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Fritz Reuter

 

Reuter, Fritz (Stavenhagen, Mecklenburg, 1810-74, Eisenach), one of the most talented German dialect writers, was a son of the mayor of Stavenhagen. He studied law, first at Rostock University and then at Jena, where he became a member of one of the student corporations, which were then officially frowned upon as breeding-places of subversive views. When, after a student attack on a military guardhouse in Frankfurt (April 1833), new repressive measures were taken, Reuter, then staying in Berlin, was one of the victims. He was arrested by the Prussian police in October 1833, detained for more than three years on remand (Untersuchungshaft), and in January 1837 was condemned to death, a sentence which was simultaneously commuted to thirty years' imprisonment.

This astonishing sentence for treason, based on suspicion of membership of a non-existent conspiracy, was served in various Prussian prisons (Silberberg, Glogau, Magdeburg, and Graudenz) until in 1839 repeated pleas from the father, supported by the Mecklenburg authorities, led to Reuter's transfer to the Mecklenburg prison of Dömitz. In 1840 he was released. After an unsatisfactory attempt to resume his studies, he worked on the land in Mecklenburg until 1850, when he became a private tutor in Treptow. There in 1851 he married Luise Kuntze.

Reuter's first book, the dialect poetical anecdotes Läuschen un Rimels (1853) proved a success, and a second volume (1858) was also well received. Reuter turned to dialect verse narratives with De Reis nah Belligen (1855), Kein Hüsung (1857, a sombre tale of serfdom), and Hanne Nüte (1860). In 1856 he moved to Neubrandenburg with the intention of continuing to give private tuition, but he abandoned this plan in order to devote himself entirely to literature. Schurr-Murr, a volume of short narratives, appeared in 1861.

Reuter's first novel, Ut de Franzosentid, set in Mecklenburg in 1812 at the time of the Napoleonic Wars, appeared in 1859; a remarkably detached, and in places even humorous, account of his years in prison followed in 1862 as Ut mine Festungstid; an autobiographical novel based on his years on the land concluded this group of works ( Ut mine Stromtid, 1862-4). He gave these works and others such as Dörchläuchting (1866) the generic title Olle Kamellen (‘Old Tales’). In 1863 Reuter moved to Eisenach, which remained his home for the rest of a life that was henceforth diversified only by a rather adventurous journey to the Mediterranean and the Near East (Corfu, Smyrna, Constantinople, Venice). He wrote three comedies, all of which reached the stage (Onkel Jakob und Onkel Jochen, Blücher in Teterow (both 1857), Die drei Langhänse, 1858). Reuter, whose principal novels draw extensively upon his own experiences and those of his family, had a considerable gift for the creation of character in a small town or rural environment, a sense of fun, and a pervading good humour, all of which make him one of the most successful of German comic writers.

Reuter's collected works and posthumous papers (15 vols.) were published with a biography by A. Wilbrandt in 1861-75, Lustspiele und Polterabendgedichte (2 vols.) were added 1878 Gesammelte Werke und Briefe (9 vols., including biography), ed. K. Batt, appeared in 1967, selections, transposed into German by F. and B. Minssen, in 1977 (Gezeiten des Lebens and Das Leben auf dem Lande).

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Fritz Reuter
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Reuter, Fritz (Heinrich Ludwig Christian Friedrich Reuter) (frĭts roi'tər, hīn'rĭkh lūt'vĭkh krĭs'tyän frē'drĭkh), 1810-74, German writer. His tales of Mecklenburg life are among the best of German provincial literature. Reuter's political views brought him a death sentence (1833), later commuted to 30 years' imprisonment. Released in the Prussian amnesty of 1840, he led a wretched life until, in the 1850s, he won recognition with novels, tales, and verse in Low German dialect, or Plattdeutsch. His works, characterized by compassion for the poor and acute understanding of provincial people, include Ut de Franzosentid (1860; tr. In the Year '13, 1867), Ut mine Stromtid (1862-64; tr. Seedtime and Harvest, 1871), and Ut Mine Festungstid [from my prison days] (1863).
Wikipedia: Fritz Reuter
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Fritz Reuter

Fritz Reuter (November 7, 1810 – July 12, 1874) was a German novelist.

