Adolf Glassbrenner (March 27, 1810–September 25, 1876), was a German humorist
and satirist, born in Berlin.
After working for a short time in a merchant's office, he took to journalism, and in 1831
edited Don Quixote, a periodical which was suppressed in 1833 owing to its
revolutionary tendencies. He next, under the pseudonym Adolf Brennglas, published a series of pictures of Berlin life, under the
titles Berlin wie es ist undtrinkt (thirty parts, with illustrations, 1833–1849), and Buntes Berlin (fourteen
parts, with illustrations, Berlin, 1837–1858), and thus became the founder of a popular satirical literature associated with
modern Berlin. In 1840 he married the actress Adele Peroni (1813–1895), and removed in the
following year to Neustrelitz, where his wife had obtained an engagement at the Grand Ducal
theatre. In 1848 Glassbrenner entered the political arena and became the leader of the democratic party in Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Expelled from that country in 1850, he settled in Hamburg, where he remained until 1858; and then he became editor of the Montagszeitung Berlin, where he
died in 1876.
Among Glassbrenner's other humorous and satirical writings may be mentioned:
- Leben und Treiben der feinen Welt (1834)
- Bilder und Träume aus Wien (2 vols., 1836)
- Gedichte (1851, 5th ed. 1870)
- Neuer Reineke Fuchs (1846, 4th ed. 1870)
- Die verkehrte Welt (1857, 6th ed. 1873)
- Kaspar der Mensch (1850)
- Berliner Volksleben (3 vols., illustrated; Leipzig, 1847-1851)
- Lachende Kinder (14th ed., 1884)
- Sprechende Tiere (20th ed., Hamburg, 1899).
References
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