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・ Georg Broe
・ Georg Bruchmüller
・ Georg Bruckbauer
・ Georg Brunner
・ Georg Brunnhuber
・ Georg Brustad
・ Georg Burchard Jersin
・ Georg Burgfeld
・ Georg Buschner
・ Georg Busolt
・ Georg Bydlinski
・ Georg Böhm
・ Georg Böhnk
・ Georg Böning
・ Georg Büchmann
Georg Büchner
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・ Georg Bühler
・ Georg C. F. Greve
・ Georg C. Klaren
・ Georg Calixtus
・ Georg Cantor
・ Georg Carabelli
・ Georg Carl Amdrup
・ Georg Carl Bohlmann
・ Georg Carl von Döbeln
・ Georg Carl Wilhelm Vatke
・ Georg Carlsson
・ Georg Carstensen
・ Georg Caspar Schürmann


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Georg Büchner : ウィキペディア英語版
Georg Büchner

Karl Georg Büchner (17 October 1813 – 19 February 1837) was a German dramatist and writer of poetry and prose, considered part of the Young Germany movement. He was also a revolutionary, a natural scientist, and the brother of physician and philosopher Ludwig Büchner. His literary achievements, though few in number, are generally held in great esteem in Germany and it is widely believed that, had it not been for his early death, he might have joined such central German literary figures as Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Friedrich Schiller at the summit of their profession.
== Life and career ==
Born in Goddelau (now part of Riedstadt) in the Grand Duchy of Hesse as the son of a physician, Büchner attended a humanistic secondary school that focused on modern languages (including French, Italian and English).
In 1828, he became interested in politics and joined a circle of William Shakespeare aficionados which later on probably became the Gießen and Darmstadt section of the "Gesellschaft für Menschenrechte" (Society for Human Rights).
In 1831, at age 18, he began to study medicine in Strasbourg. In Strasbourg, he immersed himself in French literature and political thought. He was influenced by the utopian communist theories of François-Noël Babeuf and Claude Henri de Saint-Simon. In 1833 he moved to Gießen and continued his studies at the University of Giessen.
While Büchner continued his studies in Gießen, he established a secret society dedicated to the revolutionary cause. In July 1834, with the help of evangelical theologian Friedrich Ludwig Weidig, he published the leaflet ''Der Hessische Landbote'', a revolutionary pamphlet critical of social injustice in the Grand Duchy of Hesse. The authorities charged them with treason and issued a warrant for their arrest. Weidig was arrested, tortured and later died in prison in Darmstadt; Büchner managed to flee across the border to Strasbourg where he wrote most of his literary work and translated two French plays by Victor Hugo, ''Lucrèce Borgia'' and ''Marie Tudor''. Two years later, his medical dissertation, "Mémoire sur le Système Nerveux du Barbeaux (Cyprinus barbus L.)" was published in Paris and Strasbourg. In October 1836, after receiving his M.D. and being appointed by the University of Zürich as a lecturer in anatomy, Büchner relocated to Zürich where he spent his final months writing and teaching until his death from typhus at the age of twenty-three.
His first play, ''Dantons Tod'' (''Danton's Death''), about the French revolution, was published in 1835, followed by ''Lenz'' (first partly published in Karl Gutzkow's and Wienberg's ''Deutsche Revue'', which was quickly banned). ''Lenz'' is a novella based on the life of the Sturm und Drang poet Jakob Michael Reinhold Lenz. In 1836 his second play, ''Leonce and Lena'', satirized the nobility. His unfinished and most famous play, ''Woyzeck'', was notable because its main characters were all from the working class. It exists only in fragments and was published posthumously.

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