Reuter was born at Stavenhagen in Mecklenburg-Schwerin, a small country town where his father was mayor and sheriff (Stadtrichter), and in addition to his official duties carried on the work of a farmer. Fritz Reuter was educated at home by private tutors and subsequently at the gymnasiums of Friedland in Mecklenburg-Strelitz, and of Parchim.

Contents

Early career and imprisonment

In 1831, Reuter began to attend lectures on jurisprudence at the University of Rostock, and in the following year went to the University of Jena. Here he was a member of the political students' club, or German Burschenschaft, and in 1833 was arrested in Berlin by the Prussian government. Although the only charge which could be proved against him was that he had been seen wearing the club's colours, he was condemned to death for high treason. This sentence was commuted by King Frederick William III of Prussia to imprisonment for thirty years in a Prussian fortress. In 1838, through the personal intervention of the Grand Duke of Mecklenburg, he was delivered over to the authorities of his native state, and he spent the next two years in the fortress of Dömitz, but was set free in 1840, when an amnesty was proclaimed after the accession of Frederick William IV to the Prussian throne.

Although Reuter was now thirty years of age, he went to Heidelberg to resume his legal studies, but was forced by his father to give them up when it was found that he paid little attention to his studies. After returning to Mecklenburg, he spent some time with his uncle, a minister at Jabel, and then began working on an estate, in 1842, as Strom (trainee). Finding out, upon his father's death in 1845, that he had been disinherited, he realized that acquiring an estate of his own was out of the question, and he began to write, first in High German, later, with more success, in Low German. In 1850 he settled as a private tutor in the little town of Treptow an der Tollense in Pommerania (today Altentreptow, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern), and was now able to marry Luise Kuntze, the daughter of a Mecklenburg pastor.

Early published works

Reuter's first publication was a collection of miscellaneous poems, written in Low German, entitled Läuschen un Riemels (anecdotes and rhymes, 1853; a second collection followed in 1858). The book, which was received with encouraging favour, was followed by Polterabendgedichte (1855), and De Reis nach Belligen (1855), the latter a humorous epic poem describing the adventures of some Mecklenburg peasants who resolve to go to Belgium (which they never reach) to learn the secrets of modern farming.

In 1856 Reuter left Treptow and established himself at Neubrandenburg, resolving to devote his whole time to literary work. His next book (published in 1858) was Kein Hüsung, a verse epic in which he presents with great force and vividness some of the least attractive aspects of village life in Mecklenburg. This was followed, in 1860, by Hanne Nüte un de lütte Pudel, the last of the works written by Reuter in verse.

In 1861 Reuter's popularity was largely increased by Schurr-Murr, a collection of tales, some of which are in standard German, but this work is of slight importance in comparison with the series of stories, entitled Olle Kamellen ("old stories of bygone days"). The first volume, published in 1860, contained Woans ick tau 'ne Fru kam and Ut de Franzosentid. Ut mine Festungstid (1861) formed the second volume; Ut mine Stromtid (1864) the third, fourth and fifth volumes; and Dörchläuchting (1866) the sixth volume – all written in the Plattdeutsch dialect of the author's home. Woans ick tau 'ne Fru kamm is a bright little tale, in which Reuter tells, in a half serious half bantering tone, how he wooed the lady who became his wife.

Fritz-Reuter-Literaturmuseum, Stavenhagen

In Ut de Franzosentid the scene is laid in and near Stavenhagen in the year 1813, and the characters of the story are associated with the great events of the Napoleonic wars which then stirred the heart of Germany to its depths. Ut mine Festungstid, a narrative of Reuter's hardships during the term of his imprisonment, is no less vigorous either in conception or in style. Both novels have been translated into English by Carl F. Bayerschmidt, Ut mine Festungstid as Seven Years of My Life in 1975, and Ut de Franzosentid as When the French Were Here in 1984.

