Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Aloys Blumauer

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Aloys Blumauer


Role
  
Poet

Aloys Blumauer wwwpayerdereligionskritikblumauerlogogif

Born
  
22 December 1755 (
1755-12-22
)

Died
  
March 16, 1798, Vienna, Austria

Aloys Blumauer, also known as Alois Blumauer or Johannes Aloysius Blumauer, (21 or 22 December 1755 Steyr - 16 March 1798 Vienna) was an Austrian poet.

Contents

Aloys Blumauer Aloys Blumauer Wikipedia

Biography

His works, which are chiefly coarse satires on the clergy and on the Jesuits (of which he himself had become a member a year before its dissolution in 1773), enjoyed a wide popularity. He is remembered, however, chiefly for his Abenteuer des frommen Helden Æneas (1784–88; published with introduction and commentary by E. Griesbach, 1872), a coarse travesty on Vergil's Aeneid. His complete works (Sämmtliche Werke) appeared after his death in four volumes (1801–03; republished 1884). Blumauer was also an acquaintance of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, collaborating on the song "Lied der Freiheit" (KV. 506) with him in 1786.

References

Aloys Blumauer Wikipedia