Adolf Wilbrandt

Adolf Wilbrandt in 1882

Adolf Wilbrandt (August 24, 1837  June 10, 1911) was a German novelist and dramatist.

History

Wilbrant was born in Rostock. His father was a professor at the university in Rostock. He received early education in his native town, and then entered the university and engaged in the study of law.[1] He soon abandoned law in favour of philology and history, and continued these studies in Berlin and Munich. After taking the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, he joined the staff of the Süddeutsche Zeitung in Munich.[2]

He travelled abroad for a time and in 1871 he settled in Vienna, where, two years later, he married the actress, Auguste Baudius. In 1881, Wilbrandt was appointed director of the Hofburg theatre in succession to Franz Dingelstedt, an office he held until 1887. In this year he returned to his native town, and remained actively engaged in literary production.[2]

Wilbrandt is distinguished both as a dramatist and novelist. His merits were acknowledged by the award of the Grillparzer prize on two occasions—in 1895 for the tragedy Gracchus der Volkstribun, and in 1890 for his dramatic poem Der Meister von Palmyra, while in 1878 he received the Schiller prize for his dramatic productions.[2]

Works

Among his plays may be mentioned:

Among his novels the following deserve notice:

He also published translations of Sophocles and Euripides (1866), Gedichte (1894, 1889 and 1907), and a volume of Erinnerungen (1905).

See V. Klemperer, Adolf Wilbrandt. Eine Studie über seine Werke (1907), and A. Stern, Studien zur Literatur der Gegenwart (3rd ed., 1905).

Literature

References

Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Wilbrandt, Adolf". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

External links

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