Waldemar Müller (writer)

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Waldemar Müller ( pseudonyms : Waldemar Müller-Eberhart , Ernst Erik Eberhard , Jaroslav Maria ; born June 3, 1871 in Bromberg , † July 6, 1955 in Alfeld (Leine) ) was a German writer .

Life

Waldemar Müller, who comes from the town of Bromberg in the Prussian province of West Prussia , decided to pursue a military career after completing compulsory schooling. After graduating from war school , he had been employed as an officer in Bremen since 1892 , and in 1896 he quit his service. As a result, he turned to the study of political science , which he broke off after three semesters. After Waldemar Müller had passed the police officer examination in 1898, he took up a position as detective inspector in Berlin in 1900 , which he resigned in 1908.

Waldemar Müller, who emerged as a storyteller and playwright and called himself Müller-Eberhart since 1908, then lived as a freelance writer in Alfeld an der Leine , where he died in the summer of 1955 at the age of 84.

Works (selection)

  • Locomotive driver Claussen: in the service of traffic: drama in 4 acts, H. Seemann, Berlin, 1904
  • The legend of St. Hedwig, Central Office for the Dissemination of Good German Literature, Neuhof; Teltow district, 1921
  • Michael Holtenbeen, the soap boiler: The game from the German Michel Cottbus, Lausitzer Druckerei u. Publishing house, Cottbus, 1923
  • How Petrus celebrates Christmas: A game in 3 pictures, Deutscher Kultorverband, Prague, 1927
  • Kunigunde: The German Kynast-Volksspiel, office of the Waldemar Müller-Eberhart-Spiele, Oberschreiberhau, 1928
  • The storm on the Gröditzburg Wallenstein's German Sendg; Burgspiel, office of the Waldemar Müller-Eberhart Games, Oberschreiberhau, 1933
  • Fridericus Immortalis: The true spirit of Potsdam, Volksdeutscher Verlag, Breslau, C. Fr. Fleischer, Leipzig, 1935

literature

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