Friedrich Schiller was a German poets, historian and philosopher
@Historians, Career and Facts
Friedrich Schiller was a German poets, historian and philosopher
Friedrich Schiller born at
In 1790, he married Charlotte von Lengefeld. The couple had four children.
He died at the age of 45 due to tuberculosis.
In 1839, a statue of him was built in the city of Stuttgart. It was later renamed Schillerplatz.
He was born as Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller in Marbach am Neckar, W�rttemberg, Holy Roman Empire. His parents were, Johann Kaspar Schiller, a military doctor and Elisabeth Dorothea Kodwei�.
In 1763, his father was appointed as a recruiting officer at Schwabisch Gmund, Germany. The family hence relocated to Germany and settled down in the small town of Lorch.
In Lorch, he attended primary school but was rather unhappy with the quality of education and often missed classes. Since his parents wanted him to become a pastor; he was instructed in Latin and Greek by the village pastor.
In 1766, the family resettled in Ludwigsburg, where his father took up an assignment. Here he came under the notice of Karl Eugen, Duke of Wurttemberg. He later graduated with a degree in medicine from the Karlsschule Stuttgart.
His first play, ‘The Robbers’ was written while he was still in school. It was published in the year 1781 and the following year, it opened in Germany. The play was primarily about a conflict between two brothers.
In 1780, he was appointed as a regimental doctor in Stuttgart, Baden-W�rttemberg, Germany. He was not very happy with the job and hence quit the same without permission to watch the opening of his play, ‘The Robbers’.
Since he left his regiment without any prior permission, he was later arrested and was penalized with a sentence of 14 days. He was also prohibited from publishing any of his works in future.
In 1782, he escaped to Weimar, through Frankfurt, Mannheim, Leipzig, and Dresden. The following year, his full length drama, ‘Fiesco' premiered at Bonn, Germany.
In 1784, his five-act play titled ‘Intrigue and Love', premiered at the Schauspiel Frankfurt. In later years, the play was translated in French and English.
In 1785, he came out with the poem titled, 'Ode to Joy'. The following year, he came out with his work of prose titled, ‘Der Verbrecher aus verlorener Ehre', written in the form of a crime report.
His play, 'The Robbers' is regarded as one of the first European melodramas. The work provides a window for the societal viciousness and scrutinizes the inequalities that result out of class, religion and economic status differences in people.