|
Gerold Tietz ( * November 11, 1941, in Horka () near Dauba ((チェコ語:Dubá)), northern Bohemia/Sudetenland July 24, 2009, in Esslingen, Germany) was a German author. == Biography == Gerold Tietz was born in Bohemia. As a child he and his family were banished. They first moved to the federal state of Bavaria in Germany, and later to Baden-Württemberg. He studied history, politics and French in Tübingen, Berlin and Paris. Gerold Tietz held a doctor's degree in history. During the last decades he lived in Esslingen and worked in the nearby city of Wendlingen as a grammar school teacher. He published his first book in 1989. In 2006 he received the first prize for prose by the ''Künstlergilde Esslingen'', and he was elected to become a member of the ''Sudetendeutsche Akademie der Wissenschaften und Künste'' (Sudeten German academy of science and art). In 2007 he received the ''Sudetendeutscher Kulturpreis für Literatur'' (prize for literature awarded by the Sudeten German organisation). Gerold Tietz is one of the few writers to address the banishments of the 20th century in the region of Bohemia critically from all sides, avoiding to subjectively consider only one side as aggressor and the other as victim. His wife Anne Birk was also an author. The couple was childless. Anne Birk died just a few days after her husband (July 29, 2009).〔ROGEON Verlag (publishing house)〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Gerold Tietz」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|