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Hermann und Thusnelda

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Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock by Johann Caspar Füssli (1750)
Hermann (Arminius) and Thusnelda by Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein (1822)

"Hermann und Thusnelda" is a poem written in 1752 by Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock exalting the Cheruscan chieftain Arminius, whom Johannes Turmair and Martin Luther named Hermann in the 16th century,[1] and his wife Thusnelda. The poem was set to music by Franz Schubert in 1815 (D 322).[2]

History

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Since the rediscovery of Tacitus's Germania in the 16th century, Germans have exalted the Germanic tribes as their direct ancestors. They especially praised German liberty defended by Arminius in 9 A.D. when three legions of the Roman Empire were defeated on Germanic soil, thus putting an end to Roman plans to subjugate Germania.[3]

In Klopstock's poem, blood-stained Hermann returns from battle and is praised by his wife Thusnelda, who is happy about the death of the Roman soldiers. Her husband's victory heavily delights her making her confess that her love for Hermann has never been as ardent as now after the lurid fight. Arminius himself only regrets that Roman emperor Augustus has not been present as he would have slain him.

Klopstock wrote several other dramas and poems about "Germany's liberator":

In his later years, Christoph Willibald Gluck got interested in patriotic Germanic sujets and notably in Klopstock's œuvres. Hence, he had planned to set the monumental work Hermanns Schlacht to music, but he died before he could realize it.[4]

Lyrics

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ernst Baltrusch [de] et al. 2000 Jahre Varusschlacht. Geschichte – Archäologie – Legenden. Walter de Gruyter: Berlin/Boston, 2012. Page 223.
  2. ^ Dürhammer, Ilija. Schuberts literarische Heimat: Dichtung und Literatur-Rezeption der Schubert-Freunde. Böhlau-Verlag: Wien, Köln, Weimar, 1999. Page 369.
  3. ^ Alexander Schmidt, Vaterlandsliebe und Religionskonflikt: Politische Diskurse im Alten Reich, Brill Publishers, p. 125.
  4. ^ Von Kleist, Heinrich. Die Hermannsschlacht. In einer Bearbeitung von Rudolph Genée. Mit Erläuterungen von Alfred Heil. Severus-Verlag: Hamburg, 2001. Page 136.
  5. ^ Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb. Klopstocks Werke. Erster Band. Georg Joachim Göschen: Leipzig, 1798. Page 102.
  6. ^ Translated by Charles Timothy Brooks.
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