Wilhelm Hauff (29 November 1802 – 18 November 1827) was a German poet and novelist. Hauff was born in Stuttgart, the son of August Friedrich Hauff, a secretary...
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century novella by Wilhelm Hauff based on the early 18th century German Jewish banker and financial adviser Joseph Süß Oppenheimer. In Hauff's novella, Joseph...
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Little Muck (German fairy tale) (category Works by Wilhelm Hauff)
(German: Die Geschichte von dem kleinen Muck) is a fairy tale written by Wilhelm Hauff. It was published in 1826 in a collection of fairy tales and tells the...
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Dwarf Nose (category Works by Wilhelm Hauff)
Dwarf Nose is a fairy tale by Wilhelm Hauff, which was published in a collection of fairytales in 1826. The story has been adopted by Andrew Lang in the...
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was inspired by the romantic historical novel Lichtenstein by Wilhelm Hauff (1826). Hauff was in turn inspired by the works of Walter Scott. He was created...
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Jud Süß (category Films based on works by Wilhelm Hauff)
the course of more than a century; the earliest of these having been Wilhelm Hauff's 1827 novella. The most successful literary adaptation was Lion Feuchtwanger's...
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league footballer Reinhard Hauff (born 1939), German film director Wilhelm Hauff (1802–1827), German poet and novelist Helena Hauff, German DJ and Music Producer...
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the state of Baden-Württemberg. The modern castle was inspired by Wilhelm Hauff's 1826 novel Lichtenstein and was built in 1840–1842. The ruins of an...
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Schäferei. In: Ingeborg Haun, Jacob Grimm, Wilhelm Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen, Ludwig Bechstein, Wilhelm Hauff: Die schönsten Märchen. (Book without year...
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The Cold Heart (category Works by Wilhelm Hauff)
"The Cold Heart" (German: Das kalte Herz) is a fairy tale written by Wilhelm Hauff. It was published in 1827 in a collection of fairy tales that take place...
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German legend of Faust. The story inspired other tales, including Wilhelm Hauff's "Heart of Stone" (1827), and Stephen Vincent Benét's "The Devil and...
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Little Longnose (category Films based on works by Wilhelm Hauff)
combined adaptation of the fairy tales "Dwarf Nose" and "Little Muck" by Wilhelm Hauff. It opened in Russia on March 20, 2003, and had 375,000 admissions during...
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Harz), a hill in Lower Saxony Lichtenstein (novel), an 1826 novel by Wilhelm Hauff Lichtenstein (surname), shared by several notable people Liechtenstein...
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nineteenth century the company published the fairy tales of Wilhelm Hauff as well as works by Wilhelm Waiblinger and Eduard Mörike. The "Friends of Nature Club"...
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Lichtenstein (novel) (category Novels by Wilhelm Hauff)
Sage aus der wuerttembergischen Geschichte is a historical novel by Wilhelm Hauff, first published in 1826, the year before his early death. Set in and...
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Wolfgang von Goethe Nikolai Gogol Brothers Grimm Bernardo Guimarães Wilhelm Hauff Nathaniel Hawthorne E. T. A. Hoffmann Josiah Gilbert Holland Victor...
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German writer of Volksmärchen der Deutschen (5 volumes; 1782–1786) Wilhelm Hauff, German author and novelist Heinrich Pröhle, collector of Germanic language...
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Dorothy Aldis, illustrations by Maurice Sendak, 1960) Dwarf Long-Nose (by Wilhelm Hauff, translated by Doris Orgel, 1960) Best in Children's Books: Volume 41...
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Woman Who Had No Shadow. Hofmannsthal was inspired by the fairy tale by Wilhelm Hauff, "The Cold Heart". Keikobad is a variant spelling of the name of the...
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William I of Württemberg (redirect from Wilhelm I. (Württemberg))
military commander in the wars of 1814 and 1815. Wilhelm Hauff celebrated this in his poem Prinz Wilhelm. On 24 January 1816, Frederick William married...
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Catherine Gore – The Broken Heart Ann Hatton – Deeds of the Olden Time Wilhelm Hauff Die Bettlerin vom Pont des Arts (The True Lover's Fortune; or, the Beggar...
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Grimm's Fairy Tales (KHM 161). It was first published by Wilhelm Grimm in 1827 in Wilhelm Hauff's Märchen-Almanach. An older, somewhat shorter version, "The...
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theorist Christian Friedrich Schönbein (1799–1868), chemist and inventor Wilhelm Hauff (1802–1827), novelist Eduard Mörike (1804–1875), poet and novelist Julius...
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Heart of Stone (1950 film) (category Films based on works by Wilhelm Hauff)
is based on the fairy tale of the same name originally published by Wilhelm Hauff in 1826. Peter, a woodsman and his mother live in the Black Forest where...
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film. Jud Süß or variants may also refer to: Jud Süß (Hauff novel), an 1827 novella by Wilhelm Hauff about Joseph Süß Oppenheimer Jud Süß (Feuchtwanger novel)...
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Erich-Kaestner, Friedrich-Silcher, Justinus-Kerner, Ludwig-Uhland, Wilhelm-Hauff and Grundschule Dagersheim; Other schools include: (loosely translated)...
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Die Geschichte vom kleinen Muck (category Films based on works by Wilhelm Hauff)
adapted from the 19th century fairy tale, Little Muck, written by Wilhelm Hauff. It was the most successful film in East Germany. An old artisan in...
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over the course of the past two centuries. The earliest of these was Wilhelm Hauff's 1827 novella titled Jud Süß. The most successful literary adaptation...
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The Spessart Inn (1923 film) (category Films based on works by Wilhelm Hauff)
The Spessart Inn Directed by Adolf Wenter Written by Wilhelm Hauff (novel) Margarete-Maria Langen Cinematography Ewald Daub Production company Orbis-Film...
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(1882) "Mogarzea und sein Sohn", Rumänische Märchen, Leipzig: Verlag von Wilhelm Friedrich, pp. 73ff. Ransome, Arthur (1916). Peter's Russian Tales. London...
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