Difference between revisions of "Messias: drei Dichtungen (1920 Wiener), poetry"

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==External links==
==External links==


[[Category:Fiction]]  
 
[[Category:Literature|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:1920| Wiener]]
 
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[[Category:Jewish Authorship--German|1920 Wiener]]
 
[[Category:Fiction--1920s|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Fiction--German|1920 Wiener]]  
 
[[Category:Literature--1920s|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Poetry|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Poetry|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Made in the 1920s|1920 Wiener]]
 
[[Category:German language|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:German language--1920s|1920 Wiener]]
 
 
 
[[Category:Jesus of Nazareth (subject)|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Jesus of Nazareth (subject)|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Jesus of Nazareth--fiction (subject)|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Jesus of Nazareth--literature (subject)|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Herod the Great (subject)|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Herod the Great (subject)|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Herod the Great--fiction (subject)|1920 Wiener]]
[[Category:Herod the Great--literature (subject)|1920 Wiener]]

Latest revision as of 05:42, 26 April 2016

Messias: drei Dichtungen <German> (1920) is a poem by Meir Wiener.

Abstract

A collection of three poems, devoted to 16th-century Portuguese marrano Shlomo Molco, King Herod the Great, and 15th-century Kabbalist Joseph della Reina, respectively. The first and, more directly, the second poem deal with the Second Temple period. In a dream Shlomo Molco foresees the time in which Jesus, freed from burden of "Christian" interpretations, will regain his place among his people. The second poem elaborates on the Talmudic tale about Herod killing the sages of Israel out of fear that they would challenge the legitimacy of his power.

Editions and translations

Published in Vienna [Austria]: Löwit, 1920.

External links