Harro Harring Explained

Harro Paul Harring (28 August 1798 – 14 May 1870) was a German-Danish revolutionary and writer. Often identified as Danish, he was, more accurately, from North Frisia in the Duchy of Schleswig.[1]

Early life

Harring was the son of a farm owner in Schleswig. First employed in the customs, he went to Copenhagen to devote himself to military historical painting. In 1820, he lived in Vienna and Würzburg, and then returned to Denmark. In 1821 he fought in the Greek War of Independence, and then went to Rome, where he stayed a year, then to Vienna in order to concentrate again on art.

Subsequently Harring lived in Switzerland and in Munich, and worked in Vienna as a playwright at the Theater an der Wien. He was in Prague and later went to Warsaw (1828), to enter as a cornet in a Russian lancer regiment.

Itinerant revolutionary

As the 1830, July Revolution broke out in France, Harring returned to Germany, first to Braunschweig, then to Bavaria and Saxony. Expelled as a demagogue, he went to Strasbourg, where he edited the newspaper Das constitutionelle Deutschland and took part in the Hambach Festival (1832), but had to leave again for France.

Harring then lived in the DijonChâlons area, and met Mazzini. He took part in the republican attack on Savoie. He was arrested more than once in Switzerland, and expelled, after which he traveled to London. In May 1837, he was wounded in a gun battle and was living on the island of Helgoland. At that time a British colony where the inhabitants had no vote, his revolutionary views were unwelcome. The island governor Henry King ordered Harring to leave and sent for a warship to remove him.[2] In September 1838, he was on Jersey, in the winter 1838-39 back in Helgoland, then in Bordeaux and Bruges; in 1841 he was in the Netherlands, and later lived in England and France. After a period in Brazil, in August 1843 he traveled to the United States, where he lived as a painter and writer.

The revolutions of 1848 lured Harring back to Germany and to the Danish Duchy of Schleswig. He was in Hamburg, then in Rendsburg, where he edited the newspaper Das Volk. On July 23, 1848, in the middle of the German-Danish civil war over the Duchy of Schleswig, Harring gave a speech in Bredstedt in North Frisia, where he called for a North Frisian Republic. At the end of the speech he drew a sword and quoted the North Frisian saying "better dead than a slave". Harring had positioned himself as an early representative of Scandinavism, was close to the Danish National Liberals and was a convinced Republican.[3] [4] As early as 1846 he had formulated: A united, free fatherland, from the North Cape to the beach of the Eider.[5] So he quickly came into conflict with the German-oriented Schleswig-Holstein movement, which demanded annexation to Germany. In 1849, he was banished, and went to Christiania. His revolutionary writings on Norway incited the country to insurrection against its monarchical constitution. He had to leave in May 1850.

Later life

Harring first went to back to Copenhagen, and then again to London, where he participated in a European "democratic central committee", in a poor condition. When he went to Hamburg in the year 1854, he was immediately arrested, and only through the mediation of the American consul was he able to go to America, staying until 1856 in Rio Janeiro; and then returned to the United Kingdom. From Jersey, he asked the Danish government to grant him just one place on home ground. He lived alternately in London and Jersey.

Towards the end of his life, Harring suffered from mental illness. On 25 May 1870, he was found lying dead on the floor of his bedroom in Jersey.[6] [7]

He had poisoned himself with phosphorus, from matches.

Works

Harring was a prolific writer, of novels, drama and political verse. He published an autobiography in 1828, as Rhongar Jarr: Fahrten eines Friesen in Dänemark, Deutschland, Ungarn, Holland, Frankreich, Griechenland, Italien und der Schweiz.[8] Karl Marx, in order to diminish other German revolutionaries in the same mould, mocked Harring's memoirs as developing an archetype (Urbild) to which others (meaning Gottfried Kinkel, Arnold Ruge, and Gustav Struve in particular) sought to conform.[9]

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ladies in the Laboratory 2. 1 January 2004. Scarecrow Press. 978-0-8108-4979-2. 154.
  2. Book: Rüger . Jan . Helgoland: Britain, Germany, and the Struggle for the North Sea. 23 May 2019 . Oxford University Press . 9780199672479 . 35 .
  3. Peter Mathews: Harro Harring - Rebell der Freiheit. Europa-Verlage, Berlin 2017, p. 360
  4. Wilhelm Ladewig: Harro Harring og Skandinavismen. Dansk-Frisisk Selskab. Haderslev 1950, p. 19
  5. Wilhelm Ladewig: Harro Harring og Skandinavismen, Dansk-Frisisk Selskab. Haderslev 1950, p. 21
  6. "Suicide of Paul Harro Harring, a Danish Political Exile, at Jersey", Palmer's Index to "The Times" Newspaper, June 30, 1870, p. 107
  7. Henrik Cavling, Fra Amerika, Vol. 1 (1897), p. 142: "Den 25. Maj 1870 begik Harro Harring Selvmord i Jersey, England."
  8. Book: Harro Harring. Rhongar Jarr: Fahrten eines Friesen in Dänemark, Deutschland, Ungarn, Holland, Frankreich, Griechenland, Italien und der Schweiz. 1-4. 1828.
  9. Book: Siegbert Salomon Prawer. Siegbert Salomon Prawer. Karl Marx and World Literature. 1976. Oxford University Press. 0-19-815745-2. 190.