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== Life == Jaroslav Hašek's paternal ancestors were farmers rooted in Mydlovary in South Bohemia. Hašek's grandfather from his father's side, František Hašek, was a member of the Czech Landtag and later also the so-called [[Imperial Diet (Austria)|Kromeriz convention]]. He was also involved in barricade fights in Prague in 1848. According to some rumors, he worked with [[Mikhail Bakunin]] during his stay in Bohemia in 1849.<ref>{{Cite journal | title = Lidský profil Jaroslava Haška | journal = Svejkmuseum.cz | url = http://www.svejkmuseum.cz/menger.htm | date = 2 August 2017 | access-date = 30 November 2019 | archive-date = 12 November 2019 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20191112213844/http://svejkmuseum.cz/menger.htm | url-status = live }}</ref> [[Image:Jaroslav Hasek - pomnik v Lipnici nad Sazavou - detail.jpg|thumb|upright|Monument to Jaroslav Hašek in [[Lipnice nad Sázavou]]]] [[Image:Hasek-nepras-01.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Statue of Jaroslav Hašek]] in [[Žižkov]], near the pubs where he wrote some of his works]] The family of his mother, Katherine, née Jarešová, was also from South Bohemia. His grandfather Antonín Jareš and his great-grandfather Matěj Jareš were pond-keepers of the Schwarzenberg princes in Krč village No. 32.<ref>{{Cite journal | title = Matriční záznam o narození Kateřiny Garešowy 3. 11. 1849 na baště v Krči čp. 32: DigiArchiv of SOA Třebon – ver. 18.12.20 | journal = Digi.ceskearchivy.cz | url = https://digi.ceskearchivy.cz/DA?menu=3&id=6706&page=237&x=1261&y=2610&z=56 | access-date = 29 December 2018 | archive-date = 17 June 2020 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200617125807/https://digi.ceskearchivy.cz/DA?menu=3&id=6706&page=237&x=1261&y=2610&z=56 | url-status = live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal | title = Stopami literátů. | journal = Jirilouzensky.TXT.cz | url = http://jirilouzensky.txt.cz/clanky/34460/stopami-literatu/ | access-date = 29 December 2018 | archive-date = 2021-01-20 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210120223024/https://jirilouzensky.txt.cz/clanky/34460/stopami-literatu/ | url-status = dead }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal | journal = Radkopytlik.sweb.cz | title = Chlapec | url = http://radkopytlik.sweb.cz/hasek_ke_d.html | access-date = 29 December 2018 | archive-date = 29 January 2021 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210129042830/http://radkopytlik.sweb.cz/hasek_ke_d.html | url-status = live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal | title = Kniha Krč vesnice v srdci mém od Ing. Václava Vojíka z roku 2012 v pdf podobě - strana 9.pdf | journal = SDHKRC.cz | url = http://www.sdhkrc.cz/wp-content/uploads/Krc-Vesnice-v-srci-mem.pdf | access-date = 29 December 2018 | archive-date = 24 February 2021 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210224213222/http://www.sdhkrc.cz/wp-content/uploads/Krc-Vesnice-v-srci-mem.pdf | url-status = dead }}</ref><ref>{{Citation | last1 = Vojík | first1 = Václav | title = Krč vesnice v srdci mém | type = monograph | year = 2012 | pages = II to 74 }}</ref> His father, Josef Hašek,<ref name="matrikaO1">[http://digi.ceskearchivy.cz/cs/6710/131 Matriční záznam o sňatku prof. Josefa Haška s Kateřinou Jarešovou] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200617125934/https://digi.ceskearchivy.cz/DA?menu=3&id=6710&page=131&lang=cs |date=17 June 2020 }} farnosti Protivín</ref> a mathematics teacher and religious fanatic,<ref>{{Cite journal | title = Kdo je Jaroslav Hašek | journal = Svejkmuseum.cz | url = http://www.svejkmuseum.cz/ludvik.htm | access-date = 1 August 2017 | archive-date = 5 April 2016 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160405094616/http://svejkmuseum.cz/ludvik.htm | url-status = live }}</ref> died early of alcohol intoxication.<ref name="Panorama">{{Cite book | editor1-last = Galík | editor1-first = Josef | type = anthology | title = Panorama české literatury | publisher = Rubico | location = Olomouc | date = 1994 | isbn = 80-85839-04-0 }}</ref> He put an end to himself due to pain caused by cancer. Poverty then forced his mother Kateřina with three children to move more than fifteen times. At the age of four, the doctor diagnosed a heart defect and "stunted thyroid gland" in little Jaroslav. Because of this, he spent a lot of time in the country, with his grandfather from his mother's side, in the so-called Ražice dam-house, especially with his younger brother Bohuslav. In his childhood, Jaroslav was jealous of Bohuslav and even tried several times to hurt him as a baby.