Johann Friedrich Schütze
Johann Friedrich Schütze, pseudonym: Jäger, (1758-1810) was a German author. LifeSchütze was born on 1 April 1758 in Altona near Hamburg in the Duchy of Holstein. He was the son of Gottfried Schütze. He attended the Gelehrtenschule des Johanneums, the school where his father taught. From 1780 to 1783 he studied law at the University of Kiel[citation needed] and University of Leipzig and subsequently lived as a gentleman in Hamburg. In 1793 he was appointed as secretary to the chancellery (Kanzleisekretär) and in 1797 as the successor to Heinrich Wilhelm von Gerstenberg in the post of General Administrator of the Lotto in Altona. Johann Friedrich Schütze remained single all his life and died in Altona on 15 October 1810.[citation needed] WorksOutside of his job, Schütze published a wide and large range of books. For many years he collected sources for the Hamburgischen Theater-Geschichte ("Hamburg's Theatre History"). This 1794 work was reprinted in 1975 and is a standard work. Schütze published many theatre critiques, especially of performances at the Altona National Theatre, which was experienced a brief success under the leadership of Johann Friedrich Ernst Albrecht from 1796 to 1800. In 1800 Schütze published the Satyrisch-ästhetische Hand- und Taschen-Wörterbuch für Schauspieler und Theaterfreunde beiden Geschlechts. Also noteworthy is his Holsteinische Idiotikon. Ein Beitrag zur Volkssittengeschichte. Published in four parts between 1800 and 1806, the author had been writing it for many years. This book, with its Low German expressions and words, was reprinted in 1976. Schütze also published novels, travel reports and many articles in well known, contemporary periodicals. He worked for the Journal des Luxus und der Moden and translated from French and Danish. Works
Literature
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