Ludwig von Alvensleben


Karl Ludwig Friedrich Wilhelm Gustav von Alvensleben was a German author.

Life

Ludwig von Alvensleben was born on 3 May 1800 in Berlin. He came from the Low German noble family of Alvensleben. At the age of thirteen, he took part in the German War of Liberation and began his career as an officer. In 1821, he was punished with two years of fortress arrest for a threatening letter written to Prince Augustus of Prussia. From 1825 to 1828 he completed a law degree in Leipzig, but could not take the final exam due to a lack of knowledge of Latin. However, he was able to make a living as a freelance writer, translator and journalist. In 1830, he was imprisoned for a short time because of a text “shadow and no light” printed in Halle and directed against the Leipzig police. In 1836, he temporarily directed the court theatre in Meiningen. In 1841, he moved to Vienna. There he took an active part in the revolutionary uprisings in October 1848 and was initially sentenced to death after being arrested, but then pardoned to one year in prison and expelled from Vienna after serving his sentence. His literary work was often impaired by frequent illnesses, so that he was in need and had to be supported by his family.

Works

Alvensleben was a versatile writer in the fields of entertainment, games and the theatre. Under his pseudonyms Gustav Sellen and Chlodwig he wrote a number of his own novellas and novels, was successful as a translator from English and French and was the editor of various magazines. The journal Allgemeine Theater-Chronik, founded by him in 1832, is still significant in terms of theatre history. It appeared until 1873 and he edited it until 1837. He also published the Journal for the German Aristocracy with Friedrich de la Motte Fouqué from 1840 to 1844.
His translations included Napoleons Werke, Eugène Sue's Sämmtliche Werke in 24 volumes and the works of Balzac, Molière, Dumas, Swift, Defoe, Casanova. In total, he translated over 140 novels and plays and alongside Georg Nikolaus Bärmann, was the most important German translator of his time.
Among his own works is
The Lying Emperor - Destinies of the Lord of Münchhausen jun. - a time-critical satire that was reprinted in 1966 and 1968 - together with the original Münchhausen from 1768 - and characterized as follows: "Alvensleben was a revolutionary spirit who had the courage to show the breaks he recognized in the state and social order as well as in the way people live and work together. This remarkable attitude, which did not stop at his own, still privileged social class, makes him particularly likeable. ".
His other works included:
Erzählungen, Der strafende Burggeist, Novellas and Narratives , The Debunked Jesuit ',' 'Life and travel pictures and novellas, Encyclopedia of board games' ',' 'Polterabend-Scherze' ', Garibaldi , Prince Lobkowitz or: Revenge to the grave ., General world history for the people ''.

Family

He was a son of the Prussian hussar major, August von Alvensleben, from the House of Redekin, and Countess Charlotte von Schlippenbach a.d.H. Schönermark. In 1828, he married Florentine Herzog ; in 1834, Elvire Böhn and in his third marriage in 1853, Emma Greiffeld. These marriages resulted in nine children, five of whom died in childhood. His grandmother was the actress, Friederike von Alvensleben, born née von Klinglin. This line expired with Bodo von Alvensleben in the male line. Ludwig von Alvensleben died on 3 August 1868 in Vienna.

Literature