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・ Die Horen (Morawietz)
・ Die Horen (Schiller)
・ Die Hoërskool Rustenburg
・ Die Huldigung der Künste
・ Die Humpty-Dumpty-Maschine der totalen Zukunft
・ Die Hydronauten
・ Die Hölle muss warten
・ Die Ideale (Liszt)
・ Die in Cries
・ Die in Your Arms
・ Die Insel
・ Die Israeliten in der Wüste
・ Die Jagd
・ Die Jagd nach dem Stiefel
・ Die Jakobsleiter
Die Judenbuche
・ Die Jungen vom Kranichsee
・ Die Jungfrau auf dem Dach
・ Die Jüdin von Toledo
・ Die Kandidaat
・ Die Karpathen
・ Die Karte mit dem Luchskopf
・ Die Kassierer
・ Die Katakombe
・ Die Kathrin
・ Die keusche Susanne
・ Die Kinder
・ Die Kinder der Heide
・ Die Kinder vom Alstertal
・ Die Kleinen und die Bösen


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Die Judenbuche : ウィキペディア英語版
Die Judenbuche

''Die Judenbuche'' (''The Jew's Beech'') is a novella written by Annette von Droste-Hülshoff and first published in 1842. The beech tree becomes a significant symbol in the story.
It has been considered as potentially one of the first murder mysteries and is indeed often viewed as a crime thriller or Gothic fiction. The book is full of implications and red herrings while there is no definitive answer as to what actually happened.
The story is based on a real-life 18th-century report provided by Annette von Droste-Hülshoff's uncle, the agronomist and writer August von Haxthausen. The events take place in the village of B. (''Dorf B.'') in the Westphalian mountains, which represents Bellersen in the former Prince-Bishopric of Paderborn, today part of the town of Brakel. The plot reflects the conditions of anarchy, bigotry, and antisemitism in a microstate's society of the disintegrating Holy Roman Empire.
== Characters ==
Friedrich Mergel
The main character of the novella, whose life we follow from beginning to end. It is never conclusively proved, but he is accused of the murder of the Jew Aaron, who vanished from his home. Friedrich also had to give evidence in the inquest into the murder of Brandis.
Margreth Mergel
His mother Margreth (maiden name Semmler) was the second wife of Hermann Mergel. We learn that she died insane, literally driven mad by the tragic events of her life, mistreated by her husband and abandoned by her beloved son.
Hermann Mergel
Friedrich's father, a drunkard, beat both his wives, while there is also an implication that he raped Margreth. However, he sincerely loved his son and always brought him little treats. Returning drunk in the night, he died of hypothermia during a winter storm when Friedrich was nine years old.
Simon Semmler
Margreth's brother, a bachelor, who adopts his nephew Friedrich when his father died. He is shown to be a bad influence, as Friedrich's personality undergoes dramatic changes after associating with him. Simon seems to be involved in illegal logging within the surrounding forests. He may be the father of Johannes.
Johannes Niemand ("John Nobody")
A mysterious character, who seems to become Friedrich's shadow. He is Simon's pig herdboy, and it is implied that he is also his illegitimate son. He is very similar physically to Friedrich, as shown when his mother mistakes the two on their first meeting. He and Friedrich disappear on the same day.
Brandis
A forester who is found dead in the woods with an axe in his head. One reading of the novella is that Friedrich killed him, as they had an unfriendly encounter shortly before and he later appears frightened when confronted with the hatchet, but probably Simon is the murderer, using an old axe of his that Friedrich recognised.
Aaron
The Jew Aaron was a usurer who sold Friedrich the pocket watch which, seemingly, belonged to Franz Ebel first. He sold the watch on credit and had not received payment for some time. He publicly demands payment at a wedding reception, humiliating Friedrich. Aaron was found slain under a beech three days later, becoming the second murder victim in the story.
A local historian, Horst-D. Krus, maintains that Seligman Salomon Archenhold was the victim found murdered by the beech tree.〔Horst-D. Krus, ''Mordsache Soistmann Berend: Zum historischen Hintergrund der Novelle ''Die Judenbuche'' von Annette von Droste-Hülshoff''. Münster: Aschendorff, 1990.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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