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Friedrich Schiller [1759-1805] DEU
Ranked #222 in the top 380 poets
Votes 93%: 97 up, 7 down

Poet, philosopher, physician, historian, and playwright.

Human freedom. Ethics and aesthetics. Sublime. He synthesized the thought of Immanuel Kant with the thought of the German Idealist philosopher, Karl Leonhard Reinhold.

Ability to defy one's animal instincts, such as the drive for self-preservation, when, for example, someone willingly sacrifices themselves for conceptual ideals.

Concept of die schöne Seele (the beautiful soul), a human being whose emotions have been educated by reason, so that Pflicht und Neigung (duty and inclination) are no longer in conflict with one another; thus beauty, for Schiller, is not merely an aesthetic experience, but a moral one as well: the Good is the Beautiful.

Dualism between sensuous and formal drive.

Conflict between man's material, sensuous nature and his capacity for reason.

Great disenchantment Schiller felt about the French Revolution, its degeneration into violence and the failure of successive governments to put its ideals into practice.

Innovative use of dramatic structure and his creation of new forms, such as the melodrama and the bourgeois tragedy.

Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller was born in Marbach, Württemberg, of Lutheran parents. His father, Johannes Kaspar Schiller, was an officer and surgeon.He was ordered by The Duke Karl Eugen (Charles II) to attend the military academy instead of studying theology.  The strict discipline, only strengthened his longing for freedom. Schiller studied first law and entered then the newly created medical department, but was dismissed from the academy in 1780 after writing a controversial essay on religion, On Relation Between Man`s Animal and Spiritual Nature. At 21 he was then forced to join his father`s regiment.

Schiller though continued to write despite opposition from his father. 

His first drama, Die Rauber, (The Robbers)  published in 1781, about a noble outlaw, Karl Moor, who has rejected the values of his father gained immediate success among young students. 

Pressured by the Duke for his `Sturm und Drang` writings, he fled to Württemberg. In 1783 he was given a post of theater-poet at the Mannheim theater, but he lost it in 1784.

The theme of the conflict between a father and son continued in Don Carlos(1787). The story was about the eldest son of Philip II of Spain, who is torn between love and court intrigues. He was inspired by Charlotte von Kalb, a married woman,who was portrayed in Don Carlos as Elizabeth of Valois.

Through Goethe`s influence, he was appointed professor of history at Jena. During 1787 and 1792 he wrote on historical subjects, among others the history of the Thirty Years War (1791-93). 

In 1790 he married Charlotte von Lengefeldt

Schiller was forced to give up in 1791 his professional duties because of pneumonia and pleurisy. He continued to write and in the 1790s Schiller wrote philosophical poems and studies about philosophy and aesthetics under the influence of Kant.

Horrified by the aftermath of the French Revolution he rejected Among a homage offered to him by the Jacobines and emphasized the humanistic, preserving forces of art. 

He assisted Goethe in Weimar in the direction of the Court Theater by adapting many plays for that stage. Schiller died on May 9, 1805, at the age of 46 in Weimar. 

Schiller`s best-known works is An Die Freude (Ode to Joy), later set to music by Ludwig van Beethoven in his Choral Symphony 

The dramatic trilogy WALLENSTEIN Wallenstein(1796-99) depicted the tumultuous period of the Thirty Years War. 

The historical drama Maria Stuart(1800) was about Queen Elizabet I of England and the last days of Mary Queen of Scots, when she was held captive in the Castle of Fothernghay. 

In Wilhelm Tell (1803), about the Swiss hero of that name, Schiller paid tribute to freedom and the dignity of men living close to nature.

Deism, Freemasons, Gothic, National, Philosophy, Romanticism, Slavery, Sturm und Drang

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1890-1960
RUS
Boris Pasternak
→ translated Friedrich Schiller
1564-1616
ENG
William Shakespeare
← translated by Friedrich Schiller
1749-1831
DEU
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
← friend of Friedrich Schiller
1772-1834
ENG
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
← translated by Friedrich Schiller
1877-1962
DEU/CHE
Hermann Hesse
← influenced by Friedrich Schiller


