- Friedrich Schiller - Wikipedia
Friedrich Schiller was born on 10 November 1759, in Marbach, Württemberg, as the only son of military doctor Johann Kaspar Schiller and Elisabetha Dorothea Schiller They also had five daughters, including Christophine, the eldest
- Friedrich Schiller | German Poet, Playwright, Historian | Britannica
Friedrich Schiller was a leading German dramatist, poet, and literary theorist, best remembered for such dramas as Die Räuber (1781; The Robbers), the Wallenstein trilogy (1800–01), Maria Stuart (1801), and Wilhelm Tell (1804)
- Friedrich Schiller - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Johann Christoph Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805) is best known for his immense influence on German literature In his relatively short life, he authored an extraordinary series of dramas, including The Robbers, Maria Stuart, and the trilogy Wallenstein
- Schiller (band) - Wikipedia
Schiller (German pronunciation: [ˈʃɪlɐ]) is a German electronic music act It was formed in 1998 and is named after the German poet and dramatist Friedrich Schiller Originally, Schiller was a duo consisting of Christopher von Deylen (German: [ˈdaɪlən]) and Mirko von Schlieffen
- Doctor and spin instructor wife were executed in garage of $1. 3m home . . .
Eric Cordes, 63, and his wife Vicki Schiller, 66, were found suffering from multiple gunshot wounds on Sunday in their Simi Valley home after his son Keith Cordes, 37, opened fire on the couple
- Who is Schiller?
Schiller was the great republican poet of freedom, who could adorn the ideal of a nobler, more beautiful mankind in such powerful language, that he truly found “an infallible key to the most secret recesses of the human soul ”
- Friedrich Schiller: The Master of All Things - Poem Analysis
Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller, more commonly just Freidrich Schiller, was a multitalented thinker, romanticist writer, playwright, polymath, and historian who has become one of the icons of German literature
- Friedrich Schiller - Philosopher, Dramatist, Poet | Britannica
Schiller offers a disturbing analysis of the problems that arise whenever political expediency masquerades as justice and judges are subjected to the pressures of power politics or ideological conflict
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