Hans Reyhing

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Hans Reyhing (born October 1, 1882 in Bernloch near Münsingen , † July 1, 1961 in Ulm ) was a Swabian homeland poet.

Life

Hans Reyhing was born in 1882 in the Swabian village of Bernloch near Münsingen. After attending elementary school in Bernloch, he attended the teachers' college in Nagold from 1896 to 1901 . Then he was a teacher in Neuhausen an der Erms , Blaubeuren , Neckartailfingen and Stuttgart-Gaisburg . From 1908 Hans Reyhing taught at a girls' school in Ulm . From 1919 to 1933 Reyhing headed the adult education center in Ulm and was head of the home department of the Association for the Promotion of Popular Education. From 1920 until 1961, the year he died, Reyhing published the Swabian home calendar .

From 1908 Reyhing was also active as a writer. He wrote various writings about his Swabian homeland, including the trilogy The Thousand Year Field .

On December 9, 1933, Hans Reyhing signed the declaration of admission to join the Reich Association of German Writers . Reyhing named Wilhelm Schussen and Georg Schmückle as guarantors . Just like his two guarantors, Reyhing sympathized with National Socialism . He was known and valued in the relevant circles of Nazi writers in Württemberg and far beyond as a staunch messenger of the ethnic-national convictions. He wrote what the people and the Nazis expected of him, and he did so out of inner conviction.

In Hans Reyhing's poems from the 1930s in particular, clear tones of the blood and soil poetry can be heard.

“Schmid describes Reyhing's high affinity for the blood-and-soil poetry of the Nazi era and his involvement in Nazi propaganda . As a profound expert on the subject, Schmid Reyhing's life and work are analyzed in 37 easily understandable articles. "

- Alb-Bote , November 26th 2011: State Secretary for Art of the State of BW, Jürgen Walter, laudation

After the end of World War II that he was together with Christian Jenssen published work The German Bell and his books The millennial arable and Klausenhof on the list of auszusondernden literature set.

Honors

Streets and paths in Laichingen , Leonberg , Reutlingen , Ulm and Bad Urach are named after Hans Reyhing.

Works (selection)

  • Burrenhardt people. Stories from the Rough Alb . Stuttgart 1917.
  • Wasteland . Stories. Stuttgart 1919.
  • The fathers good. Story from our sick home . Stuttgart and Berlin 1922.
  • The Hülenbauer . Novel. Stuttgart 1922.
  • Festival d'Schäferlies. Play about the Uracher Schäferlauf, premiered in 1923.
  • Albheimat. A book from the Münsinger Alb . Stuttgart 1926.
  • The morning. Stories from home and youth . Stuttgart 1932.
  • Thibot in luck . Narrative. Berlin 1935.
  • The millennial field. The novel of a village . Munich 1942.
  • The Klausenhof . Novel. Munich 1943.
  • The count beech . Narrative. Munich 1942.
  • The hour has arrived . Novel. Ulm 1955.
  • As long as the earth stands. Novel of a village. Ulm 1957.
  • The engagement in the jungle. Carefree love stories . Ulm 1961.

literature

  • Karl Götz : Hans Reyhing. The voice of the Alb . Hess, Ulm 1963, 6th edition 1998, ISBN 3-87336-267-8 (145 pages)
  • Angelika Bischoff-Luithlen : Hans Reyhing (1882-1961). In: Württembergisches Jahrbuch für Volkskunde 1961/64 (1965) p. 294 f.
  • Karl Götz: Memory of Hans Reyhing . In: Swabian home calendar . 93, 1982, pp. 34-39
  • Gerhard F. Schmid: Swastika and Dog Roses , 2011.

Individual evidence

  1. Gerhard Schmid receives an award for his research on Hans Reyhing: "Hakenkreuz und Heckenrosen", in Reutlinger General-Anzeiger , November 24, 2011 online
  2. ^ Gauverlag Bayerische Ostmark , Bayreuth 1942
  3. So No. 3824 or No. 9488 and 9389 of the list at www.polunbi.de , accessed on November 2, 2018
  4. ^ Website of the Swabian Homeland Federation; last accessed on December 27, 2016