<ref name="Lidský profil Jaroslava Haška">{{Cite journal | title = Lidský profil Jaroslava Haška | journal = Svejkmuseum.cz | url = http://www.svejkmuseum.cz/menger.htm | access-date = 2 August 2017 | archive-date = 12 November 2019 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20191112213844/http://svejkmuseum.cz/menger.htm | url-status = live }}</ref> Later they had an extremely strong relationship and traveled together a lot on foot. Bohuslav drank himself to death one year after Jaroslav's death. Hašek's childhood was ordinary, boyish, imbued with adventures with peers and reading [[Karl May]] and [[Jules Verne]]. However, this changed when Hašek was eleven: the retired sailor Němeček moved to Lipová Street, where the Hašeks lived at that time. Němeček wrapped the teenage Hašek around his little finger, pilfered the money that Hašek had stolen at home, and began to lead him into bars, including the infamous Jedová chýše (Poison Hut) on Apolinářská Street, where he taught him to drink alcohol. In addition, he intentionally had sex with his girlfriend in front of the boy. It was a trauma for Hašek. He later remembered these experiences with disgust and remorse. It probably influenced Hašek's relationship with women. In his discussions with his comrades in the Russian legions, it is said that he said: "Can there be anything worse in the world than such a human pig? I didn't know anything about these things, and yet I felt such disgust and revulsion that it was enough to poison my whole life. I could never look at the woman again and I have also been afraid of women since then." <ref name="Lidský profil Jaroslava Haška"/> Some theories about Hašek's homosexuality, spread mainly by the literary historian Jindřich Chalupecký (the essay "Podivný Hašek" in the book ''Expresionisté''), have also originated here, as well as in the testimony of Hašek's friend Rudolf Šimanovský.<ref>{{Cite journal | last1 = Novák Večerníček | first1 = Jaroslav | title = Hašek: Gay, nebo milovník jediné ženy? – Blog iDNES.cz | journal = Mladá fronta Dnes | url = http://jaroslavnovak.blog.idnes.cz/blog.aspx?c=29953 | access-date = 2 August 2017 | archive-date = 2 August 2017 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170802204901/http://jaroslavnovak.blog.idnes.cz/blog.aspx?c=29953 | url-status = live }}</ref> Shortly after Hašek began his studies at the grammar school in Ječná Street, his father died. In 1897 he was present at anti-German riots in Prague as a student. He was arrested and the gymnasium teachers forced him to "voluntarily" leave the institution. He then trained as a druggist in Kokoška's drugstore on the corner of Perštýn and Martinská Street, but eventually graduated from the Czech-Slavonic Business Academy in Resslova Street. <ref>{{Cite journal | title = Jaroslav Hašek {{!}} Českoslovanská akademie obchodní | journal = Cao.cz | url = http://www.cao.cz/cs/o-skole/jaroslav-hasek/ | language = cs | access-date = 7 August 2017 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170807192543/http://www.cao.cz/cs/o-skole/jaroslav-hasek/ | archive-date = 7 August 2017 | url-status = dead }}</ref> At the academy he made friends with Ladislav Hájek, and together they wrote and released a parody of the lyrical love poetry of May Shouts, in which Hašek first laughed at pathos and entered the field of humorous literature. After graduation, he became an employee of Slavia Bank but soon began to earn his living exclusively in journalism and literature. At that time he also met Czech anarchists. He began to lead a bohemian and vagrant life. Together with his brother Bohuslav, he walked through, among other places, Slovakia and western Galicia (now in Poland). Stories from these trips were published by Jaroslav Hašek in ''Národní listy''. In 1907, he became editor of the anarchist magazine ''Komuna'' and was briefly imprisoned for his work. In the same year, he fell in love with Jarmila Mayerová, but, because of his bohemian life, her parents did not consider him a suitable partner for their daughter. When he was arrested for desecrating the Austro-Hungarian flag in Prague, Mayer's parents took her to the countryside in the hope that it would help end their relationship. In response, Hašek tried to back out of his radical politics and get permanent work as a writer. In 1908 he edited the ''Women's Horizon''. In 1909 he had sixty-four published short stories, and the same year he was appointed editor of ''Animal World'' magazine. Hašek's engagement with Svět zvířat, i.e. ''Animal World, w''as only the second time in his life that he was permanently employed, and now he lasted much longer in the job than he did at Banka Slavia, probably around 20 months.