Later works

The novel Ut mine Stromtid (3 volumes) is by far the greatest of Reuter's writings. The men and women he describes are the men and women he knew in the villages and farmhouses of Mecklenburg, and the circumstances in which he places them are the circumstances by which they were surrounded in actual life. Ut mine Stromtid also presents some of the local aspects of the revolutionary movement of 1848. M. W. MacDowell translated this book from German into English as From my Farming Days in 1878, The better translation is that by Katharine Tyler which predated MacDowell's, appearing, in 1871, in Littell's Living Age, and in 1872 in book form, entitled Seedtime and Harvest.

In 1863 Reuter transferred his residence from Neubrandenburg to Eisenach, after having received an honorary doctorate from Rostock University, and here he died on 12 July 1874.

Reuter's Sämtliche Werke, in 13 volumes, were first published in 1863-1868. To these were added in 1875 two volumes of Nachgelassene Schriften, with a biography by Adolf von Wilbrandt, and in 1878 two supplementary volumes to the works appeared. A popular edition in 7 vols was published in 1877-1878 (last edition, 1902); there are also editions by Karl Friedrich Müller (18 vols, 1905), and Wilhelm Seelmann (7 vols, 1905-1906). Interest in Reuter was revived in the period after World War II, in part through the efforts of Friedrich Griese.

Among the institutions concerning themselves with the works of Reuter are the Fritz Reuter Gesellschaft e.V. in Neubrandenburg, the Fritz-Reuter-Literaturmuseum in Stavenhagen, the Reuter-Wagner-Museum in Eisenach, and the Fritz Reuter Literary Archive (Fritz Reuter Literaturarchiv) Hans-Joachim Griephan in Berlin. The latter archive keeps an index of the letters from and to Fritz Reuter.

References

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain. The article is available here: [1]

External links

Further reading

  • Otto Glagau: Fritz Reuter und seine Dichtungen. Berlin: Lemke, 1866 (2nd ed. Berlin: Grote,1875)
  • Hermann Ebert: Fritz Reuter: sein Leben und seine Werke Güstrow: Opitz, 1874
  • Friedrich Latendorf: Zur Erinnerung an Fritz Reuter: verschollene Gedichte Reuters nebst volkstümlichen und wissenschaftlichen Reuter-Studien. Poesneck: Latendorf, 1879
  • Karl Theodor Gaedertz: Fritz Reuter-Studien. Wismar: Hinstorff, 1890
  • Karl Theodor Gaedertz: Aus Reuters jungen und alten Tagen : Neues über des Dichters Leben und Werke. 3 Bde. Wismar: Hinstorff, 1894-1900
  • Briefe von Fritz Reuter an seinen Vater aus der Schüler-, Studenten-, und Festungszeit (1827 bis 1841) hrsg. von Franz Engel. 2 Bde. Braunschweig: Westermann, 1896
  • Abraham Römer: Fritz Reuter in seinem Leben und Schaffen. Berlin: Mayer & Müller, 1896
  • Gustav Raatz, Wahrheit und Dichtung in Fritz Reuter's Werken: Urbilder bekannter Reuter-Gestalten. Wismar: Hinstorff, 1895
  • Ernst Brandes: Aus Fritz Reuters Leben. 2 Tle. Strasburg i. Westpr.: Fuhrich, 1899-1901 (Wissenschaftliche Beilage zu den Schulnachrichten des Gymansiums Strasburg i. Westpr. 1899, 1901)
  • Karl Friedrich Müller: Der Mecklenburger Volksmund in Fritz Reuters Schriften: Sammlung und Erklärung volksthümlicher Wendungen und sprichwörtlicher Redensarten im Mecklenburgischen Platt. Leipzig: Hesse, 1901

A complete bibliography of Fritz Reuter can be found in the Niederdeutsches Jahrbuch for 1896 and 1902.


 
 
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German Literature Companion. The Oxford Companion to German Literature. Copyright © 1976, 1986, 1997, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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