After the death of her father, Karl Laantee’s daughter donated the remaining part of his papers to the Estonian Literary Museum.
Mart Laar (b. 1960) is an Estonian historian and politician. He was prime minister of Estonia in 1992–1994 and 1999–2002. As a historian, he has written a large number of books about Estonian history (some have also been published in English, Russian, German and Finnish), and several textbooks.
He studied history at the Tartu State University in the early 1980s, and was an initiator and active member of the Noor-Tartu (Young-Tartu) student movement. He had the initial idea for a movement to arrange the city space. He got it from Tallinn, where a similar movement of school students was active.
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Tallinn , Estonia undefined
Pavel Landovský was a Czech actor, playwriter and signatory of Charter 77. After an unsuccessful period at the Academy of Mechanical Engineering, he decided to devote himself to the theatre. At first, he worked in the district theatres in Šumperk, Klatovy and Pardubice. Later, from 1965–1976, he became one of the leading figures of the Prague Drama Club (Činoherní klub). He wanted to study drama at the Theatre Faculty of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (DAMU), however, he was never admitted. The end of his official acting career in pre-1989 Czechoslovakia is linked to his critical approach to the regime. Landovský’s critical attitude was confirmed by his signature of Charter 77. Under pressure from the police authorities, and after several short-term prison sentences, he decided to emigrate from Czechoslovakia to neighbouring Austria in 1978. He successfully performed there as an actor. From 1982–1996 he was engaged at the Vienna Burgtheater. He returned to the Czech Republic in the mid-1990s.
Pavel Landovský was also involved in the literary side of the theatre, writing several plays. When he was still allowed to officially act, the plays Hodinový hoteliér (1969) and Případ pro venkovského policajta (1972) were performed. During “Normalization”, he produced several radio plays under the names of other authors (e. g. Karel Steigerwald). His plays were also published in samizdat volumes. Typical features of Landovský’s work are farces emerging from trivial, everyday situations, his distinctive language and slightly vulgar humour.
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Praha, Prague, Czech Republic
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Vienna, Austria
Ján Langoš was born on 2 August 1946 in Banská Bystrica and was a Slovak politician associated with the Democratic Party. He studied from the beginning of the 1970s at the Institute of Technical Cybernetics of the Slovak Academy of Sciences. He was one of the key dissidents during the 1980s in former Czechoslovakia. During this time he was as well active in the underground university and after November 1989 he served as a Minister at the Department of Home Affairs (1990–1992) of the former Czech and Slovak Federative Republic, appointed by president Václav Havel. In 1994 he entered the parliament as a candidate of the Christian Democratic Movement. Between 1995 and 2000 he was chairman of Democratic Party and in 2002 he ended his function as a member of the National Council. In 2003 Langoš founded the Nation's Memory Institute, where until his death he was a member of its Governing Board. He proposed many laws and legal standards about freedom of information. He died on 15 June 2006 in a tragic traffic accident.
Jonas Lankutis, a researcher of Lithuanian literature and critic, graduated from Vilnius University in 1953, and in 1956 he started to work at the Institute of Lithuanian Language and Literature. In 1984, Lankutis was appointed director of the institute. (He was director until 1992.) He is the author of a book about the work of Vincas Mykolaitis-Putinas. (First published in 1961, the third edition came out in 1986.) During the writing process, he often communicated with Mykolaitis-Putinas. In 1979, Lankutis presented his correspondence with Mykolaitis-Putinas to the Manuscript Section of the library of the Institute of Lithuanian Language and Literature.