< 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica

MOSCHEROSCH, JOHANN MICHAEL (1601–1669), German satirist, was born at Willstädt, near Strassburg, on the 5th of March 1601. He received a careful early education at the Latin School at Strassburg, and in 1620 began his academic career as a student of jurisprudence. After being for some years tutor in the family of the Graf von Leiningen-Dachsburg, he finally became privy councillor to the landgravine of Hesse-Cassel. He died at Worms on the 4th of April 1669. Under the name of “Der Träumende,” Moscherosch was a member of the Fruchtbringende Gesellschaft, a society founded by Prince Ludwig of Anhalt-Cöthen, in 1617, for the purincation of the German language and the fostering of German literature. His most famous work is the Wunderliche und wahrhafflige Gesichte Philanders von Sillewald (anagram of Willstädt) (1642–1643), for which he took as his model the Sueños (visions) of the famous Spaniard Francisco Gomez de Quevedo y Villegas (1580–1645). Hardly inferior to the “visions” is the Insomnis cura parentum, Christliches Verimächtnis eines Vaters, which Was published at Strassburg in 1643 and again in 1647. Noteworthy is also Die Patientia, discovered in 1897 in MS. in the municipal library at Hamburg.

Selections from Moscherosch's writings have been published by W. Dittmar (1830), F. Bobertag (in Kürschner's Deutsche Nationalliteratur, xxxii., 1884), and K. Müller (in Reclam's Universalbibliothek). Reprints of the Insomnis cura parentum and Patientia have been published by L. Pariser (1893 and 1897), who is also the author of Beiträge zu einer Biographie von Moscherosch (1891). See also M. Nickels, Moscherosch als Pädagog (1883); J. Wirth Moscherosch's Gesichte (1888).

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