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Hønsi |first=Jomar |date=2022-02-27 |title=The Good Soldier Švejk > Institutions > Svět zvířat |url=https://honsi.org/svejk/?page=6-2-3&lang=en#Sv%C4%9Bt_zv%C3%AD%C5%99at |access-date=2025-01-04 |website=honsi.org/svejk}}</ref> Obtaining permanent employment at Animal World was instrumental in overcoming Jarmila Mayerová's parent's resistance to her marrying Hašek, and the wedding took place on 23 May 1910.<ref name="matrikaO">[http://katalog.ahmp.cz/pragapublica/permalink?xid=35F9846ABF044C84AFFF3A52F4C2A6F3&scan=259#scan259 Matriční záznam o sňatku Jaroslava Haška s Jarmilou Mayerovou] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210225034545/http://katalog.ahmp.cz/pragapublica/permalink?xid=35F9846ABF044C84AFFF3A52F4C2A6F3&scan=259#scan259 |date=25 February 2021 }} farnosti při kostele sv. Ludmily na pražských Královských Vinohradech</ref> However, after a year of marriage, Jarmila returned to her parents after Hašek was detained after trying to feign his own death. According to other sources, however, this was a serious attempt at suicide, motivated by the understanding that he was unable to live a marital life.<ref>{{Cite book | title = Muž, který zachránil Haška před sebevraždou. Nebýt jeho, nebyl by Švejk. | date = 15 February 2011 | url = http://promuze.blesk.cz/clanek/pro-muze-novinky/148922/muz-ktery-zachranil-haska-pred-sebevrazdou-nebyt-jeho-nebyl-by-svejk.html | publisher = Blesk.cz | type = monograph | access-date = 30 November 2019 | archive-date = 9 August 2020 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20200809072310/https://promuze.blesk.cz/clanek/pro-muze-novinky/148922/muz-ktery-zachranil-haska-pred-sebevrazdou-nebyt-jeho-nebyl-by-svejk.html | url-status = live }}</ref> After this attempt, he was briefly hospitalized in a psychiatric hospital. From 1911, he contributed to the ''Czech Word'', then to the ''Torch'', ''Humorist Letters'', ''Nettle'', ''Cartoons'', and for some time led the Institute of Cynology,<ref name="Panorama" /> which inspired his later book ''My Dog Shop''. In 1911, he founded [[The Party of Moderate Progress Within the Bounds of the Law]]. He founded it with his friends in the Vinohrady pub called U zlatého litru (The Golden Liter) to parody the political life of that time. He also wrote the satirical work ''Political and Social History of the Party of Mild Progress within the limits of the law'', but it was not published in book form until 1963. During this period, together with [[František Langer]], [[Emil Artur Longen]] and [[Egon Kisch|Egon Erwin Kisch]] he co-authored a number of cabaret performances, where he was also the main performer. In the summer of 1912, Hašek spent several weeks in a pub in Chotěboř, where he could not be gotten rid of and the proprietors waited in vain for payment. He described his stay in Chotěboř in the stories "Traitor of the Nation in Chotěboř", the "District Court in Malibor", and "How about the birthplace of Ignát Herrmann or the Consecration in Krivice". At the outbreak of the First World War, Hašek lived with the cartoonist [[Josef Lada]], who later illustrated the ''Good Soldier Švejk''.<ref>{{Cite journal | title = Hašek Jaroslav – živit a dílo ( Osudy dobrého vojáka Švejka za světové války ) – Materiály do školy | journal = Materiály do školy | date = 6 September 2016 | language = cs-CZ | url = http://www.materialy-do-skoly.cz/maturitni-otazky/cestina/hasek-jaroslav-zivit-a-dilo-osudy-dobreho-vojaka-svejka-za-svetove-valky/ | access-date = 7 August 2017 | archive-date = 7 August 2017 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170807152615/http://www.materialy-do-skoly.cz/maturitni-otazky/cestina/hasek-jaroslav-zivit-a-dilo-osudy-dobreho-vojaka-svejka-za-svetove-valky/ | url-status = live }}</ref> In February 1915, Hašek was called up to the replacement battalion of the 91st Regiment of the [[Austro-Hungarian Army|Austro-Hungarian army]] in České Budějovice. With the 12th march battalion of the regiment, he was in early July transported to the [[Eastern Front (World War I)|Eastern front]] in [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]] (now Ukraine). He served on the front until 24 September 1915 when he was captured by the [[Imperial Russian Army|Russians]] and sent to the [[Totskoye]] camp in [[Orenburg Governorate]]. Here he joined the [[Czechoslovak Legion]] in 1916. Then he was drafted into the 1st Regiment, where he worked as a scribe, emissary of the recruitment committee and gunner. Then he was transferred to the connecting section, machine-gun section (in which he participated in the [[Battle of Zborov (1917)|Battle of Zborov]] against the Austrians) and the office of the 1st Regiment. From July 1916 to February 1918 he published in the journal ''Čechoslovan and Cs. soldier'', and was the author of a number of anti-Bolshevik articles. [[File:Hasek jaroslav1920.jpg|thumb|left|upright=0.8|Jaroslav Hašek in 1920.]] At the end of February 1918, he joined the [[Czech Social Democratic Party|Czechoslovak Social Democratic Workers' Party]] (forerunner of the [[Communist Party of Czechoslovakia]], 1921–1992). What led Hašek to abandon anarchism and to accept socialist ideals has nowhere been clarified. In March, the Czechoslovak legions embarked on their [[Czechoslovak Legion#Evacuation from Bolshevik Russia|well-known retreat]], with the aim of joining the Western Front via Vladivostok. Hašek disagreed with this and went to Moscow, where he began to cooperate with the [[Bolsheviks]]. In April he transferred from the legions to the [[Red Army]]. He was sent to [[Samara]] and the following year he was director of the army printer in [[Ufa]], chief of the department for work with foreigners, etc.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.cs-magazin.com/index.php?a=a2007122069 |title=Jaroslav Hašek – Eduard Stehlík, Míla Sýkora |access-date=1 December 2019 |archive-date=2 August 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200802014126/http://www.cs-magazin.com/index.php?a=a2007122069 |url-status=live }}</ref> At the end of 1918 he served as commander of the [[Chuvash people|Chuvash]] troops in the Red Army and as deputy military commander of the [[Bugulminsky District|Bugulma district]]. He then worked in Siberia, where he published several magazines. One of them was also the first magazine in the [[Buryat language]], ''Jur'' (Dawn).<ref>{{Cite journal | title = Jaroslav Hašek – biografia {{!}} TerazTeatr | journal = Terazteatr.pl | url = https://www.terazteatr.pl/artysci/jaroslav-hasek,bio,7484 | language = pl | access-date = 1 August 2017 | archive-date = 1 August 2017 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170801162314/https://www.terazteatr.pl/artysci/jaroslav-hasek,bio,7484 | url-status = live }}</ref> [[File:Czech-writer-Jaroslav-Hasek-in-Prague-1921-391854784892.jpg|thumbnail|upright=1|Jaroslav Hašek in 1921]] In 1920, he was wounded in an assassination attempt<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.classs.ru/persons/writers/hashek/ |title=Гашек Ярослав |access-date=1 December 2019 |archive-date=1 December 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191201205826/http://www.classs.ru/persons/writers/hashek/ |url-status=live }}</ref> in Irkutsk, where he served as a member of the city soviet.<ref name="interesniy" /> In the same year he fell ill with typhoid fever, and in May he married a printing worker named Alexandra Grigorievna Lvova, called Shura, who took care of him after his illness. After his return to Czechoslovakia, he was not tried for polygamy because of the lack of order and recognition of various international treaties in Russia. In December 1920, Hašek returned to independent Czechoslovakia. He was initially placed in quarantine in [[Pardubice]], and on 19 December he arrived in Prague with Shura. The Soviets had sent him to Czechoslovakia to organize the communist movement. However, he was prevented from doing so by two circumstances: on the one hand, in support of the [[:cs:Prosincová generální stávka 1920|Kladno riots]], he received from the Russian authorities an amount of 1,500 marks, which, however, was completely devalued by [[Hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic|German inflation]]. In addition, even before Hašek's arrival in Prague, Jaroslav Handlíř, leader of a clutch of Russian agents whom Hašek was to contact, was arrested in Czechoslovakia. In this way Hašek's interest in communist politics ended and he returned to his bohemian way of life. He visited pubs in Prague and its surroundings, where he wrote his stories. Many stories describing this period were written by Hašek's friend Zdeněk Matěj Kuděj. On 25 August 1921 Hašek left with his wife Shura and painter [[Jaroslav Panuška]] for Lipnice nad Sázavou. By this time he was seriously ill and dangerously obese. In Lipnice he began writing his masterpiece, ''[[The Good Soldier Švejk|The Fate of the Good Soldier Švejk During the World War]]''. Eventually he was unable to write, yet he continued to dictate Švejk's chapters in his bedroom. On 3 January 1923, he died of heart disease. The last known photograph was taken in December 1922. [[File:Jaroslav Hašek.gif|thumb|Hašek in October 1922]]
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