Eugen Oswald


Eugen Oswald, was a journalist, translator, teacher and philologist who participated in the German revolutions of 1848–49.

Biography

Eugen Oswald was born in Heidelberg. His father August Carl Oswald, publisher for the university and his mother Christiane Brédé. Oswald was the youngest child of the five children of the family. He visited the Kurfürst-Friedrich-Gymnasium Heidelberg. After A level he studied Jurisprudence at the University of Heidelberg. He was a journalist in Germany with democratic beliefs. He participated in the revolutionary movement in Baden in 1848-1849. He published in the „Mannheimer Abendzeitung“. After the defeat of the Baden uprising, Eugen Oswald emigrated to Paris in 1849. Together with Edgar Quinet he wrote for the monthly newspaper „La Liberté de penser“. After Napoleon III French coup d'état of 1851 he was sent to Mazas Prison and wrote there his „Gefängnisbetrachtungen über Frankreich“. He was expelled from France and go to London. The publisher of the „Mannheimer Abendzeitung“ Jean Pierre Grohe and Oswald were condemned of High treason on 24 August 1854 by the Hofgericht Mannheim. Oswald for 4 years House of correction or 2 years and 8 month Solitary confinement. His first job he got at University College School. In England he named himself since 1868 "Eugene Oswald". His translation The Sphere and Duties of Government influenced John Stuart Mill for his book „On Liberty“. 1857 he was employed at the Royal Naval College, Greenwich as an instructor. He taught at the Working Men´s College and was president of the Carlyle Society. 1870/1871 he helped Marx and Engels to defeat the Paris Commune during the Franco-Prussian War. In 1874 he got the Doctor from the University of Göttingen. He wrote for Meyer's Konversations-Lexikon. In 1892, he taught Prince Albert the later King George VI in German language. In 1907, he helped to translate letters of Queen Victoria. He died on October 16, 1912 in London.
He was one of the founders of the English Goethe Society and a friend of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.
His wife named Caroline Goodwin. They had one son and two daughters.
In 1941, the Bodleian Library bought a collection of letters written to Eugen Oswald by prominent liberals and socialists.

Works