Norbert von Hellingrath

Norbert von Hellingrath
Born Friedrich Norbert Theodor von Hellingrath
21 March 1888
Munich, German Empire
Died 14 December 1916 (1916-12-15) (aged 28)
Verdun, French Third Republic
Known for reviving the works of the poet Friedrich Hölderlin

Friedrich Norbert Theodor von Hellingrath (21 March 1888 14 December 1916) was a German literary scholar whose main contribution to literary scholarship is the first complete edition of the works of the poet Friedrich Hölderlin.

Biography

Hellingrath was born in Munich: his father was an army officer and his mother claimed descent from the Byzantine Emperor John VI Cantacuzenus. He studied philosophy at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.

Attracted to Hölderlin’s poetry from an early age, in 1910 he provided a prefatory essay for the first publication of Hölderlin's translations of Pindar (published in Jena, 1911).

Norbert von Hellingrath during World War I.

From 1912–14 Hellingrath lived and taught in Paris, during which time he began work on his monumental first-ever "Complete Edition" of Hölderlin, Hölderlins Samtliche Werke, collecting together not only all the poems in their variant forms, the novel Hyperion, the unfinished drama The Death of Empedocles, the articles and translations, but also all traceable letters and written accounts of the poet. The enterprise was planned in six volumes. Hellingrath published Volumes I and V in Munich in 1913, but after the outbreak of World War I, he volunteered for military service and was killed in action during the Battle of Verdun on 14 December 1916 at the age of 28.

Volume IV appeared posthumously in Munich in 1916, and the edition was completed after the war by Friedrich Seebass and Ludwig von Pigenot; the remaining volumes appeared in Berlin between 1922 and 1923. Though since superseded by two subsequent complete editions (the Stuttgarter and Frankfurter Ausgabe), Hellingrath's pioneering work continues to have value.

Stefan George, who Hellingrath was friends with, commemorated him in a poem, "Norbert", published in 1928.[1]

References

  1. Elden, Stuart (2001). Mapping the Present: Heidegger, Foucault and the Project of a Spatial History (reprint, illustrated ed.). Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8264-5847-5.
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