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JOHANN FISCHART (c. 1545–1591)

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Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 426 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHANN

FISCHART (c. 1545–1591)  , German satirist and publicist, was born, probably at Strassburg (but according to some accounts at Mainz), in or about the
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year 1545, and was educated at
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Worms in the house of Kaspar Scheid, whom in the preface to his Eulenspiegel he mentions as his " cousin and
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preceptor." He appears to have travelled in Italy, the Nether-lands, France and England, and on his return to have taken the degree of doctor
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juris at Basel . From 1575 to 1581, within which period most of his
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works were written, he lived with, and was probably associated in the business of, his
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sister's
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husband, Bernhard Jobin, a printer at Strassburg, who published many of his books . In 1581 Fischart was attached, as advocate to the Reichskammergericht (imperial court of
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appeal) at Spires, and in 1583, when he married, was appointed Amtmann (magistrate) at
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Forbach near Saarbriicken . Here he died in the winter of 1590-1591 . Fischart wrote under various feigned names, such as Mentzer, Menzer, Reznem, Huldrich Elloposkleros, Jesuwalt Pickhart, Winhold Alkofribas Wiistblutus,
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Ulrich Mansehr von Treubach, and Im Fischen Gilt's Mischen; and it is partly owing to this fact that there is doubt whether some of the works attributed to him are really his . More than 50 satirical works, however, both in
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prose and verse, remain authentic, among which are—Nachtrab oder Nebelkrdh (1570), a satire against one Jakob Rabe, who had become a convert to the
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Roman Catholic Church; Von St Dominici
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des Predigermonchs and St Francisci Barfussers artlichem Leben (1571), a poem with the expressive motto " Sie haben Nasen vnd riechen's nit " (Ye have noses and smell it not), written to def end the Protestants against certain wicked accusations, one of which was that Luther held communion with the devil; Eulenspiegel Reimensweis (written 1571, published 1572); Aller Praktik Grossmutter (1572), after Rabelais's Prognostication Pantagrueline; Floh Haz, Weiber Traz (1593), in which he describes a
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battle between fleas and
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women; Affentheuerliche and ungeheuerliche Geschichtschrift vom Leben, Rhaten and Thaten der . . . Helden and Herren Grandgusier Gargantoa and Pantagruel, also after Rabelais (1J75, and again under the modified title, Naupengeheurliche Geschichtklitterung, 1577); Neue kiinstliche Figuren biblischer Historien (1576); Anmahnung zur christlichen Kinderzucht (1576); Das glilckhafft Schiff von Zurich (1576, republished 1828, with an introduction by the poet Ludwig Uhland), a poem commemorating the adventure of a
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company of Zurich arquebusiers, who sailed from their native
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town to Strassburg in one day, and brought, as a proof of this feat, a kettleful of Hirsebrei (millet), which had been cooked in Zurich, still warm into Strassburg, and intended to illustrate the
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pro-verb " perseverance overcomes all difficulties "; Podagrammisch Trostbiichlein (1579); Philosophisch Ehzuchtbilchlein (1578); the celebrated Bienenkorb des heiligen romischen Immenschwarms, &c., a modification of the Dutch De roomsche . Byen-Korf, by Philipp Marnix of St Aldegonde, published in 1579 and reprinted in 1847; Der heilig Brotkorb (158o), after Calvin's Traite des reliques; Das vierhornige Jesuiterhiitlein, a rhymed satire against the
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Jesuits (158o); and a number of smaller poems . To Fischart also have been attributed some " Psalmen and geistliche Lieder " which appeared in a Strassburg hymn-
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book of 1576 . Fischart had studied not only the ancient literatures, but also those of Italy, France, the
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Netherlands and England . He was a lawyer, a theologian, a satirist and the most powerful
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Protestant publicist .of the
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counter-reformation period; in politics he was a republican .

Above all, he is a

master of language, and was indefatigable with his pen . His satire was levelled mercilessly at all perversities in the public and private
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life of his time—at astrological superstition, scholastic pedantry, ancestral pride, but especially at the papal dignity and the lives of the priesthood and the Jesuits . He indulged in the wildest witticisms, the most abandoned caricature; but all this he did with a serious purpose . As a poet, he is characterized by the eloquence and picturesqueness of his style and the symbolical language he employed .
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Thirty years after Fischart's
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death his writings, once so popular, were almost entirely forgotten . Recalled to the public attention by Johann Jakob Bodmer and Gotthold
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Ephraim Lessing, it is only recently that his works have come to be a subject of investigation, and his position in German literature to be fully understood . Freiherr von Meusebach, whose valuable collection of Fischart's works has passed into the possession of the royal library in Berlin, deals in his Fischartstudien (Halle, 1879) with the
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great satirist . Fischart's poetical works were published by Hermann Kurz in three volumes (
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Leipzig, 1866–1868) ; and selections by K . Goedeke (Leipzig, 1800) and by A . Hauffen in Kurschner's Deutsche Nationallileratur (
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Stuttgart, 1893) ; Die Geschichtklitterung and some minor writings appeared in Scheible's Kloster, vols . 7 and 10 (Stuttgart, 1847–1848) . Das gluckhafft Schiff has been frequently reprinted, critical edition by J .

Baechtold (1880) . See for further

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biographical details, Erich Schmidt in the Allgemeine deutsche Biographie, vol . 7; A . F . C . Vilmar in Ersch and Gruber's
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Encyclopaedia; W . Wackernagel, Johann Fischart von Strassburg and
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Base's Anteil an ihm (2nd ed., Basel, 1875) ; P . Besson, Etude sur
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Jean Fischart (Paris, 1889) ; and A . Hauffen, Fischart-Studien " (in
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Euphorion, 1896–1909) .

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