Henryk Sienkiewicz
Biography
Henryk Sienkiewicz (1846–1916) was a Polish novelist and the first Polish writer to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature, awarded in 1905 for his outstanding merits as an epic writer. Born in Wola Okrzejska in Russian-controlled Poland, he studied literature and history at Warsaw University. After travelling in the United States in the late 1870s, he returned to Warsaw and began the historical trilogy — With Fire and Sword, The Deluge, and Pan Michael — that made him a national hero by dramatising Poland's seventeenth-century struggles. His international fame came with Quo Vadis (1896), a vivid novel of early Christians under Nero that was adapted into multiple films. Sienkiewicz's prose combined adventure, patriotic fervour, and psychological insight, offering Polish readers stories of resilience at a time when their nation had been erased from the map. He spent his final years in Switzerland championing Polish independence during World War I.