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JOHANN LUDWIG TIECK

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 962 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHANN

LUDWIG TIECK  {1773-1853), German poet, novelist and critic, was born in Berlin on the 31st of May 1773, his
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father being a rope-maker . He was educated at the Friedrich-Werdersche Gymnasium, and at the
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universities of Halle,
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Gottingen and
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Erlangen . At Gottingen Shakespeare and the Elizabethan drama were the chief subjects of his study . In 1794 he returned to Berlin, resolved to make a living by his pen . He contributed a number of short stories (1795-1798) to the series of Straussfedern, published by the bookseller C . F . Nicolai and originally edited by J . K . A . Musaus, and wrote Abdallah (1796) and a novel in letters, William Lovell (3 vols . 1795-1796) . These
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works are, how-ever, immature and sensational in tone .

Tieck's transition to romanticism is to be seen in the series of plays and stories published under the title Volksmdrehen von Peter Lebrechl (3 vols., 1797), a collection which contains the admirable fairy-tale Der blonde Eckbert, and the witty dramatic satire on Berlin
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literary taste, Der gestiefelie Kater . With his school and college friend W . H . Wackenroder (1773-1798), he planned the novel Franz Sternbalds Wanderungen (vols. i-ii . 1798), which, with Wackenroder's Herzensergiessungen (1798), was the first expression of the romantic
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enthusiasm for old German
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art . In 1798 Tieck married and in the following
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year settled in
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Jena, where he, the two brothers Schlegel and
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Novalis were the leaders of the new Romantic school . His writings between 1798 and 1804 include the satirical drama, Prinz Zerbino (1799), and Romantische Dichtungen (2 vols., 1799-1800) . The latter contains Tieck's most ambitious dramatic poems, Leben and Tod der heiligen Genoveva, Leben and Tod
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des klcinen Rotkappchens, which were followed in 1804 by the remarkable "
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comedy " in two parts, Kaiser Oktavianus . These dramas, in which Tieck's poetic powers are to be seen at their best, are typical plays of the first Romantic school; although formless, and destitute of dramatic qualities, they show the influence of both Calderon and Shakespeare . Kaiser Oktavianus is a poetic glorification of the
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middle ages . In 18or Tieck went to
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Dresden, then lived for a time near
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Frankfort-on-the-Oder, and spent many months in Italy . In 1803 he published a
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translation of Minnelieder aus der schwdbischen Vorzeit, between 1799 and 1804 an excellent version of Don Quixote, and in 1811 two volumes of Elizabethan dramas, Altenglisches Theater .

In 1812-1817 he collected in three volumes a number of his earlier stories and dramas, under the title Phantasus . In this collection appeared the stories Der Runenberg,

Die Elf en, Der Pokal, and the dramatic fairy tale, Fortunat . In 1817 Tieck visited England in order to collect materials for a
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work on Shakespeare (unfortunately never finished) and in 1819 he settled permanently in Dresden; from 1825 on he was literary adviser to the Court Theatre, and his semi-public readings from the dramatic poets gave him a reputation which extended far beyond the Saxon capital . The new series of short stories which he began to publish in 1822 also won him a wide popularity . Notable among these are Die Gemalde, Die Reisenden, Die Verlobung . Des Lebens Uberfluss . More ambitious and on a wider
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canvas are the
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historical or semi-historical novels, Dichter-'eben (1826), Der Aufruhr in den Cevennen (1826, unfinished), Der Tod des Dichlers (1834); Der junge Tischlermeister (1836; but begun in r8rr) is an excellent story written under the influence of Goethe's Wilhelm Meister;
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Vittoria Accorombona (1840), in the style of the French Romanticists, shows a falling-off . In later years Tieck carried on a varied literary activity as critic (Dramaturgische Blotter, 2 vols., 1825-1826; Kritische Schriften, 2 vols., 1848); he also edited the translation of Shakespeare by A . W . Schlegel, who was assisted by' Tieck's daughter Dorothea (1799-1841) and by Graf Wolf Heinrich Baudissin(1789-1878); Shakespeares Vorschule (2 vols., 1823-1829); the works of H. von Kleist(1826) and of J . M . R .

Lenz (1828) . In 1841 Friedrich Wilhelm IV. of Prussia invited him to Berlin where he enjoyed a pension for his remaining years . He died on the 28th of
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April 1853 . Tieck's importance
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lay rather in the readiness with which he adapted himself to the new ideas which arose at the close of the 18th century, than in any conspicuous originality or genius . His importance as an immediate force in German
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poetry is restricted to his early period . In later years it was as the helpful friend and adviser of others, or as the well-read critic of wide sympathies, that Tieck distinguished himself . Tieck's Schriften appeared in 20 vols . (1828-1846), and his Gesammelte Novellen in 12 (1852–1854) . Nachgelassene Schriften were published in 2 vols. in 1855 . There are several
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modern
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editions of Ausgewahlte Werke by H . Welti (8 vols., 1886-1888) ; by J . Minor (in Kurschner's Deutsche Nationalliteratur, 144, 2 vols., 1885) ; by G .

Klee (with an excellent

biography, 3 vols., 1892), and G . Witkowski (4 vols., 1903) . The Elves and The Goblet were translated by Carlyle in German
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Romance (1827), The Pictures and The Betrothal by Bishop Thirlwall (1825) . A translation of Vittoria Accorombona was published in 1845 . Tieck"s Letters have not yet been collected, but Briefe an Tieck were published in 4 vols. by K. von Holtci in 1864 . See for Tieck's earlier
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life R . Kopke,Ludwig Tieck (2 vols., 1855) ; for the Dresden period, H. von Friesen, Ludwig Tieck: Erinnerungen (2 vols., 1871); also A . Stern, Ludwig Tieck in Dresden (Zur Literatur der Gegenwart, 1879) ; J . 'Minor, Tieck als Novellendichter (1884); B . Steiner, L . Tieck and die Volksbucher (1893) ; H . Bischof, Tieck als Dromaturg (1897) ; W .

Miessner . Tiecks Lyrik (1902) .

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