in a village near Skopje (then part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia), where he settled, remarried, and had more children. He died during World War II on September 16, 1941,[3] and was buried in the Butel cemetery (P-17), near Skopje (then part of the Kingdom of Bulgaria).[4] His great-grandson was rock musician Pavlos Sidiropoulos.
Notes
- ↑ Nikos Kazantzakis, Peter Bien, The Selected Letters of Nikos Kazantzakis, Princeton University Press, 2012, ISBN 0691147027, p. 66.
- 1 2 Thomas R. Lindlof. Hollywood Under Siege: Martin Scorsese, the Religious Right, and the Culture Wars. Lexington, Ky.: University of Kentucky Press. p. 16. ISBN 0-8131-2517-0 – via Google Books.
- ↑ Nikos Kazantzakis, Zorba the Greek, Publisher Simon and Schuster, 2014, p. 349., ISBN 1476782814
- ↑ Brown, K. The Past in Question: Modern Macedonia and the Uncertainties of Nation, Publisher Princeton University Press, 2003, p. 134., ISBN 0691099952
References
- The Real Zorbas and Nikos Kazantzakis by Giannes Anapliotes. Amsterdam: Hakkert, 1978. ISBN 90-256-0803-5.