Johann Gottfried Schnabel | |
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Born | November 7, 1692 Sandersdorf, Germany |
Died | date of death unknown (ca. 1751-1758) |
Pen name | Gisander |
Occupation | writer |
Nationality | German |
Notable work(s) | Insel Felsenburg |
Johann Gottfried Schnabel (b. November 7, 1692 in Sandersdorf near Bitterfeld, Germany, d. ca. 1751-1758) was a German writer best known for his novel Insel Felsenburg. He published his works under the pen name Gisander.
An orphan since 1694, Schnabel was raised by relatives.[1] After an apprenticeship to a barber from 1706 to 1709, Schnabel worked as a Feldsher, a military barber-surgeon, in the regiments of Wolfenbüttel and Saxony until 1717.[2] In this capacity he took part in the War of the Spanish Succession. In 1719, Schnabel settled as a master barber in Querfurt. From 1724 he was court barber in the County of Stolberg-Wernigerode, where he was promoted to valet de chambre in 1729 and to court agent around 1737.[2] The year 1750 shows the last record of Schnabel's life; his death date and place are unknown.
Contents |
The Insel Felsenburg (literally: Rock Castle Island) was originally published in 1731 under the title
The title was only in 1828 shortened into Insel Felsenburg when republished in an abridged version by German romanticist Ludwig Tieck.
The title summarizes the book. It is about a seaman who is shipwrecked on the coast of an island, where he marries and starts a family of 300. It combines themes of the then-popular genre of the robinsonade with elements of a social utopia.
The book was highly successful when it was published. German author Arno Schmidt wrote in a review to a reissue of the book: "It is attested that around and after 1750 the library of a commoner consisted of at least two volumes: the Bible and the Insel Felsenburg."[3] Due to the success of the original work, Schnabel published three sequels of decreasing quality.