Friedrich Bruckbräu

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Friedrich Wilhelm Bruckbräu , also: Baron Belial , (born April 14, 1792 in Munich ; † December 23, 1874 there ) was a German writer and translator .

After graduating from high school in 1809, Bruckbräu studied philosophy in Landshut at the (today's) Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich . After completing his studies, he started a career as an official at customs in 1810 . Bruckbräu translated the canzons and sonnets of Petrarch and Paradise Lost ( The lost paradise ) by John Milton and smaller works by George Sand and Alexandre Dumas , Simonde de Sismondi and others. a. In addition, however, Bruckbräu produced "work that did not go beyond breadwork" (Killy) of its own, including a prayer book ( Der Geist des Sankt Paulus , 1825), dramas , stories and (especially slippery) novels , such as Rosa's curtain sigh (2 vols. , 1832).

literature

  • P. English: History of Erotic Literature . Stuttgart 1927. pp. 194-196.
  • B. Grassl: Bruckbräu . In: KLL, 2, 250.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Max Leitschuh: The matriculations of the upper classes of the Wilhelmsgymnasium in Munich , 4 vols., Munich 1970-1976 .; Vol. 3, p. 231.