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KARL LEBERECHT IMMERMANN (1796-1840)

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Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 336 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KARL LEBERECHT

IMMERMANN (1796-1840)  , German dramatist and novelist, was born on the 24th of
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April 1796 at
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Magdeburg, the son of a government official . In 1813 he went to study law at Halle, where he remained, after the suppression of the university by
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Napoleon in the same
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year, until King Frederick William's "Summons to my
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people " on March 17th . He responded with alacrity, but was prevented by illness from taking
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part in the earlier
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campaign; he fought, however, in 1815 at Ligny and
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Waterloo, and marched into Paris with Blucher . At the conclusion of the war he resumed his studies at Halle, and after being Referendar in Magdeburg, was appointed in 1819 Assessor at Munster in Westphalia . Here he made the acquaintance of Elise von Lutzow, Countess von Ahlefeldt, wife of the leader of the famous "
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free corps" (see I5-now) . This lady first inspired his pen, and their relationship is reflected in several dramas written about this time . In 1823 Immermann was appointed judge at Magdeburg, and in 1827 was transferred to
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Dusseldorf as Landgerichtsrat or
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district judge . Thither the countess, whose
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marriage had in the mean-time been dissolved, followed him, and, though refusing his hand, shared his home until his marriage in 1839 with a granddaughter of August Hermann Niemeyer (1954-1828), chancellor and rector per petuus of Halle university . In 1834 Immermann under-took the management of the Dusseldorf theatre, and, although his resources were small, succeeded for two years in raising it to a high level of excellence . The theatre, however, was insufficiently endowed to allow of him carrying on the
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work, and in 1836 he returned to his official duties and
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literary pursuits . He died at Dusseldorf on the 25th of August 184o . Immermann had considerable aptitude for the drama, but it was long before he found a congenial field for his talents .

His

early plays are imitations, partly of Kotzebue's, partly of the Romantic dramas of Tieck and
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Milliner, and are now forgotten . In 1826, however, appeared Cardenio and Celinde, a love tragedy of more promise; this, as well as the earlier productions, awakened the
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ill-will of Platen, who made Immermann the subject of his wittiest satire, Der romanlische Oedipus . Between 1827 and 1832 Immermann redeemed his good name by a series of
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historical tragedies, Das Trauerspiel in Tirol (1827), Kaiser Friedrich II . (1828) and a trilogy from
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Russian
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history, Alexis (1832) . His masterpiece is the poetic mystery, Merlin (1831), a noble poem, which, like its model, Faust, deals with the deeper problems of
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modern spiritual
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life . Immermann's important. dramaturgic experiments in Dusseldorf are described in detail in Diisseldorfer Anfange (184o) . More significant is his position as a novelist . Here he clearly stands on the boundary
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line between Romanticism and modern literature; his Epigonen (1836) might be described as one of the last Romantic imitations of Goethe's Wilhelm Meister, while the satire and realism of his second novel, Miinchhausen (1838), form a
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complete break with the older literature . As a
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prose-writer Immermann is perhaps best remembered to-day by the admirable story of
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village life, Der Oberliof, which is embedded in the formless mass of Miinchhausen . His last work was an unfinished epic, Tristan and Isolde (1840) . Immermann's Gesammelte Schriften were published in 14 vols. in 1835–1843; a new edition, with biography and introduction by R . Boxberger, in 20 vols .

(

Berlin, 1883) ; selected
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works, edited by M . Koch, (4 vols., 1887–1888) and F . Muncker (6 vols., 1897) . See G. zu Putlitz, Karl Immermann, sein Leben and seine Werke (2 vols., 1870) ; F .
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Freiligrath, Karl Immermann, Blatter der Erinnerung an ihn (1842); W . Muller, K . Immermann and sein Kreis (186o) ; R . Fellner, Geschichte einer deutschen Musterbiihne (1888) ; K . Immermann: eine Gedachtnisschrift (1896) .

End of Article: KARL LEBERECHT IMMERMANN (1796-1840)
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