Gustav Von Franck
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Gustav Ritter von Franck (born 22 March 1807,
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– died 8 January 1860, London) was a writer and publisher from the
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.


Life and work

Gustav Ritter von Franck was born on 22 March 1807 in Vienna and was the son of the banker and businessman Johann Jakob Ritter von Franck and his wife Anna Maria, née Graumann. He was the second oldest of seven sons. The father's side of the von Franck family originated from
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, which was, at that time, part of the
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. On 8 November 1771, Gustav's grandfather, Johann Jakob Franck, a patrician and a member of the Grand Council of the city of Mulhouse, married Rosina von Fries, who was thirteen years younger and the daughter of Baron Philipp von Fries, whose brother, Johann von Fries, was regarded as one of the richest men of his time. Johann Jakob Franck moved with his wife to
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and bought himself into the tobacco business there. The
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elevated him to Knighthood for his activities in this sphere and, from then on, Johann Jakob and all his heirs were permitted to use the title 'von Franck' and display a
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. Franck's father, Johann Jakob von Franck, a wholesale dealer, banker and art lover, inherited his grandfather's wealth and his title. The von Franck household was at the centre of artistic and intellectual life in Vienna. Literary figures and musicians frequented the household, among whom
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was a welcome guest during his stay in Vienna. Beethoven was the most well known pianist in Vienna at that time and he dedicated his sonata A-major, Opus 101 to Baroness Dorothea von Ertmann, an aunt of Gustav on his mother's side. In 1829, Gustav von Franck received a Doctorate in Law in
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. But he exercised his profession as an advocate for just several months since he was financially independent after the early death of his father. Thereafter, he was active exclusively as an author and publisher. His literary output consisted mainly of plays, comedies, tragedies and poetry; but he also wrote an autobiographical novel,
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pieces and revolutionary articles. In 1842, whilst he was the Theater Director at the German Theater in Pest (nowadays a part of
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), he met his wife-to-be, the opera singer Sophie Wirnser. They had a daughter, Melanie von Franck, in 1844. Because of his revolutionary activities he had to flee Austria in 1848 and he then tried to establish himself in
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and to publish a newspaper, the "Wiener Boten” (the Vienna Herald). On the pretext of a legal action against his paper Gustav von Franck was arrested and threatened with extradition to Austria. His wife, Sophie, succeeded in getting him freed from the prison in Leipzig. He fled via the
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to England, where he subsequently settled. He survived at first by being an art teacher and portrait painter. A year later his wife and daughter followed him in exile. Then, after initial difficulties, Franck succeeded in gaining a reputation as a playwright. In collaboration with William und Robert Brough** he put on two comedies at the
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and at the Lyceum Theatre and critics at the time acclaimed the popularity of "A Tale of a Coat" and "Kicks and Halfpence". Franck was also a founder member of the " Savage Club", in Whitehall Place in London, which still exists today and he belonged to a circle of German speaking immigrants, who lived in exile in England. An account of his adventurous flight to England was published in the journal, “The Welcome Guest“. Gustav von Franck died suddenly and unexpectedly on 8 January 1860; however, not by suicide as is reported in several literature lexicons, but from a physiological complaint. He was laid to rest in
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. Gustav's wife Sophie and daughter, Melanie, returned to Germany via France three years later in 1864. A part of the Franck family moved from Vienna to
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including Moritz Ritter von Franck (Mayor of Graz) and Alfred Ritter von Franck (painter and arts professor). His oldest brother Karl von Franck (Minister of War and Politician) died in Paris in 1867.


Members of the Ritter von Franck family

* Johann Jacob von Franck * Anna von Franck, geb. Graumann * Baronin von Ertmann, geb. Graumann * Alfred Ritter von Franck * Karl von Franck * Sophie von Franck, geb. Wirnser * Melanie von Franck * Moritz Ritter von Franck


Opera

* ''Gedichte, Gedichtband''. Wien: Sollinger, 1828. * ''Mitteilungen aus den Papieren eines Wiener Arztes''. Leipzig: Wigand, 1864. * ''König Edwards Söhne. Trauerspiel in drei Aufzügen''. Leipzig: Brockhaus, 1835. * ''Belisar. Lyrische Tragödie.'' Wien: Gerold, 1836 * ''Dramatische Zeitbilder. Zwei Schauspiele''. Leipzig: Wigand, 1837. * ''Taschenbuch dramatischer Originalien''. Leipzig: Brockhaus, 1837–1842. * ''The Tale of a Coat. Lustspiel''. London 1858. * ''Kicks and Halfpence. Lustspiel''. London um 1858.


Editor

Taschenbuch dramatischer Originalien. Brockhaus, Leipzig 1837–1842 * ''Wiener Zeitschrift für Kunst, Literatur, Theater und Mode''. Wien 1845. * ''Wiener demokratisches Bürgerblatt.'' Wien 1848. * ''Die Wiener Boten''. Leipzig 1848.


Literature


''Franck, Gustav Ritter von''
In Constant von Wurzbach: ''
Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich ''Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich'' (English, ''Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire'') (abbreviated ''Wurzbach'' from the author's surname) is a 60-volume work, edited and published by Constantin von Wurzbach, cont ...
''. Vol. 4, Vienna 1858, * Franz Brümmer: ''Deutsches Dichterlexikon''. Leipzig 1876 * Heinz Rupp (Hrsg.): ''
Deutsches Literatur-Lexikon The ''Deutsche Literatur-Lexikon'' (English, ''German Literature Dictionary'') is a biographical reference work on authors and literature Literature is any collection of Writing, written work, but it is also used more narrowly for writings ...
''. Bern and Munich 1978 *
Walther Killy Walther Killy (26 August 191728 December 1995) was a German literary scholar who specialised in poetry, especially that of Friedrich Hölderlin and Georg Trakl. He taught at the Free University of Berlin, the Georg-August-Universität Götting ...
: ''
Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopädie The ''Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopädie'' (''DBE'') is a biographical dictionary published by Walther Killy and Rudolf Vierhaus (from the third to fourth volume), the first edition of which was published from 1995 to 2003 in 13 volumes by K. ...
''. Munich 1996 {{DEFAULTSORT:Franck, Gustav Von 1807 births 1860 deaths Dramatists and playwrights from the Austrian Empire Journalists from the Austrian Empire Emigrants from the Austrian Empire to the United Kingdom Burials at Brookwood Cemetery Businesspeople from the Austrian Empire