Mykola Arkas was a son of the Russian admiral Nikolay Andreyevich Arkas, who was the Commander of the Black Sea Fleet, a founder of steam navigation and trade on the Black Sea and a founder of Caspian Sea Fleet, (1816–1881) and the Ukrainian Sophia Bogdanovich.[citation needed]
Mykola received his all-round education in the Law School of St. Petersburg and completed his studies in physics and mathematics at the University of Odessa.[citation needed]
Naval career and later life
After completing his studies (1875–1881), in accordance with the family tradition,[citation needed] he joined the Imperial Russian Navy, where from 1875 to 1899 he worked in the Naval Office in Mykolaiv .[1]
Arkas obtained a magistracy in Kherson. In his leisure time, he collected and recorded folk songs, also studying the history of Ukraine. His teacher, Petro Nishchynsky, who was a Ukrainian composer, conductor, and writer, had an influence upon Mykola; the latter tried to master musical knowledge independently, to develop his composer's skills and writing music.[citation needed] On his Kherson estate in the villages of Khrystoforivka and Bohdanivka, Arkas set up and paid for, a Ukrainian-speaking school that closed by the government two years later.[1]
Mykola Arkas died on 26 March 1909 [O.S. 13 March], in Mykolaiv,[1] where he was buried in the family chapel in the town cemetery.[2]
Compositions and other cultural activities
Arkas's artistic contributions include poetry, and about 80 compositions for solo-singing, vocal ensembles and arrangements of folk songs. He composed romances and duets.[1]
Arkas was the founder and chairman of the "Prosvita" cultural and educational society in Mykolaiv.[1] At his own expense he opened a public school that taught in Ukrainian, as the dominant teaching language in schools was Russian.[citation needed]
In 1908 in St. Petersburg, a book by Mykola Arkas — "History of Ukraine-Rus" — was published,[1] under the editorship of Ukrainian writer Vasyl Domaniczky.[citation needed] It was the first popular history of Ukraine published in Ukrainian.[2]
Kateryna (1890)
Arkas's operaKateryna (1890) is the most significant work of Mykola Arkas, adapted as from Taras Shevchenko's poem of the same title. The opera was first performed in Moscow in 1899 by the Ukrainian composer and theatre director Marko Kropyvnytskyi. The piano–vocal score was first published in 1897.[1] The work brought recognition to Mykola Arkas and became the first Ukrainian lyrical folk opera. Performances of "Kateryna" were a great success, first playing in Moscow by Mark Kropivnitskiy's troupe in 1899, and later in Minsk, Vilnius and Kiev.[citation needed]
Commemoration
In October 1992 in Myoklaiv there was open a monument to Mykola Arkas (by sculptor O.Zdykhovskiy). In 2003 a postage stamp was released in Ukraine dedicated to Mykola Arkas.[citation needed]
A biography about Arkas was written by the Ukrainian folklorist Leonid Sergeevič Kaufman in 1958.[1]
References
^ abcdefghiEncyclopedia of Ukraine (1984). "Arkas, Mykola". Internet Encyclopaedia of Ukraine. Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
Dytyniak Maria Ukrainian Composers – A Bio-bibliographic Guide – Research report No. 14, 1896, Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, University of Alberta, Canada.
Kaufman, Leonid Sergeevič (1958). M.M. Arkas: narys pro žittja i tvorčist' [M.M. Arkas: An Outline of his Life and Creativity]. Kyiv: Derž. Vyd-co obrazotvorchoho mistectva i muzychnoi lir. OCLC753353294.
Shkvarets, Valentin P. (2002). "1-3". Микола Миколайович Аркас: життя, творчість, діяльність [Mykola Mykolayovych Arkas: life, creativity, activity] (in Ukrainian). Mykolaiv, Ukraine: Mykolaiv Educational and Scientific Center of Odesa National University named after I.I. Mechnikova. ISBN966-7149-22-6.