- Johann Gaudenz von Salis-Seewis
Johann Gaudenz Freiherr von Salis-Seewis (born
December 26 ,1762 ,Malans ,Switzerland ; diedJanuary 29 ,1834 ) was Swiss poet.Life
Salis-Sewis came from an old Swiss aristocracy. His parents were baron Johann Ulrich von Salis Seewis and Freiin Jakobea von Salis-Bothmar. Between 1779 and 1789 he served as an officer in the Swiss Guards in France in
Paris ,France , until theFrench revolution made him quit. Salis Sewis was one of the favourites ofMarie Antoinette . In the next year Salis-Seewis undertook a journey to theNetherlands andGermany (includingWeimar ), meeting Goethe, Herder, Schiller, Wieland, and Matthisson. He particularly connected with Matthisson, and an intimate friendship developed.The poet colleagues shared a sense of
Sturm und Drang and empathy, calling it the ""Bündner Nachtigall" ("Graubünden nightingale "). Salis-Seewis returned to Switzerland in 1791, living inChur and marrying the 22-year old Ursina Pestalozzi. He had a lively involvement in the political changes in his homeland over the next years lively involved, endorsed the alliance of theThree Leagues of Switzerland to the new France, and the proclaimedHelvetic Republic . After the area was occupied by Austria in the following year, Salis-Sweewis and his family had to flee toZurich . There, he was appointed inspector general of the Helvetican troops. This activity brought him the nickname "poet general". He later went toBerne and received a place on theCourt of cassation . When theAct of Mediation was issued byNapoleon Bonaparte in 1803, it became possible for Salis-Seewis to return toGraubünden . There he held several public offices until 1817, then he withdrew as Swiss federal colonel. His father had died two years before.Artistic work
Salis-Seewis and Matthission had similar writing styles, both being inclined to write about natural topics, and about their homeland. The poems of Salis Seewis are characterised however by more masculinity, freshness, popularity as well as a deeper sense of yearning. His elegies have always had a firm and determining reason. Done of the revolutionary thoughts of the French revolution, he was a progressive representative of
human rights and separated from the conservative, oligarchic tradition of his family, which controlled the Three Leagues unquestioned over decades.Franz Schubert has set many poems of Salis-Seewis to music, like "Abschied von der Harfe", "Das Grab" oder "Zum Rundtanz". His best known work is the [http://de.wikisource.org/wiki/Herbstlied "Herbstlied"] , written in 1782, set to music in 1799 byJohann Friedrich Reichardt .Literature
* Christian Erni: "Von Paris nach Weimar. Johann Gaudenz von Salis-Seewis in der Französischen Revolution auf Urlaubsreise nach Weimar 1789-1790." In: Jahrbuch der Historischen Gesellschaft von Graubünden. 1995.
* Hans Peter Gansner: "Der Dichter-General. Eine dramatische Biographie des J. G. von Salis-Seewis." Mit einem Essay des Autors über J. G. von Salis-Seewis und Ferdinand Freiligrath sowie einigen Nachbemerkungen. Calven, Chur 2003. ISBN 3-905261-27-8
* "Johann Gaudenz von Salis–Seewis und Johann Heinrich Füßli in ihren Briefen", hrsg. v. Felix Humm. Huber, Bern u.a. 1976.
* Emil Jenal: "Johann Gaudenz v.Salis-Seewis und die eidgenössische Wiedergeburt." Schuler, Chur 1924.
* Alfred Rufer: "Johann Gaudenz v. Salis–Seewis als Bündner Patriot und Helvetischer Generalstab". Bischofberger, Chur 1938.
* Johann Ulrich Schlegel: "Die Beziehungen zwischen Johann Gaudenz von Salis und Ignaz Heinrich von Wessenberg". Juris, Zürich 1976. ISBN 3-260-04126-5
* Walter Zindel-Kuoni: "Johann Gaudenz von Salis-Seewis. Landschaft seiner Lieder und Geschichte seiner Zeit." Desertina, Chur 2006. ISBN 978-3-85637-328-3External links
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* [http://www.recmusic.org/lieder/s/salis/ selected poems] at recmusic.org
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