Jadvihin à  . () was the pen name of Anton Lavicki (, 16 January 1869 â 23 February 1922) who was a Belarusian novelist, playwright and publicist, "one of the founders of modern Belarusian prose".
Jadvihin à  . was born as Anton Lavicki on the estate in what was then RahaÃÂoà  District of Mogilev Governorate (now Kiraà Âsk District). His family soon moved to Piarà ¡ai, where his father worked as a ranger for Count Tyà ¡keviàof Valoà ¾yn, and then to Karpilaà Âka, near Radaà ¡koviÃÂy. Jadvihin à  . studied at a school in Lucynca, which was set up by the daughter of the writer and playwright Dunin-MarcynkieviÃÂ.
Later, he graduated from the and enrolled in the Moscow Imperial University to study medicine. For his participation in student unrest, he was sent to Butyrka prison and expelled from the university. After his release, he managed to receive a qualification in pharmacy and returned to .
Soon he moved to Radaà ¡koviÃÂy, where he worked as an assistant pharmacist and got involved in the town's cultural life, including literary parties. He began to study literature and wrote the play The Crook, which was staged locally before being banned by the Tzarist police.
In 1906, Jadvihin à  . started making contributions to the newspapers Naà ¡a Dola and Naà ¡a Niva and later moved to Wilno to work in Naà ¡a Niva's editorial office, where he got acquainted with the Belarusian poets Janka Kupaà Âa and Maksim BahdanoviÃÂ.
From 1913, he worked in the editorial office of the newspaper The Belarusian and was also the technical editor of the magazine The Plow and The Luchina.
During the First World War, he organised a shelter for refugee children in Karpilaà Âka and worked in the Minsk branch of the Belarusian Society for Aid to War Victims.
In March 1917, after the February Revolution, Jadvihin à  . took part in the , worked in its press commission and zemstvo commission. In July 1917, he was elected to the executive committee of the and in October became a member of the committee which initiated the convening of the All-Belarusian Congress.
In March 1918, Jadvihin à  . became a member of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic on a mandate from the Society of Belarusian Culture. In fall 1920, he supported the Belarusian campaign of General Buà Âak-Balachoviàand later became one of the founders of the , which, with the support of Poland, waged a resistance campaign against the Bolsheviks.
In 1921, he returned from Polesia to Wilno and became a member of the Belarusian Academic Society. However, he soon fell ill with tuberculosis and died in 1922.
Jadvihin à  . is buried at the Vilnius Rasos Cemetery. A memorial stone was installed in Radaà ¡koviÃÂy at the place where there used to be the pharmacy in which he worked.
One theory about the writer's pen name is that it was chosen in honour of his inamorata, Jadviha à  abuneviÃÂ, from Radaà ¡koviÃÂy .
Legacy of Jadvihin à  . is wide-ranging â from psychological novellas to parables to fables. They were published in the collections Grandfather Zavala (1910), The Birch Tree (1912) and Cornflowers (1914). He also wrote the essays Letters from the Road, in which the author describes his 500 km trek across Belarus, the memoir Memories (1921), and the unfinished novel Gold.