Philip Blommaert
Philip Blommaert | |
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Photo of a drawing of Philip Blommaert by Charles Baugniet (1836) | |
Born | August 24, 1809 |
Died | August 14, 1871 61) | (aged
Philip, Esquire Blommaert (Ghent, 24 August 1809 - 14 August 1871) was a Flemish writer.
He earned his living as a private scholar and was as a friend and comrade of Hendrik Conscience with whom he promoted the use of Dutch in Belgium.
In 1834 he had poems written for the Flemish magazine Vaderlandsche Letteroefeningen in Dutch, but with little success because of their rough language. Together with Jan Frans Willems he worked for several Belgian magazines against the influence of the French language in Flanders, and in 1840 was one of the co-authors of the Vlaams petitionnement (E: Flemish petition) to support the Flemish cause in Belgium.
Of more importance was the publication of Dutch poems from the 12th to 14th centuries, such as Theophilus (Ghent 1836, 2. edition 1858), and Oudvlaemsche gedichten (1838–1851, 3 Volumes.), as well as a Dutch translation of the Nibelungenlied in iambic verse.
His most famous work was the Aloude geschiedenis der Belgen of Nederduitschers (Ghent 1849), where he gave his opinion that the Low German areas are destined, despite their political divisions, to the fulfillment of a high cultural-historical idea.
Later years
In 1860 he became a member of the Royal Belgian Academy, where he took part in the work of the commission for the publication of a Flemish cultural monument. He had started working on the publication Jacob van Maerlant's just discovered poem Istory van Troyen. when he died.
See also
References
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