Quick Facts
Born:
Nov. 7, 1750, Bramstedt, Holstein
Died:
Dec. 5, 1819, Schloss Sondermühlen, near Osnabrück, Hanover (aged 69)
Notable Works:
“Geschichte der Religion Jesu Christi”

Friedrich Leopold, Graf zu Stolberg-Stolberg (born Nov. 7, 1750, Bramstedt, Holstein—died Dec. 5, 1819, Schloss Sondermühlen, near Osnabrück, Hanover) was a German lyric poet of the Sturm und Drang (Storm and Stress) and early Romantic periods.

Stolberg and his brother Christian, noblemen who were actually Danish subjects, studied law at Halle and at Göttingen, where in 1772 both became members of the Göttinger Hain, a group that met to discuss their poems and to further the ideals of friendship, virtue, freedom, love of fatherland, and interest in Germanic history. The two were caught up in the revolutionary mood of the times and wrote stirring odes to freedom and fatherland. A book of poems by the brothers, Gedichte, appeared in 1779. But Friedrich’s verse also has a pastoral, idyllic quality that ties his work to the Romantics. The combination of revolutionary and pacifist sentiments in Stolberg’s poems is striking.

Stolberg entered the diplomatic service in 1777 and lived in Copenhagen and Berlin. After several years of increasing religiosity, he converted to Roman Catholicism in 1800. He was active in a group of Westphalian Catholics working to develop Romanticism. In addition to poetry, Stolberg wrote travel books and theoretical literary essays and translated Homer’s Iliad (1778) and tragedies by Aeschylus (1802). His final work was the immense Geschichte der Religion Jesu Christi, 15 vol. (1806–18; “History of the Religion of Jesus Christ”), which covered the development of Christianity up until the year 430. It was continued (53 vol., 1825–64) by F. von Kerz and J.N. Brischar.

Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) only confirmed photograph of Emily Dickinson. 1978 scan of a Daguerreotype. ca. 1847; in the Amherst College Archives. American poet. See Notes:
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This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Sturm und Drang, (German: “Storm and Stress”), German literary movement of the late 18th century that exalted nature, feeling, and human individualism and sought to overthrow the Enlightenment cult of Rationalism. Goethe and Schiller began their careers as prominent members of the movement.

The exponents of the Sturm und Drang were profoundly influenced by the thought of Rousseau and Johann Georg Hamann, who held that the basic verities of existence were to be apprehended through faith and the experience of the senses. The young writers also were influenced by the works of the English poet Edward Young, the pseudo-epic poetry of James Macpherson’s “Ossian,” and the recently translated works of Shakespeare.

Sturm und Drang was intimately associated with the young Goethe. While a student at Strasbourg, he made the acquaintance of Johann Gottfried von Herder, a former pupil of Hamann, who interested him in Gothic architecture, German folk songs, and Shakespeare. Inspired by Herder’s ideas, Goethe embarked upon a period of extraordinary creativity. In 1773 he published a play based upon the 16th-century German knight, Götz von Berlichingen, and collaborated with Herder and others on the pamphlet “Von deutscher Art und Kunst,” which was a kind of manifesto for the Sturm und Drang. His novel Die Leiden des jungen Werthers (1774; The Sorrows of Young Werther), which epitomized the spirit of the movement, made him world famous and inspired a host of imitators.

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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German literature: Late Enlightenment (Sturm und Drang)

The dramatic literature of the Sturm und Drang was its most characteristic product. Indeed, the very name of the movement was borrowed from a play by Friedrich von Klinger, who had been inspired by the desire to present on the stage figures of Shakespearean grandeur, subordinating structural considerations to character and rejecting the conventions of French Neoclassicism, which had been imported by the critic Johann Christop von Gottsched. With the production of Die Räuber (1781; The Robbers) by Schiller, the drama of the Sturm und Drang entered a new phase.

Self-discipline was not a tenet of the Sturm und Drang, and the movement soon exhausted itself. Its two most gifted representatives, Goethe and Schiller, went on to produce great works that formed the body and soul of German classical literature.