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・ Friedrich Walchner
・ Friedrich Waller
・ Friedrich Wannieck
・ Friedrich Wasmann
・ Friedrich Weber
・ Friedrich Weber (entomologist)
・ Friedrich Weber (general)
・ Friedrich Weber (veterinarian)
・ Friedrich Wegener
・ Friedrich Wehmer
・ Friedrich Weidemann
・ Friedrich Spanheim
・ Friedrich Spanheim the Younger
・ Friedrich Specht
・ Friedrich Spee
Friedrich Spielhagen
・ Friedrich Spitta
・ Friedrich St. Florian
・ Friedrich Stadler
・ Friedrich Staphylus
・ Friedrich Staps
・ Friedrich Stelzner
・ Friedrich Stephan
・ Friedrich Sthamer
・ Friedrich Stickler
・ Friedrich Stohmann
・ Friedrich Stolz
・ Friedrich Strack
・ Friedrich Strasser
・ Friedrich Strohm


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Friedrich Spielhagen : ウィキペディア英語版
Friedrich Spielhagen

Friedrich Spielhagen (February 24, 1829 – February 25, 1911) was a German novelist, literary theorist and translator. He tried a number of careers in his early 20s, but at 25 began writing and translating. His best known novel is ''Sturmflut'' and his novel ''In Reih' und Glied'' was quite successful in Russia.
==Life==
Spielhagen was born in Magdeburg and brought up in Stralsund, where his father was appointed a government architect in 1835. He attended the gymnasium (roughly equivalent to an American high school) in Stralsund, studied law, and subsequently literature and philosophy at the universities of Berlin, Bonn and Greifswald.
At Bonn, he was a member of the Burschenschaft Franconia, which at that time also included Carl Schurz, Johannes Overbeck, Julius Schmidt, Carl Otto Weber, Ludwig Meyer and Adolf Strodtmann. In his ''Reminiscences'', Schurz recalls Spielhagen as a person “in whom, in spite of his somewhat distant and reserved character, we all recognized a man of rare intellectuality and moral elevation, and who later became a star of the first magnitude among the novelists of the century.”〔

After leaving university, he tried his hand at being a private tutor, an actor, a soldier and a teacher in a school in Leipzig, but upon his father's death in 1854 he devoted himself entirely to writing. In 1859, he became editor of the ''Zeitung für Norddeutschland'' (Newspaper for Northern Germany) in Hannover, and then, in 1862, moved to Berlin where he later edited ''Westermanns illustrirte deutsche Monatshefte'' (Westermann's Illustrated German Monthly) 1878-84.
As a translator, Spielhagen rendered into German George William Curtis's ''Howadji'', Ralph Waldo Emerson's ''English Traits'', a selection of American poems (1859; 2d ed. 1865), and William Roscoe's ''Lorenzo de' Medici''. He also translated from the French minor works of Jules Michelet: ''L'amour'', ''La femme'', ''La mer''.〔
He married Therese Boutin (1835–1900) with whom he had a daughter, Elsa Spielhagen (1866–1942). He died on 25 February 1911. Streets are named after him in his hometown of Magdeburg, as well as the three cities in which he lived: Stralsund, Hannover, and Berlin.

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