Rodion Markovits
Rodion Markovits (; or
Markovitz, born
Markovits Jakab ; 1888 – August 27, 1948) was an
Austro-Hungarian-born writer, journalist and lawyer, one of the early
modernist contributors to
Magyar literary culture in
Transylvania and
Banat regions. He achieved international fame with the extended
reportage ''Szibériai garnizon'' ("
Siberian Garrison", 1927–8), which chronicles his own exotic experiences in
World War I and the
Russian Civil War. Locally, he is also known for his lifelong contribution to the political and cultural press of Transylvania. A
Romanian national after 1920, Markovits divided himself between the
Hungarian Romanian and
Jewish communities, and was marginally affiliated with both the ''
Ma'' art group and the ''
Erdélyi Helikon'' writers.
Rodion Markovitz was seen by his contemporaries as an eccentric, and some of his colleagues believed him a minor and incidental writer. He was also noted for his leftist inclinations, cemented during his personal encounter with
Bolshevism but toned down during the final decades of his life. Although he continued to publish short stories until the 1940s, and wrote the sequel novel ''Aranyvonat'' ("Gold Train"), his work never again matched the success of ''Szibériai garnizon''. His final home was the Banat city of
Timișoara, where he worked for the Romanian and Hungarian press, and eventually became a grassroots activist of the
Hungarian People's Union.
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