Heinrich von Reder

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Heinrich von Reder

Heinrich Reder , since 1871 Knight von Reder (born March 19, 1824 in Mellrichstadt , † February 17, 1909 in Munich ) was a Bavarian officer , poet and landscape painter .

Life

Reder, son of a forensic doctor, studied forest science at the Aschaffenburg Forest Academy and at the University of Munich . He was a co-founder of the Aschaffenburg Forest Corps Hubertia . Soldier from 1846, he took part in the war of 1866 as an artillery officer and received the Military Max Joseph Order for his services in the Franco-German War in 1870/71 . Associated with this was the elevation into the personal nobility and from this point on he was allowed to call himself "Ritter von Reder". Retired in 1881, the colonel was promoted to major general in 1908 .

Reder belonged to the Munich poet group "Crocodiles" and the naturalists group around Michael Georg Conrad , with whom he and Oskar Panizza were among the protagonists of the Society for Modern Life . He wrote several volumes of poetry and depictions of landscapes. In addition, Reder mainly painted landscapes, especially motifs from the Dachau Moos , Italy and Spain . Reder is the text creator of the soldier's song Vom Berette the pen wavers (first published in the soldier's songs , 1854).

Works

  • Soldier songs by two German officers (together with Carl Woldemar von Neumann, Frankfurt / Main 1854).
  • Poems (1859).
  • The Bavarian Forest (portrayed and illustrated, 1861).
  • Pen-and-ink drawings from the forest and highlands (volume of poems, Munich 1885).
  • I am poor Kunrad (1885).
  • Wotan's army. Tales from the Odenwald (fairytale epic, 1892).
  • Lyrical sketchbook (Munich 1893).
  • Red and blue blood . (Munich 1893).
  • Soldier songs by three German officers (together with K. Woldemar Neumann and G. Betzel, 1893).
  • My traveling book (1895).

literature

Web links

Wikisource: Heinrich von Reder  - Sources and full texts

Individual evidence

  1. The three Aschaffenburg Corps were only recognized by the KSCV in 1906 and moved to Munich in 1910. That is why Reder is not on the Kösener corps lists .
  2. Jürgen Müller : Oskar Panizza - attempt at an immanent interpretation. Medical dissertation Würzburg (1990) 1991, pp. 103-109, here: pp. 106 f.