Níkos Kazantzákis (born Feb. 18, 1883, Iráklion, Crete, Ottoman Empire [now in Greece]—died Oct. 26, 1957, Freiburg im Breisgau, W.Ger.) was a Greek writer whose prolific output and wide variety of work represent a major contribution to modern Greek literature.
Kazantzákis was born during the period of revolt of Crete against rule by the Ottoman Empire, and his family fled for a short time to the Greek island of Náxos. He studied law at the University of Athens (1902–06) and philosophy under Henri Bergson in Paris (1907–09). He then traveled widely in Spain, England, Russia, Egypt, Palestine, and Japan, settling before World War II on the island of Aegina. He served as a minister in the Greek government (1945) and worked for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in Paris (1947–48). He then moved to Antibes, France.
Kazantzákis’ works cover a vast range, including philosophic essays, travel books, tragedies, and translations into modern Greek of such classics as Dante’s Divine Comedy and J.W. von Goethe’s Faust. He produced lyric poetry and the epic Odíssa (1938; Odyssey), a 33,333-line sequel to the Homeric epic that expresses the full range of Kazantzákis’ philosophy.
Kazantzákis is perhaps best known for his widely translated novels. They include Víos kai politía tou Aléxi Zormpá (1946; Zorba the Greek), a portrayal of a passionate lover of life and poor-man’s philosopher; O Kapetán Mikhális (1950; Freedom or Death), a depiction of Cretan Greeks’ struggle against their Ottoman overlords in the 19th century; O Khristós Xanastavrónetai (1954; The Greek Passion); and O televtaíos pirasmós (1955; The Last Temptation of Christ), a revisionist psychological study of Jesus Christ. Published after his death was the autobiographical novel Anaforá stón Gréko (1961; Report to Greco). Motion pictures based on his works include Celui qui doit mourir (1958; “He Who Must Die,” from The Greek Passion), Zorba the Greek (1964), and The Last Temptation of Christ (1988).