Johan Michiel Dautzenberg
Johan Michiel Dautzenberg (Heerlen, 6 December 1808 – Elsene, 4 February 1869) was a Belgian writer. Professionally he was successively secretary, clerk, teacher, private teacher, and bookkeeper.
He wrote poems on nature, songs, novels, poems concerning the Flemish movement. According to August Vermeylen, he was the first consciously Flemish writer. With his "Beknopte prosodie der Nederduitsche taal (E: Concise prosody of the Dutch language), he tried to convince his fellow poets to return to the classical metrics of poetry. His work shows a strong German literary influence, and he translated Loverkens of Hoffmann von Fallersleben.
In 1850 his first work, Gedichten (Poems), appeared, and a literature study called Beknopte Prosodia der Nederduitsche Taal. Many poems, songs, and literature studies followed, including an ode to miners. In 1857, he, together with some friends, started the teachers-journal de Toekomst (The Future).
He translated the Odes of Horatius, which were published in 1923. In 1857, he founded the illustrated magazine "De Toekomst" (E: The Future), a magazine for teachers. A collection of his poems was published in 1869, after his death, by his son-in-law Frans de Cort as Verspreide en nagelaten gedichten'.
Fifthy odes to Horatius were found back in 1910 and subsequently published. Later still 70 letters, which were stored in the Plantin-Moretus-museum, Antwerp, were published.
Bibliography
- Gedichten (1850)
- Loverkens (1852)
- Beknopte prosodie der Nederduitsche taal (1859)
- De doop (1867)
- De moriljen (1867)
- Verspreide en nagelaten gedichten (1869)
- Oden (1923)
See also
Sources
- Johan Michiel Dautzenberg
- Johan Michiel Dautzenberg
- T. Verschaffel, Belg door inborst, door neigingen, door zeden, Handel. Kon. Zuid-Ned. Mij voor Taal- en Letterkunde 54 (2000), p. 335-355.
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