Albin Tröltzsch

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Albin Tröltzsch (* 1893 in Kirchberg (Saxony) , † 1973 in Bad Liebenstein ) was a German engineer, Ore Mountains native and dialect poet and radio play author.

The son of a miner grew up in Kirchberg. At the age of eleven he wrote his first own poems and read them to school. After attending school, he trained as a civil engineer and specialized in laying gas pipelines . He achieved particular fame through the novel The Underground Network , which appeared in 1962. For many years he had a close friendship with Kurt Arnold Findeisen , who often included Albin Tröltzsch's dialect poems in his Saxon calendar , such as the three-page Ore Mountain dialect story on the bridge between death and life in 1941 . After the end of the Second World War , both worked for the Saxon homeland papers from 1955 .

Tröltzsch was also successful as a radio play author. He won first prize with Die Zwickauer Bergarbeiter at the radio play competition of the Heimatwerk Sachsen in 1938.

In 1940 his monograph Kopp huch! Was published by Bastei-Verlag in Dresden . Wos der Pfüller Ton as a front soldier derlabt hot, told in Ore Mountains dialect as volume 24 of the series Voices of the Landscape .

literature

  • Johannes Decker: poet friendship. In: Kirchberger Nachrichten, July 6, 2005, p. 1.

Web links