Stanislav Kostka Neumann was born on 5 June 1875 in
Prague,
Austria-Hungary. His father, a lawyer and member of
Imperial Council, died when Stanislav was five years old. Stanislav was raised by his mother and aunts. He studied a
gymnasium in Prague, but did not graduate. He was arrested in 1893 for his anarchist tendencies and sentenced to fourteen months in prison. He served his sentence in
Plzeň-Bory. From 1897 to 1905, he worked as the chief editor of his own magazine,
Nový kult ('new cult'), which brought together Czech anarchists.Neumann's villa in Prague-
Žižkov (called
Olšanská vila) became a place where Neumann's literary and anarchist friends met, including
František Gellner,
Karel Toman,
Marie Majerová,
Fráňa Šrámek,
Viktor Dyk,
Jiří Mahen and
Rudolf Těsnohlídek. In 1905, Neumann shortly lived in
Vienna, but then he moved to Řečkovice (today part of
Brno). In 1907, he moved to
Bílovice nad Svitavou. He lived there until 1915. From 1915 to 1917, during
World War I, Neumann served as a soldier in the medical corps during the campaign in Albania and Macedonia. After the war, he moved back to Prague. He was married twice. He is the father of the actor
Stanislav Neumann (1902–1975). Neumann wrote his first poems in jail in 1893. He has undergone many stages of creative:
symbolist (
I Am an Apostle of the New Life),
anarchist (
A Dream About a Crowd of Desperate People, and Other Verses), landscape lyric (
The Book of Forests, Hills, and Waters),
civilist (
New Songs),
communist (
Red Songs) and others. He helped found the
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. Neumann died on 28 June 1947 in Prague, aged 72. He was buried at
Vyšehrad Cemetery, but in 2021, his grave was moved to
Olšany Cemetery. ==Work==