Wüterich (person)

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Postage stamp: For the youth, 100th anniversary of Heinrich Hoffmann's death with the image of the angry Friederich.

An angry self is someone who is angry or who gets angry and becomes violent easily . The word is sometimes seen as slang .

The word is first in the 9th century as ahd. Wuotarīh occupied. According to the German dictionary of the Brothers Grimm, it initially referred to a tyrant , despots , and tyrants as the exact equivalent of the Latin tyrannus, and later also generally referred to as a “tough, violent person”. Since the beginning of the 19th century, it has been withdrawing (in both senses) “more and more of the serious language style”.

The medieval surname Wüterich developed into a gender name and is now also a family name (also written: Wüeterich , Wütrich , Wüthrich , Wütherich etc.) and already then referred to a person who z. B. tended to be angry or later, had such an ancestor.

Synonyms

Wüterich is a generic term for z. B .: gunman , Berserker , irascible , maniac, monster, Raging, maniac or just generally Wüter .

Use in literature

In Struwwelpeter by Heinrich Hoffmann is story of the evil Friederich included with the well-known verse:

Friederich, Friederich, that was angry! ...

Also known in Rumpelstiltskin & Co .:

Don't be called Alexander, and not Welomyr, not even Celsius, I'll tell you, not called Alpha or Beta or Caesar, not called Dietrich or Wüterich, nor am I the Tsar. Ha, ha, ha - how well nobody knows that my name is Rumpelstiltskin. My name is Rumpelstiltskin, but the king doesn't know what my real name is. - Everything is going very well and so I sing mightily - trallalla - trallalla.

Heinrich von Kleist called Napoleon a madman in a letter to Ulrike von Kleist .

Friedrich Schiller lets the small farmer Armgard speak to the children in Wilhelm Tell when Gessler is pierced by the arrow of Tell: See children how an angry man passes away. In Die Bürgschaft , Schiller uses Wüterich in the older meaning as a synonym (cf. DWB, entry Wüterich):

Sneaked to Dionys the tyrant
Damon, the dagger in the robe:
The captors beat him in gang,
"What did you want with the dagger? Speak!"
The angry replies darkly.
"Free the city from the tyrant!"
"You should regret that on the cross.

The Roman satirical poet Juvenal states that the name Antiphates , in Greek mythology the king of the gigantic, man-eating laistrygones , was used literally for an angry man.

Famous pepole

Literature on anger

  • Wayrhieftige neuwe tzydunghe, the tyrannical Vuttrich Turck Salomon called. Dyt 29. jair against Ungeren, Austria and common Christianity dye tzo and defer tzo , 1529.
  • Iris Karg, Willi Wüterich says no! : a story , Regensburg 2010, Charlotte Verlag: Kinderleicht-Wissen-Verlag, ISBN 978-3-86751-315-9 .
  • Annette Langen , Ritter Wüterich and Drache Borste , Hamburg 2017, Verlag Dressler, ISBN 978-3-7707-0023-3
  • Hans-Peter Langfeldt, "Zappel-Philipp" and "Friedrich der Wüterich": prototypes of children with behavioral disorders , in: Psychology in Education and Teaching: Journal for Research and Practice , Organ of the German Society for Psychology, Munich 2003, Reinhardt, Vol. 50 .
  • Hans Jörg Mannasser, Warhaffte and actual illustration and contrafactur deß of all the most luminous and most unfathomable king Æstas or summer king next to excellent promise strong support of the Teutscher Nation against the cruel tyrant and Wüterich Rex Hyems or winter king , Augspurg 1623.
  • M. Augustinum Neser von Fürstenberg How one would like to resist the fierce rage and the Christian blood-thirsty tyrant in all directions: Comforting, useful and necessary report to all classes. In what is shown how a yeder should hold out in this fallen war trouble ... , Jngolstatt, Weyssenhorn 1566.
  • Cornelia Nitsch, Der kleine Wüterich: Games and practical advice against aggression and bad mood , Munich 2000, mosaic.
  • Author unknown, gallery of human rascals, monsters and monsters, as well as dangerous crooks and cheeky thieves: together with some interesting anecdotes , Leipzig 1838, Ludwig Schreck.
  • War armorũ = || ge vnnd Heerzůgk of the furious || Turkish Keysers / with all order vnd zal des volcks / so he zů roß || vnd zů fůz overcoat || Christianity / with jm brings / warhawig || described. || Warning to all Christians / || ... || , Mainz 1532, Peter Jordan.

Web links

Wiktionary: Wüterich  - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Entry "Wüterich" in the Duden online dictionary. Retrieved July 22, 2020.
  2. ^ Entry "Wüterich" in the dictionary of contemporary German (1964–1977). Quoted from DWDS , accessed on July 22, 2020.
  3. So in the DWDS, but not in the Duden.
  4. ^ Entry "Wüterich" in: Wolfgang Pfeifer et al .: Etymological Dictionary of German. 1993. Digitized version in the Digital Dictionary of the German Language , revised by Wolfgang Pfeifer , accessed on July 22, 2020.
  5. entry "tyrant" in the German dictionary ( online , accessed on 22 July 2020).
  6. Quoted from L. Jordan: Kleist as a playwright: Kleist and Dresden. Work, context and environment. Würzburg 2009, p. 87.
  7. Homer , Odyssey , 10, 80-132; Library of Apollodorus , Epitome 7, 12f .; Hyginus , Fabulae 125; among others
  8. Juvenal, Satires 14:20 .