WorkLangRating
The Gods Of Greece
eng
8
Ode an die Freude
ger
5
Female Judgment
eng
2
Friend And Foe
eng
2
Punch Song
eng
2
The Complaint Of Ceres
eng
2
The Fight With The Dragon
eng
2
The Genius With The Inverted Torch
eng
2
The Hostage
eng
2
Elegy On The Death Of A Young Man
eng
1
Geniality
eng
1
Honors
eng
1
Inside And Outside
eng
1
Light And Warmth
eng
1
Love And Desire
eng
1
Parables And Riddles
eng
1
The Battle
eng
1
The Circle Of Nature
eng
1
The Forum Of Woman
eng
1
The Imitator
eng
1
The Maiden From Afar
eng
1
The Philosophica
eng
1
To Astronomers
eng
1
To Emma
eng
1
To The Spring
eng
1
A Funeral Fantasie
eng
0
A Peculiar Ideal
eng
0
A Problem
eng
0
Amalia
eng
0
Archimedes
eng
0
Astronomical
eng
0
Beauteous Individualit
eng
0
Breadth And Depth
eng
0
Carthage
eng
0
Cassandra
eng
0
Columbus
eng
0
Count Eberhard, The Groaner Of Wurtembert. A War Song
eng
0
Dangerous Consequences
eng
0
Difference Of Station
eng
0
Different Destinies
eng
0
Dithyramb
eng
0
Elysium
eng
0
Evening
eng
0
Fame And Duty
eng
0
Fantasie -- To Laura
eng
0
Feast Of Victory
eng
0
Fortune And Wisdom
eng
0
Fridolin (The Walk To The Iron Factory)
eng
0
Friendship
eng
0
Genius
eng
0
German Faith
eng
0
Germany And Her Princes
eng
0
Greekism
eng
0
Group From Tartarus
eng
0
Hero And Leander
eng
0
Honor To Woman
eng
0
Hope
eng
0
Human Knowledge
eng
0
Hymn To Joy
eng
0
Jove To Hercules
eng
0
Longing
eng
0
Majestas Populi
eng
0
Melancholy -- To Laura
eng
0
My Antipathy
eng
0
My Faith
eng
0
Nadowessian Death-Lament
eng
0
Naenia
eng
0
Ode To Joy
eng
0
Ode To Joy -- With Translation
eng
0
Odysseus
eng
0
Participatio
eng
0
Political Precept
eng
0
Pompeii And Herculaneum
eng
0
Punch Song (To be sung in the Northern Countries)
eng
0
Rapture -- To Laura
eng
0
Resignation
eng
0
Rousseau
eng
0
Shakespeare`
eng
0
The Agreement
eng
0
The Alpine Hunter
eng
0
The Animating Principle
eng
0
The Antique To The Northern Wanderer
eng
0
The Antiques At Paris
eng
0
The Artists
eng
0
The Assignation
eng
0
The Bards Of Olden Time
eng
0
The Best State
eng
0
The Best State Constitution
eng
0
The Celebrated Woman - An Epistle By A Married Man
eng
0
The Conflict
eng
0
The Count Of Hapsburg
eng
0
The Cranes Of Ibycus
eng
0
The Dance
eng
0
The Difficult Union
eng
0
The Division Of The Earth
eng
0
The Driver
eng
0
The Duty Of All
eng
0
The Eleusinian Festival
eng
0
The Fairest Apparition
eng
0
The Favor Of The Moment
eng
0
The Flowers
eng
0
The Fortune-Favo
eng
0
The Four Ages Of The World
eng
0
The Fugitive
eng
0
The German Art
eng
0
The Glove - A Tale
eng
0
The Greatness Of The World
eng
0
The Honorable
eng
0
The Ideal And The Actual Life
eng
0
The Ideals
eng
0
The Iliad
eng
0
The Immutable
eng
0
The Infanticide
eng
0
The Invincible Armada
eng
0
The Key
eng
0
The Knight Of Toggenburg
eng
0
The Knights Of St. John
eng
0
The Lay Of The Bell
eng
0
The Lay Of The Mountain
eng
0
The Learned Workman
eng
0
The Maid Of Orleans
eng
0
The Maiden`s Lament
eng
0
The Meeting
eng
0
The Merchant
eng
0
The Moral Force
eng
0
The Observer
eng
0
The Pilgrim
eng
0
The Playing Infant
eng
0
The Poetry Of Life
eng
0
The Power Of Song
eng
0
The Power Of Woman
eng
0
The Present Generation
eng
0
The Proverbs Of Confucius
eng
0
The Ring Of Polycrates - A Ballad
eng
0
The Secret
eng
0
The Sexes
eng
0
The Sower
eng
0
The Triumph Of Love
eng
0
The Two Guides Of Life - The Sublime And The Beautiful
eng
0
The Two Paths Of Virtue
eng
0
The Veiled Statue At Sais
eng
0
The Virtue Of Woman
eng
0
The Walk
eng
0
The Words Of Belief
eng
0
The Words Of Error
eng
0
The Youth By The Brook
eng
0
Thekla - A Spirit Voice
eng
0
To A Moralist
eng
0
To A World-Reform
eng
0
To Laura (Mystery Of Reminiscence
eng
0
To Laura At The Harpsichord
eng
0
To Minna
eng
0
To My Friends
eng
0
To Mystics
eng
0
To Proselytizer
eng
0
To The Muse
eng
0
Two Descriptions
eng
0
Untitled 01
eng
0
Untitled 02
eng
0
Untitled 03
eng
0
Variety
eng
0
Votive Tablets
eng
0
Wisdom And Prudence
eng
0
Worth And The Worthy
eng
0
Written In A Young Lady`s Album
eng
0

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