Friedrich von Logau

Friedrich Freiherr von Logau (January 1605 – July 24, 1655), German epigrammatist, was born at Brockut, near Nimptsch, in Silesia in 1605. He who never called himself Freiherr (baron) was educated at the gymnasium of Brieg and subsequently studied law at the university of Altdorf. He then entered the service of the duke of Brieg. In 1644 he was made ducal councillor. He died at Liegnitz in 1655.

Logau's epigrams, which appeared in two collections under the pseudonym Salomon von Golaw (an anagram of his real name) in 1638 (Erstes Hundert Teutscher Reimensprũche) and 1654 (Deutscher Sinngedichte drei Tausend), show a marvellous range and variety of expression. He had suffered bitterly under the adverse conditions of the time; but his satire is not merely the outcome of personal feeling. In the turbulent age of the Thirty Years' War he was one of the few men who preserved intact his intellectual integrity and judged his contemporaries fairly. He satirized with unsparing hand the court life, the useless bloodshed of the war, the lack of national pride in the German people, and their slavish imitation of the French in customs, dress and speech. He belonged to the Fruitbearing Society (Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft) under the name Der Verkleinernde (literally "the diminishing one"), and regarded himself as a follower of Martin Opitz; but he did not allow such ties to influence his independence or originality.

Logau's Sinngedichte were edited in 1759 by G. E. Lessing and K. W. Ramler, who first drew attention to their merits; a second edition appeared in 1791. A critical edition was published in 1872 by G. Eitner, who also edited a selection of Logau's epigrams for the Deutsche Dichter des XVII. Jahrhunderts (vol. iii, 1870); there is also a selection by F.L. Oesterley in Kũrschners Deutsche Nationalliteratur, vol. xxviii. (1885). See H. Denker, Beitrage zur literarischen Würdigung Logaus (1889); W. Heuschkel, Untersuchungen über Ramlers and Lessings Bearbeitung Logauscher Sinngedichte (1901).

Notes

Freiherr was a title, translated as Baron, not a first or middle name. From 1919 Freiherr and its feminine equivalents are no longer titles but part of the surname, following the given name(s) and are not translated. NB: The german barock epigrammatist Friedrich von Logau was not "Freiherr" or "Baron" a single day of his life! See: Seelbach, Karl-Ulrich. Friedrich von Logau: Biographischer Abriss // Althaus, Thomas und Seelbach, Sabine (Hgg.). Salomo in Schlesien. Beiträge zum 400. Geburtstag Friedrich von Logaus (1605—2005). Amsterdam, New York: Rodopi B.V., 2006. (= CHLOE. Beihefte zum Daphnis. Bd. 39). S. 489—490.

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