德國 人物列錶
歌德 Goethe荷爾德林 Friedrich Hölderlin海涅 Heinrich Heine
拉斯剋—許勒 Else Lasker-Schüler艾興多爾夫 Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff弗裏德裏希·威廉·尼采 Friedrich Nietzsche
君特·格拉斯 Günter Grass朋霍費爾 Dietrich Bonhoeffer葛瑞夫 Dieter M. Gräf
赫爾曼·黑塞 Hermann Hesse曼弗雷德·馬伊 Manfred Mai卡爾·威特 Carl Weter
康拉特·賽茨 Konrad Seitz萊內爾·埃爾林格 莱内尔埃尔林 grid哥爾特·朗古特 哥尔特朗古特
霍爾格·萊納斯 Holger Reiners烏特·艾爾哈特 Ute Ehrhardt戴特·奧藤 Dieter Otten
約爾格·艾剋曼 Jorge Ikmann赫爾曼·約瑟夫·左赫 Hermann-Josef Zoche洛塔爾·賽韋特 Lothar J. Seiwert
彼得·馬丁 Bidemading布魯諾·霍爾納格 布鲁诺霍尔 Nag花映紅 Flowers Yinghong
格哈德·施羅德 Gerhard Schroeder剋裏斯塔·施羅德 Christa Schroder羅鬍斯·米施 Rochus Misch
安格拉·默剋爾 Angela Merkel鬍戈·米勒-福格 Hugo Muller-Vogg韋爾納·比爾曼 Werner Bierman
佩特拉·納格爾 Petra Nagel特勞德爾·容格 Telaodeer Jung梅麗莎·米勒 梅丽莎米勒
埃米爾·路德維希 Emil Ludwig享利剋·埃伯利 Enjoy 利克埃伯利馬蒂亞斯·烏爾 Matthias Uhl
埃裏希·沙剋 埃里希沙克邁剋爾·舒馬赫 Michael Schumacher邁剋爾·舒馬赫 Michael Schumacher
海德格爾 Heidegger叔本華 Arthur Schopenhauer黑格爾 Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
貝托爾特·布萊希特 Bertolt Brecht布萊姆·斯托剋 Bram Stoker席勒 Friedrich von Schiller
雅科布·格林 Jacob Grimm威廉·格林 Wilhelm Grimm卡爾·馬剋思 Karl Marx
剋勞斯·曼 Klaus Mann埃裏希·馬裏亞·雷馬剋 Erich Maria Remarque特奧多·施托姆 Theodor Storm
托馬斯·曼 Thomas Mann安妮·弗蘭剋 Anne Frank威廉·豪夫 Wilhelm Hauff
施篤姆 Theodor Storm漢斯·裏鮑 Hansilibao孔薩利剋 Heinz G. Konsalik
赫拉·琳德 Hera Lind威德爾·埃彭多夫 Wade Acres Peng Dorf卡爾·麥 Karl May
格裏美爾斯豪森 Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen
德國 神聖羅馬帝國  (1622年1676年八月17日)
格裏美豪森
漢斯·雅各布·剋裏斯托夫·馮·格裏美豪森

漢斯·雅各布·剋裏斯托夫·馮·格裏美豪森Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen(1622~1676)德國小說傢。參加過30年戰爭。以此為素材創作了長篇小說《癡兒歷險記》,是巴洛剋時代最重要的文學作品。他的小說,情節麯折生動,語言通俗幽默,采用了大量的譬喻和雙關語,並帶有濃厚的宗教色彩和宿命論觀點。主題一直是在世界的動蕩和混亂中希望在彼岸得到拯救。作品還有《女騙子和女流浪者庫拉捨》、《古怪的施普林英斯費爾特》和《神奇的鳥巢》等。通常被認為是17世紀德國文學最傑出的成就。1676年逝世於巴登
 
格裏美爾斯豪森是德國人,曾經寫過一本書——<癡兒西木傳>,在那個時期的德國算是一部著作了。
 
格裏美爾斯豪森在歷史上的記載並不多。他的名言:
好事總是需要時間,不付出大量的心血和勞動是做不成大事的。想吃核桃,就是得首先咬開堅硬的果殼。
沒有教養,沒有學識,沒有實踐的人的心靈好比一塊田地,這塊田地即使天生肥沃,但倘若不經耕耘和播種,也是結不出果實來的。


Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen (1621/22 – 17 August 1676) was a German author. He is best known for his 1669 picaresque novel Simplicius Simplicissimus (German: Der abenteuerliche Simplicissimus) and the accompanying Simplician Scriptures series.

Early life

Grimmelshausen was born at Gelnhausen. At the age of ten he was kidnapped by Hessian soldiery, and in their midst experienced military life in the Thirty Years' War. At the close of the war, Grimmelshausen entered the service of Franz Egon von Fürstenberg, bishop of Strasbourg. In 1665, he was made magistrate (German: Schultheiß) at Renchen in Baden. On obtaining this appointment, he devoted himself to literary pursuits.

Works

Abenteuerlicher Simplicissimus, frontispiece of an early edition

Grimmelshausen's work is greatly influenced by previous utopian and travel literature, and the Simplicissimus series attained a readership larger than any other seventeenth-century novel. Formerly, he was credited with Der fliegende Wandersmann nach dem Mond, a translation from Jean Baudoin's L'Homme dans la Lune, itself a translation of Francis Godwin'The Man in the Moone, but recent scholars have disputed this; he did, however, write an appendix to a 1667 edition of that translation, the basis for that association. Der fliegende Wandersman was included in his collected works, though without the appendix.

