Bernhard von Beskow explained

Birth Date:19 April 1796
Nationality:Swedish
Occupation:Dramatist, historian
Birth Place:Stockholm, Sweden
Honorific Prefix:Baron
Death Place:Stockholm, Sweden

Bernhard von Beskow (19 April 179617 October 1868) was a Swedish dramatist and historian.

Born in Stockholm and the son of a merchant, his vocation for literature was assisted by his tutor, the poet Johan Magnus Stjernstolpe (1777–1831), whose works he edited. He entered the civil service in 1814, was ennobled in 1826 and received the title of baron in 1843. He held high appointments at court, and was, from 1834 onward, perpetual secretary of the Swedish Academy, using his great influence with tact and generosity.[1] He was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1836.[2]

He produced a series of plays based on Swedish history. [3] He was the most respectable exponent of romantic historical play which became popular with Swedish audiences.[4] His works include many academical memoirs, volumes of poems, philosophy and a historical study, Om Gustav den tredje såsom Konung och Menniska (5 vols, 1860–1869, Gustavus III as king and man), printed in the transactions of the Swedish Academy (vols 32, 34, 37, 42, 44).[1]

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition: "His poetry is over-decorated, and his plays are grandiose historical poems in dramatic form. Among them are Erik XIV (2 parts, 1826);[5] and four pieces collected (1836–1838) as Dramatiska Studier, the most famous of which is the tragedy of Torkel Knutsson."[1]

He became a member of Pro Fide et Christianismo, a Christian education society, in 1852.[6]

He died in Stockholm in 1868.

Notes and References

  1. This refers to a notice by Carl David af Wirsén in his Lefnadsteckningar (Stockholm, 1901).
  2. Book: Holland, Henry Scott . 20 Oct 2011. Memoir of Madame Jenny Lind-Goldschmidt: Her Early Art-Life and Dramatic Career, 1820-1851. 9 March 2022. Cambridge . Cambridge University Press . 87. 978-1-108-03868-3.
  3. Book: Scobbie, Irene . 11 May 2010. The A to Z of Sweden. 9 March 2022. Washington, DC. Rowman & Littlefield. 221. 978-0-810-87218-9.
  4. Book: Mortensen, Brita M. E . 2 Jan 1965. Strindberg. 9 March 2022. Cambridge . Cambridge University Press . 92. 978-0-521-09260-9.
  5. Book: Warme, Lars G. . 1 Jan 1996. A History of Swedish Literature. 9 March 2022. Lincoln, Nebraska. U of Nebraska Press. 200. 978-0-803-24750-5.
  6. Web site: Simonsson . Ivar . Bernhard Beskow, von . 2022-06-16 . . sv.