Difference between revisions of "Atta Troll (1843 Heine), poetry"
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[[Category:Herodias (subject)|1843 Heine]] | [[Category:Herodias (subject)|1843 Heine]] | ||
[[Category:Herodias--literature (subject)|1843 Heine]] | [[Category:Herodias--literature (subject)|1843 Heine]] | ||
[[Category:Salome--literature (subject)|1843 Heine]] | [[Category:Salome--literature (subject)|1843 Heine]] | ||
[[Category:Herod Antipas--literature (subject)|1843 Heine]] | [[Category:Herod Antipas--literature (subject)|1843 Heine]] | ||
[[Category:John the Baptist--literature (subject)|1843 Heine]] | [[Category:John the Baptist--literature (subject)|1843 Heine]] |
Latest revision as of 06:01, 2 March 2017
Atta Troll <German> (1843) is a poem by Heinrich Heine.
Abstract
First to attribute John’s decapitation to a sexual desire on the part of Herodias, who demanded the head of the prophet and kissed it in the heat of passion. Translated into French, English and Italian, inspired Oscar Wilde’s play.
Editions, performances
Written in 1841, Heine’s Sommernachtstraum was first published in Die Zeitung für die elegante Welt (1843) and in its full final form as a separate publication in 1847.
External links
Categories:
- 1843
- Fiction--1800s
- Fiction--German
- Literature--1800s
- Poetry
- German language--1800s
- Made in the 1840s
- Second Temple Studies--1800s
- Second Temple Studies--Fiction
- Second Temple Studies--Germans
- Death of John the Baptist (subject)
- Herodias (subject)
- Herodias--literature (subject)
- Salome--literature (subject)
- Herod Antipas--literature (subject)
- John the Baptist--literature (subject)