Friedrich Wagenfeld

Friedrich Wagenfeld (January 3, 1810 August 26, 1846) was a German philologist and author born in Bremen.

Friedrich Wagenfeld
Born3 January 1810
Bremen
Died26 August 1846
Bremen
NationalityGerman

Life

Wegenfeld was born in Bremen in 1810.[1]

From 1829 to 1832 Wegenfeld studied philology in Göttingen, and subsequently spent several years serving as a tutor in Brinkum. He lived and worked as a writer in Bremen, where he died on August 26, 1846 at the age of 36.[1]

Wagenfeld was the author a popular collection of Bremen folk tales titled Bremer Volkssagen (1844–45). In 1837 he published what purportedly was the entire text of Philo of Byblos' Sanchoniathon, allegedly found in the Portuguese convent of Santa Maria de Merinhão. This publication, however, was soon afterwards proven by several scholars to be a fabrication.[2]

Today there is a street named Lazy Street and the House of the Seven Lazy Brothers in Bremen which celebrate Wagenfeld's work and in particular his story of the Seven Lazy brothers.[3]

gollark: Imagine nonquaternionic gender.
gollark: Barometric currency transmission.
gollark: I WILL backpropagate you.
gollark: Sorry for the inconvenience, I've been busy.
gollark: I agree, beelike translation cubes are bad.

References

  1. Wikisource translated biography @ Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie
  2. Farrer, James Anson; et al. (1969). Literary Forgeries. p. 191 on. ISBN 1435750985.
  3. Bremen legends, Bremen tourism, retrieved 5 February 2014


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