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・ Hans Leip
・ Hans Leistikow
・ Hans Leitert
・ Hans Lem
・ Hans Lengsfelder
・ Hans Lenk
・ Hans Leo Hassler
・ Hans Leo Przibram
・ Hans Leonhard Schäufelein
・ Hans Leopold Meyer
・ Hans Leu the Elder
・ Hans Leussink
・ Hans Leutelt
・ Hans Leutenegger
・ Hans Lewy
Hans Leybold
・ Hans Leyendecker
・ Hans Liesche
・ Hans Lietzau
・ Hans Lietzmann
・ Hans Liljedahl
・ Hans Lindahl
・ Hans Lindahl Falck
・ Hans Lindberg
・ Hans Lindberg (ice hockey)
・ Hans Lindbom
・ Hans Linde
・ Hans Linde (Swedish politician)
・ Hans Lindgren
・ Hans Lindman


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Hans Leybold : ウィキペディア英語版
Hans Leybold

Hans Leybold (2 April 1892 – 8 September 1914) was a German expressionist poet, whose small body of work was a major inspiration behind much of the Dada movement, in particular the works of his close friend Hugo Ball. Although Leybold died two years before the emergence of Dada, his absurdist writings and poems represent an important stage in the development of expressionist movement in Germany.
Born into a middle-class family in Frankfurt am Main, Leybold was raised in Hamburg where he completed his schooling in 1911 and joined the German Army. In his compulsory year of conscription he impressed his superior officers so much he was offered a commission and embarked on a military career.〔Pages 149–150, ''The Lost Voices of World War I'', Tim Cross〕 Taking a leave of absence to attend university, Leybold traveled to Munich to study German literature and whilst there he fell in with the crowd of German poets and authors who would head the Dada movement post-war. These figures included Richard Huelsenbeck, Emmy Hennings, Klabund, Johannes R. Becher and most especially of all his particular friend Hugo Ball.〔 It was Ball who interested Leybold in the expressionist movement and soon the two of them were soon producing poetry together under the pseudonym ''Ha Hu Baley''. In the company of these authors, Leybold experimented wildly with technique and imagery in his poetry, seeking both to develop his skills and in the process deconstruct poetry itself, heavily influenced by Alfred Kerr and Friedrich Nietzsche.〔 In consequence of his literary experimentation, his studies went neglected and he began to edit and contribute to expressionist magazines, such as ''Die Aktion'' and his own work, the short lived magazine ''Revolution'', in which and his colleagues issued their literary manifesto.〔
In August 1914 the First World War erupted and Leybold was immediately called up as an active reservist. Less than a month later, Leybold was seriously wounded during operations near Namur and was evacuated to a casualty clearing hospital. He recovered rapidly from his wound but on 8 September, the night he returned to his regiment, he committed suicide by gunshot to the head. His death was never fully explained, although a rumour persisted that he had syphilis and had given up on survival following his wound.〔 His works were collected together many years after his death, as he never had a book published independently, and he is now recognised as an important influence both on Dadism and German expressionism itself.〔
== Notes ==


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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