Jakub Grajchman (25 July 1822 â 9 June 1897) was a Slovak poet, educator, dramatist, and romanticist. He was also a Slovak nationalist.
Grajchman was born Jakub Graichman on 25 July 1822 in Hybe, Austrian Empire (now Slovakia). He would begin spelling Graichman Grajchman, the Slovak equivalent of his German surname, in later life in support of ýudovÃÂt à  túr's standardization of the Slovak language. As a child, he attended school in Keà ¾marok, Gemer, and LevoÃÂa and had Peter Michal BohÃºà  as a classmate. He then studied Evangelical theory in Bratislava, Halle, and Berlin and attended University of Preà ¡ov, where he studied law. He taught in Bratislava and Koà ¡ice (1848) before moving to Liptovský MikulÃ¡à ¡, where he was a notary and a court assistant until 1854. He was part of the revolutions across the Austrian Empire in 1848-1849. He then worked as a court assistant in Dolný KubÃÂn 1854-1859 before returning to Liptovský MikulÃ¡à ¡, where he became a courtroom advisor. In 1867, he returned to his birthplace of Hybe to live out his last 11 years. He also lived in Liptovský Hrádok for a period.
He wrote many dramas, poems, articles, and plays in German and Slovak, sometimes using the "à  túrovo spirit of a national folk song." He contributed to such journals and almanacs as Orol tatranský ('), Nitra ('), Lipa ('), Sokol, Minerva, Slovanský almanach, and à ½ivena Grajchman was not a popular writer during his lifetime. His works include Melancholický gavalier (play), Básnické spisy Jakuba Grajchmana (collection of poems), Ako to bolo? (love drama), Kto zaplatànohavice? (comedy), Zakliaty tulipán (ballad), and Divná dáma (poem). Though Grajchman wrote primarily for amateur theatres, Kto zaplatànohavice? was made into a radio program and a TV performance was broadcast in 1987.
Grajchman died on 9 June 1897 in Hybe, where he is buried.