Helen Zimmern (1846–1934)
Autor de The Hansa Towns
Obras de Helen Zimmern
The Hanseatic League - A History of the Rise and Fall of the Hansa Towns (Illustrated) (2015) 7 copias
The Epic of Kings: Hero Tales of Ancient Persia. Retold From Firdusi's Shah Nameh By Helen Zimmern (1926) 5 copias
New Italy 4 copias
Delinquent animals 1 copia
Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema 1 copia
Obras relacionadas
Shah-Naméh = El Libro de los Reyes : Historia de Siawash (1010) — Traductor, algunas ediciones — 766 copias
LAOCOONTE: O SOBRE LOS LIMITES DE LA PINTURA Y LA POESIA (1766) — Traductor, algunas ediciones — 370 copias
The Philosophy of Nietzsche: Thus Spake Zarathustra; Beyond Good and Evil; The Genealogy of Morals; Ecce Homo; The… (1927) — Traductor, algunas ediciones — 277 copias
Homes and haunts of famous authors — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Etiquetado
Conocimiento común
- Fecha de nacimiento
- 1846-03-25
- Fecha de fallecimiento
- 1934-01-11
- Género
- female
- Nacionalidad
- UK (naturalized)
Germany (birth) - País (para mapa)
- Italy
- Lugar de nacimiento
- Hamburg, Germany
- Lugar de fallecimiento
- Florence, Italy
- Lugares de residencia
- Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England, UK
- Ocupaciones
- book reviewer
translator
children's writer
literary critic
biographer
editor (mostrar todos 8)
art lecturer
journalist - Relaciones
- Zimmern, Alice (sister)
Zimmern, Alfred Eckhard (cousin)
Nietzsche, Friedrich (friend) - Biografía breve
- Helen Zimmern was born in Hamburg, Germany, the eldest of three daughters of Hermann Theodore Zimmern, a German Jewish merchant, and his wife Antonia Maria Therese. Her youngest sister Alice Zimmern also became a writer. When Helen was about four years old, the family emigrated to England, settling in Nottingham. She made her debut in print with a story for Once a Week, and soon was contributing stories to Argosy and other leading magazines. A collection of her children's stories, first published 1869-1871 in Good Words for the Young, was published as Stories in Precious Stones (1873) and Told by the Waves (1874). She also collaborated with Alice on two volumes of translated selections from European novels, published in 1880 and 1884. The real work of her career was commentary, translation, and advocacy for European literature and art. Through her works, she introduced many English speakers to European writers, artists, and culture previously unknown to them. She wrote reviews and articles for the Examiner, Fraser's Magazine, Blackwood's Magazine, the Athenaeum, the Spectator, St. James's, Pall Mall Magazine, the World of Art, the Italian Rassegna Settimanale, and various German papers. She lectured on Italian art in Britain and Germany, and translated Italian drama, fiction, and history. She also wrote biographies of Arthur Schopenhauer, G.E. (Gotthold Ephraim) Lessing, and Maria Edgeworth. She befriended Friedrich Nietzsche, two of whose books she would later translate, in the mid-1880s. By the end of that decade she had settled in Florence, Italy, where she wrote for the Milanese newspaper Corriere della Sera and also edited the Florence Gazette.
Miembros
Reseñas
También Puede Gustarte
Autores relacionados
Estadísticas
- Obras
- 12
- También por
- 6
- Miembros
- 57
- Popularidad
- #287,973
- Valoración
- 3.9
- Reseñas
- 2
- ISBNs
- 20
In the feudal times the conditions of life on the continent of Europe seem little short of barbarous. The lands were owned not only by the kings who ruled them with an iron despotism, but were possessed besides by innumerable petty lordlings and princelets, who on their part again exercised a rule so severe and extortionate that the poor people who groaned under it were in a condition little removed from slavery. Nay, they were often not even treated with the consideration that men give their slaves, upon whom, as their absolute goods and chattels, they set a certain value. And it was difficult for the people to revolt and assert themselves, for however disunited might be their various lords, in case of a danger that threatened their universal power, they became friends closer than brothers, and would aid each other faithfully in keeping down the common folk. Hand in hand with princes and lords went the priests, themselves often worldly potentates as well as spiritual rulers, and hence the very religion of the carpenter’s son, which had overspread the civilized world in order to emancipate the people and make men of all nations and degrees into one brotherhood, was—not for the first time in its history—turned from its appointed course and used as an instrument of coercion and repression…… (más)