In 1668, Grimmelshausen published Der abenteuerliche Simplicissimus, which has been called the greatest German novel of the 17th century. For this work he took as his model the picaresque romances of Spain, already to some extent known in Germany. Simplicissimus has been interpreted as its author's autobiography; he begins with the childhood of his hero, and describes the latter's adventures amid the stirring scenes of the Thirty Years' War. The rustic detail with which these pictures are presented makes the book a valuable document of its time. For some, however, the later parts of the book overindulge in allegory, and finally become a Robinson Crusoe story.

The historian Robert Ergang draws upon Gustav Könnecke's Quellen und Forschungen zur Lebensgeschichte Grimmelshausens to assert that "the events related in the novel Simplicissimus could hardly have been autobiographical since [Grimmelshausen] lived a peaceful existence in quiet towns and villages on the fringe of the Black Forest and that the material he incorporated in his work was not taken from actual experience, but was either borrowed from the past, collected from hearsay, or created by a vivid imagination."

Among Grimmelshausen's other works, are the so-called Simplicianische Schriften (German: Simplizianische Schriften):

  • Die Ertzbetrügerin and Landstörtzerin Courasche (1670)
  • Der seltsame Springinsfeld (1670)
  • Das wunderbarliche Vogelnest (1672)

He also published satires, such as Der teutsche Michel (1673), and gallant novels, like Dietwald und Amelinde (1670).

Death and legacy

1879 Grimmelshausen monument in Renchen

He died in Renchen in 1676, where a monument was erected to him in 1879.

Grimmelshausen's Landstörtzerin Courasche became an inspiration for Bertolt Brecht's play Mother Courage and Her Children.

Der abenteuerliche Simplicissimus lent its name to Simplicissimus, a satirical German weekly which ran from 1894-1944 and 1954–67.

Notes

  1. ^ List of pseudonyms attributed (as anagrams) to Grimmelshausen:
    Samuel Greiffensohn von Hirschfeld
    German Schleifheim von Sulsfort
    Melchior Sternfels von Fugshaim
    Philarchus Grossus von Trommenheim
    Michael Rechulin von Sehmsdorf
    Eric Steinfels von Grufenshohn
    Simon Lengfrisch von Hartenfels
    Israel Fromschmid von Hugenfels

References

  1. ^ Krause, Tilman; Baier, Ute (24 June 2005). "Rätselhafter junger Mann"[Mysterious young man]. Die Welt (in German). Retrieved 15 November 2019.
  2. Jump up to:a b c "Grimmelshausen, Hans Jacob Christoph von"Encyclopædia Britannica. 13 August 2018. Retrieved 17 October 2018.
  3. Jump up to:a b  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Grimmelshausen, Hans Jakob Christoffel von". Encyclopædia Britannica12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 603.
  4. ^ Hennig, John (1945). "Simplicius Simplicissimus's British Relations". Modern Language Review40 (1): 37–45. doi:10.2307/3717748JSTOR 3717748.
  5. ^ Bürger, Thomas; Schmidt-Glintzer, Helwig (1993). Der Fliegende Wandersmann nach dem Mond: Faksimiledruck der deutschen Übersetzung (in German). Wolfenbüttel: Herzog August Bibliothek (published 1995). ISBN 978-3-88373-074-5.
  6. ^ Grimmelshausen, H. J. Chr. (1669). Der abentheurliche Simplicissimus [The adventurous Simplicissimus] (in German). Nuremberg: J. Fillion. OCLC 22567416.
  7. ^ Moore, Steven (2013). Novel: An Alternative History, 1600–1800. New York: Bloomsbury. p. 61. ISBN 978-1441188694.
  8. ^ Ergang, Robert H. (1956). The Myth of the All-Destructive Fury of the Thirty Years' War. Pocono Pines, PA: The Craftsmen. OCLC 905630683.
  9. ^ Grimmelshausen, H. J. Chr. (1670). Trutz Simplex: Die Ertzbetrügerin und Landstörtzerin Courasche [Simple's defense: The arch-fraud and pauper Courage] (in German). Nuremberg: W. E. Felssecker. OCLC 248092792.
  10. ^ Grimmelshausen, H. J. Chr. (1670). Der seltzame Springinsfeld [The strange Jump-into-the-field] (in German). Nuremberg: W. E. Felssecker. OCLC 79549164.
  11. ^ Grimmelshausen, H. J. Chr. (1673). Simplicissimi Pralerey und Gepräng mit seinem Teutschen Michel [Simplicissimus' boast and talk with his German Michel] (in German). Nuremberg.
  12. ^ Harold Bloom (2009). Bertolt Brecht: Comprehensive Research and Study Guide. Infobase Publishing. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-4381-1639-6.
  13. ^ G. Ronald Murphy (2010). Gemstone of Paradise: The Holy Grail in Wolfram's Parzival. Oxford University Press. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-19-974759-7.
  14. ^ "Anagramme Grimmelshausens" (in German). Grimmelshausenfreunde Renchen e.V. Retrieved 17 November 2019.

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