Albrecht Rodenbach
Albrecht Rodenbach | |
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Albrecht Rodenbach | |
Born |
Roeselare, Belgium | 27 October 1856
Died |
23 June 1880 23) Roeselare, Belgium | (aged
Occupation | Poet |
Nationality | Flemish |
Literary movement | Flemish movement |
Relatives | Georges Rodenbach, his cousin |
Albrecht Rodenbach (Dutch: [ˈɑlbrɛxt ˈroːdə(m)bɑx]; 27 October 1856 - 23 June 1880) was a Flemish poet, and a leader in the revival of Flemish literature that occurred in the late 19th century. He is more noteworthy as a symbol of the Flemish movement, than for his actual activities, since he died at the age of 23. Hugo Verriest called Rodenbach the poet, the soul, the heart, the mind, the word of Reborn Flanders!.[1]
Early life
Rodenbach was born in Roeselare into a bourgeois family, the eldest of 10 children and cousin to the novelist Georges Rodenbach. Albrecht Rodenbach’s father was Julius Rodenbach (1824–1915) from the Rhineland, brother to Felix Rodenbach, the Flemish political propagandist.[1] Albrecht Rodenbach's mother was Silvia de la Houttre (1834–1899). Although his mother was a Walloon from Tournai, she had adopted the Dutch spoken in Roeselare. From an early age, Rodenbach was exposed to Flemish nationalistic feeling by his father and his uncle.
Rodenbach attended the Catholic minor seminary in Roeselare where he was exposed to the ideas of the Flemish literature movement by Hugo Verriest and others. Rodenbach was also influenced at this time by Guido Gezelle. In the 1874-1875 school year, this led to a conflict between the Flemish students and the school’s francophile director. At the annual songfest the students traditionally sang French songs, Rodenbach led the protest and the predominantly Dutch speaking students sang a protest song in Dutch. This protest led to similar protests all over Belgium. Despite this and other activist activities, Rodenbach graduated with a first in rhetoric in 1876.
Flemish movement
At the University of Leuven he met the poet Pol De Mont who was a year older. Together they sought to promote a Flemish artistic revival and equal rights for Flemish students as a student movement, creating the "Algemene Vlaamse Studentenbond" (All Flemish Student Association) in 1876. Among their objectives were to have classes in Dutch and to have classes include Flemish culture. The association’s illustrated magazine Het Pennoen (The Pennant) published Rodenbach’s essays anonymously. Rodenbach maintained his contacts in Roeselare through a committee of correspondence.[2] Their ideology was a mixture of the philosophy Guido Gezelle, with the romantic nationalism of Hendrik Conscience, and the righteousness of true belief. Robenbach and de Mont called their student movement Blauwvoeterie after the blauwvoet (blue-footed booby) whose flight announces the coming storm. The rallying cry of the Blauwvoeterie was Vliegt de blauvoet, storm op zee! (When the bluefoot flies, there is a storm at sea!) Rodenbach compared it to the German Burschenschaften movement.[3]
Additionally, Rodenbach made contacts with the Flemish liberals, such as poet Jan van Beers and author Max Rooses, which served to publicize the movement and to expose its members to more political aims.[4][5]
Rodenbach died in Roeselare of tuberculosis before his 24th birthday, and almost immediately became the pre-eminent symbol of the Flemish student movement.[4] On Rodenbach’s death, Pol de Mont took over the leadership of the "Algemene Vlaamse Studentenbond".
Literature
In 1876 Rodenbach published some essays under the pseudonym "Harold". His book Eerste Gedichten (First Poems) was published in 1878.[6] The rest of his work, including his verse play Gudrun, a dramatized epic of the Vikings, was not published until after his death.[7]
Rodenbach was known at the time of his death for his songs, poems and tonal works which have remained inspiring symbols for the Flemish movement. He was the inspiration for Hendrik Conscience’s novel Kerels van Vlaanderen. Flandria Film made a film about him in 1930 entitled Albrecht Rodenbach and directed by Clemens De Landtsheer. The cultural organization Rodenbachfonds was named after him.
References
- 1 2 Antcliffe, Herbert (October 1946) "Music and the Flemish Movement" The Musical Times 87(1244): pp. 299-301, p. 300.
- ↑ Compare with U.S. Committee of correspondence.
- ↑ Kohn, Hans (April 1957) "Nationalism in the Low Countries" The Review of Politics 19(2): pp. 155-185, p. 172.
- 1 2 Heijdendal, Felix (1937) Het Leven von Albrecht Rodenbach aan de jeugd verteid ;
- ↑ van Puyvelde, Leo (1908) Albrecht Rodenbach. Zijn leven en zijn werk ;
- ↑ Verschaeve, Cyriel (1941) De dichter Albrecht Rodenbach Uitg. Zeemeeuw, Brugge;
- ↑ Jonckheere, Karel & Bodard, Roger (1958) Belgian Literature Ontwikkeling, Antwerp, p. 43
- This article is based in part on material from the Dutch-language Wikipedia (de Nederlandstalige Wikipedia).
External links
- Albrecht Rodenbach brief biography in Dutch;
- Albrecht Rodenbach brief biography in Dutch;
- Works by or about Albrecht Rodenbach at Internet Archive
- Works by Albrecht Rodenbach at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
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