Johann Karl Wezel Explained

Johann Karl Wezel
Birth Date:31 October 1747
Birth Place:Sondershausen, Germany
Death Place:Sondershausen, Germany
Occupation:writer
Nationality:German
Movement:Enlightenment
Notableworks:Belphegor

Johann Karl Wezel (October 31, 1747, in Sondershausen, Germany  - January 28, 1819, in Sondershausen), also Johann Carl Wezel, was a German poet, novelist, and philosopher of the Enlightenment.

Life

Born the son of domestic servants, Wezel studied Theology, Law, Philosophy, and Philology at the University of Leipzig. Early philosophical influences include John Locke and Julien Offray de La Mettrie. After positions as a tutor at the courts of Bautzen and Berlin, Wezel lived as a freelance writer. A short stay in Vienna did not result in him getting employed by the local, national theater. He thus moved back to Leipzig and, in 1793, to Sondershausen, which he did not leave again until he died in 1819.[1] [2]

Although his works were extremely successful when published, Wezel was almost forgotten when he died. His rediscovery in the second half of the 20th century is mainly due to German author Arno Schmidt who published a radio essay about him in 1959.[3] [4]

Works

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Meid, Volker: Reclams Lexikon der deutschsprachigen Autoren, Stuttgart 2001
  2. Klingenberg, Anneliese: Afterword in Wezel, Lebensgeschichte Tobias Knauts, Berlin and Weimar 1990
  3. Web site: Biography on the website of the Wezel Society Sondershausen . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928004720/http://www.karl-heinz-herrmann.de/wezel/wezel.php . 2007-09-28 . 2008-08-10.
  4. Prütting, Lenz: Bibliographical note to Wezel, Belphegor, Frankfurt am Main 1984