Porträt Rudolf Greinz

Rudolf Greinz (August 16, 1866 – August 16, 1942) was an Austrian writer. He was born as the eldest of five children of Anton Greinz and his wife Maria (née Kapferer). His younger brothers Hugo (1873–1946) and Hermann (1879–1938) were also writers. In 1879 the family moved to Salzburg; his father had been transferred there.[1]

In 1883 Rudolf Greinz laid on the k.k. State Gymnasium in Salzburg from the Matura. He then studied German language and literature, Classical Philology and art history at the Universities of Graz and Innsbruck. Due to illness, Greinz had to give up his intended scientific career and decided to become a writer. As a freelance writer he settled in Merano.[2]

In Meran, Rudolf Greinz met Zoe Basevi, a native of a significant Jewish-British family, the daughter of a retired naval officer living there, a grandniece of the English statesman Benjamin Disraeli. They married in 1899.[3] In 1905 he moved with his family to Innsbruck. There he worked on the magazine Der Föhn, together with Richard Wilhelm Polifka, Rudolf Brix and Franz Kranewitter. His contributions, however, increasingly met with criticism and rejection of his fellow writers, which is why he relocated to Munich in 1911. There he worked under the pseudonym "Tuifelemaler Kassian Kluibenschädel" at the magazine Jugend.[4]

In 1934 his wife Zoe died. Two years later, Rudolf Greinz moved to Ansitz Rosenegg in Aldrans, a village above Innsbruck. He acquired the "Villa Rosenegg" in 1926, but initially used it only as a summer resort.[5] Numerous travels took him to poetry readings throughout the German-speaking world. In 1939 Greinz submitted his application for admission to the Reichsschrifttumskammer, which was retroactively granted on July 1, 1938.[6]

Rudolf Greinz died on his 76th birthday. His tomb is located in the cemetery in Ampass.[7]

Writings

Bust of Rudolf Greinz in Innsbruck (2023)

The early work of Rudolf Greinz recalls Ludwig Thoma.[8] Greinz became known above all for his novels, especially for historical novels. Like Rudolf Greinz himself, many of his fictional characters are deeply religious. His relationship to the church, however, had always been ambivalent.[9] In his writings he held higher clerics before the following of Jesus not befitting lifestyle and the departure of the poor and simple people. Critical to the church is, for example, his 1915 published novel "Äbtissin Verena".

Since 1912 his books have been published by Ludwig Staackmann in Leipzig. Alfred Staackmann, the publisher, was connected to Greinz as a friend and literary advisor. Almost every year, Greinz presented a new novel, a collection of short stories and/or a new stage play. In total, Greinz published 132 books in his lifetime, with new editions not counting. A contemporary, much-read literary leader called him "smug", but not completely incorrect – a "commoner, the poetry, peasant stories and popular dramas only from the sleeve". His books reached – in total – a million edition. His novel Allerseelen alone was sold more than 100,000 times. Greinz was especially outside of Austria, among his readers in Germany and the United States, as the typical representative of the native-connected, down-to-earth literature in Tyrol.[10][11]

The estate of Rudolf Greinz is administered by the Universität Innsbruck.[12]

Together with his uncle Josef August Kapferer, Rudolf Greinz published the tapes "Tiroler Volkslieder" and "Tiroler Schnadahüpfeln" in two episodes from 1889, first at the Liebeskind publishing house in Leipzig and later at Cotta in Stuttgart. They are among the first prints with songs from Tyrolean tradition.

Honors

Works (selection)

Novels

Stories

Stage plays

Poems

Literary writings

Religious writings

Other writings

In addition, Rudolf Greinz published the poems of Hermann von Gilm zu Rosenegg, the collection Unter dem Doppelaar. Kriegsnovellen aus Österreich (1915) as well as numerous other anthologies, especially for Reclam's universal library, and literary yearbooks, including the "Taschenbuch für Bücherfreunde" and "Staackmann's Almanac".

References

  1. ^ Iris Kathan, Christiane Oberthanner: Innsbruck. Ein literarischer Stadtführer. Haymon-Verlag, Innsbruck 2009, ISBN 978-3-85218-581-1, S. 224.
  2. ^ Ferruccio Delle Cave, Bertrand Huber: Meran im Blickfeld deutscher Literatur. Eine Dokumentation von der Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts bis zur Gegenwart (= Literarische Zeugnisse aus Tirol, Bd. 6). Verlagsanstalt Athesia, Bozen 1988, ISBN 88-7014-494-1, S. 91.
  3. ^ Eduard Widmoser: Greinz, Rudolf. In: Ders: Südtirol A–Z, Bd. 2: G–Ko. Südtirol-Verlag, Innsbruck 1983, S. 114.
  4. ^ Josef Fontana: Geschichte des Landes Tirol, Bd. 3: Die Zeit von 1848 bis 1918. Verlagsanstalt Athesia, Bozen 1987, ISBN 88-7014-454-2, S. 390.
  5. ^ Ansitz Rosenegg, retrieved 28 November 2016.
  6. ^ Straßennamen Wiens seit 1860 als „Politische Erinnerungsorte" (PDF; 4,4 MB), Forschungsprojektendbericht, Wien, July 2013, S. 259.
  7. ^ Rudolf Heinrich Greinz im Portal Lexikon Literatur in Tirol.
  8. ^ Josef Nadler: Literaturgeschichte Österreichs. Otto Müller, Salzburg 1951, S. 386.
  9. ^ Josef Feichtinger, Gerhard Riedmann: Begegnungen. Tiroler Literatur des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts. Texte und Kommentare. Verlagsanstalt Athesia, Bozen 1994, ISBN 88-7014-801-7, S. 410.
  10. ^ Murray G. Hall: Österreichische Verlagsgeschichte 1918–1938, Bd. 2: Belletristische Verlage der Ersten Republik. Böhlau, Wien 1985, ISBN 3-412-05585-9, S. 535.
  11. ^ Eduard Castle (Hg.): Geschichte der deutschen Literatur in Österreich-Ungarn im Zeitalter Franz Josephs I., Bd. 2: 1890–1918. Fromme, Wien 1938, S. 1299.
  12. ^ Nachlass von Rudolf Greinz im Forschungsinstitut Brenner-Archiv.