Carl Friedrich Lentner

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Carl Friedrich Lentner , also Karl Friedrich Lentner (born January 4, 1746 in Breslau , † May 21, 1776 in Brieg ) was a German doctor , writer and city ​​physician of Brieg.

Life

Carl Friedrich Lentner was the son of the professor and later prorector at St. Maria Magdalena Lentner high school and the sister of the doctor and writer Balthasar Ludwig Tralles .

Lentner attended the St. Maria Magdalena grammar school from 1754 and grew up in a well-to-do environment in Breslau.

Physically ill, he turned to poetry at an early age . In addition to the obligatory classical ancient languages ​​Greek and Latin, he learned French and Italian.

Carl Friedrich Lentner studied medicine at the University of Halle . After completing his studies and obtaining his doctorate , Lentner returned to Breslau in 1769 to take up a position as a general practitioner at the workhouse in Brieg. In 1775 he became city physician in Brieg, where, at the age of 30, he succumbed to typhus .

Lentner became known through the publication of the "Schlesische (n) Anthologie" in 1773, which was reprinted several times (first in 1777) under the title "Schlesische Blumenlese" and was based on the so-called Second Silesian School .

Works (selection)

  • Schlesische Anthologie , Breßlau and Leipzig 1773 (published from 1777 under the title Schlesische Blumenlese )
  • Small chants dedicated to two lovable sisters , Breßlau 1773
  • The Kränzl - a meeting , Breßlau 1774

literature

  • Continuation and additions to Christian Gottlieb Jöcher's general scholarly lexico . Third volume, Georg Janßen, 1810, p. 1593.
  • Johann Georg Meusel : Lexicon of the German writers who died from 1750 to 1800. Gerhard Fleischer, the Younger, Volume 8, 1808, pp. 138 + 139.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c General German Library . Bohn, 1777, p. 301 ( google.de [accessed on November 23, 2019]).
  2. Schlesische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Breslau: Dissertations, 1910-1914 . 1911, p. 51 ( google.de [accessed on November 23, 2019]).
  3. ^ Georg Selke: The proportion of the "Schlesische Provinzialblätter" in the Silesian literature: Chapters I-III. R. Nischkowsky, 1911, p. 37 ( google.de [accessed on November 23, 2019]).
  4. a b Arno Lubos: History of the literature of Silesia: From the beginnings to approx. 1800 . Bergstadtverlag, 1995, ISBN 978-3-87057-181-8 , p. 283 ( google.de [accessed on November 23, 2019]).
  5. ^ A b Gotthold Ephraim Lessing: Lessing's letters: supplements and corrections . Hempel, 1886, p. 58 ( google.de [accessed on November 23, 2019]).