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Jan Frederik Helmers

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Name
  
Jan Helmers


Role
  
Poet

Jan Frederik Helmers wwwdbnlorgauteursportrethelm006p05gif

Died
  
February 26, 1813, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Jan Frederik Helmers (March 7, 1767 – February 26, 1813), was a Dutch poet born in Amsterdam.

Works

His early poems, Night (1788) and Socrates (1790), were tame and sentimental, but after 1805 he determined, in company with his brother-in-law, Cornelis Loots (1765–1834), to rouse national feeling by a burst of patriotic poetry.

His Poems (2 vols, 1809–1810), but especially his great work The Dutch Nation, a poem in six cantos (1812), created great enthusiasm and enjoyed immense success. Even the published censored version was contentious enough that only his premature death prevented an arrest by the French occupation. He owed his success mainly to the integrity of his patriotism and the opportune moment at which he sounded his counter-blast to the French oppression. His posthumous poems were collected in 1815.

A neighbourhood in Amsterdam is named Helmersbuurt in his honour, built 1891-1902, with not less than three streets called after Helmers: the Eerste, Tweede and Derde Helmersstraat (which would be First, Second and Third Helmers Street in English).

References

Jan Frederik Helmers Wikipedia