- D. F. Malherbe
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Daniël Francois Malherbe or (as he is generally known) D.F. Malherbe (May 28, 1881 in Dal Josafat in Cape Colony, now Western Cape Province, South Africa – April 12, 1969 in Bloemfontein, in the then Orange Free State province, now Free State Province), was an Afrikaans-language novelist, poet, dramatist, and scholar.
Malherbe is most noted for having written what is regarded as the first novel of artistic value in Afrikaans, Vergeet niet (Do Not Forget). His Biblical novels--Die Hart van Moab (The Heart of Moab, 1933), Saul die worstelheld (Saul the Struggle Hero, 1935), and Die profeet (The Prophet, 1937) draw a parallel between the Afrikaners and the Israelites of the Old Testament, yet today they are lightly regarded. Malherbe was also active in the promotion of Afrikaans.
The D.F. Malherbe High School [1] in 14th Avenue, Walmer, Port Elizabeth, South Africa is named after him as well as the D.F. Malherbe Primary School [2] in Vanderbijlpark, South Africa.
References
External links
1Lindenberg, E., et al. "Inleiding tot die Afrikaanse Letterkunde". Pretoria and Cape Town: Fifth edition, 1980.
Categories:- South African people of Huguenot descent
- 1881 births
- 1969 deaths
- South African poets
- Afrikaner people
- Hertzog Prize winners for prose
- South African writer stubs
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