Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749 – 1832) was a German poet, playwright, novelist, scientist, statesman, theatre director, and critic.
The biography 'Goethe: Life as a Work of Art' by Rüdiger Safranski is my main source.
Here is a short video that outlines his life.
Goethe was born to a wealthy family in Frankfurt. His grandfather was the mayor of Frankfurt. He was very well educated, and had a cultured upbringing.
He studied law in Leipzig. He was not a very conscientious student.
The Young Goethe 1749-1775
He fell in love with Charlotte Buff, a young woman who was engaged to someone else. This fiancé wrote about Goethe: “He has what one calls genius and an extraordinarily lively imagination. He is intensely emotional. He has a noble way of thinking. He is a man of character. He loves children and can become very involved with them. He is bizarre, and there are various things about his behaviour and appearance that could make him unpleasant. But nevertheless, he is in the good books of children, women, and many others.—He does whatever occurs to him without worrying whether it pleases others, is fashionable, or permitted by good breeding. He hates all constraints.—He holds the female sex in high regard.—He is not yet settled and is still searching for a certain system. . . . He is not what one would call orthodox, however not from pride or caprice or to make a show. He . . . doesn’t like to disturb others in their settled opinions. . . . He does not go to church, not even to Communion, and seldom prays. For, as he says, ‘I’m not enough of a liar for that.’ . . . He has great respect for the Christian religion, but not in the form in which our theologians would present it. . . . He strives for truth but has more regard for feeling it than for demonstrating it. . . . He has made belles-lettres and the arts his principal study—or rather, all branches of knowledge except those by which one earns one’s bread. . . . He is, in a word, a very remarkable person.”
In 1773 he published the play Götz von Berlichingen. Götz (circa 1480–1562) was a knight who lived during the Reformation and the Peasants’ War and was constantly entangled in feuds. Götz is not a knight in shining armour. The quarrels he picks are quite dubious. Götz is the embodiment of freedom. He doesn’t demand it and doesn’t take it, he simply lives it.
In 1774, when he was 24, he wrote a novel 'The Sorrows of Young Werther' which became a major hit, and made Goethe very famous. It features a man who falls in love with a young woman who was engaged to someone else. At the end of the novel Werther commits suicide. A number of real suicides at that time were attributed to the novel.
Practically overnight, Götz and Werther had made him the voice of his generation. As a rule, turning points in intellectual history are seen only in hindsight, but in the case of Götz and Werther, it was already clear that a new era had begun. Goethe became an instant cult author (as he would be called today): admired and envied, he was also respected, if at times reluctantly, by older authority figures.
In 1775 (aged 26), he meets the young duke Karl August, then 18. Karl August invites him to move to his duchy of Saxe-Weimar. Karl August's great-uncle was the Prussian King Frederick the Great, who had invited the French philosopher Voltaire to join his court.
Goethe spends the rest of his life there, mentoring the young Duke, and carrying out a number of administrative responsibilities in this small state.
1776: Karl August gives Goethe the garden house in the park as a gift. Madcap adventures with the young duke: hiking, riding, shooting, fencing, card-playing, drinking, dancing, flirting with girls, and cracking whips.
Visits the silver mine in Ilmenau for the first time.
Goethe is named legation councillor with a seat and a vote in the privy council and a salary of 1,200 taler.
The big event of 1777 (aged 28) was his journey to the Harz Mountains in December and the ascent on horseback of the Brocken, at 3,750 feet the highest peak in the range.
1779 He travels around with the Duke recruiting troops for a potential war. He's also working on writing a play called Iphigenia.
1780 is involved in the opening of a new theatre in Weimar. He has a complex intellectual relationship with Charlotte von Stein, an older married woman. Begins to study natural history, anatomy, and mineralogy.
1781-82 He gave a series of lectures in the field of comparative anatomy. He discovered the human intermaxillary bone, also known as "Goethe's bone".
1782 A rival wrote: “So now he is really a privy councilor, finance director, chairman of the military commission, supervisor of construction down to the level of road building, and in addition director of recreations, court poet, the author of pretty festivities, court operas, ballets, masquerades, inscriptions, works of art, etc., director of the academy of graphic art where during the winter he delivered lectures on osteology; is himself everywhere the first actor, dancer—in short, the factotum of Weimar and, God willing, soon the major domo of the entire Ernestine branch of the House of Wettin, among whom he circulates in order to be idolized. He has been made a baron, and on his birthday . . . his ennoblement will be announced. He has moved from his garden into the city and maintains a noble household, gives readings that will soon turn into assemblies, etc. etc.
1784 Writes an article 'Granite 1'.
In 1786 (aged 40) he has something of a mid-life crisis. Without telling anybody he decides to go travelling in Italy under an assumed name. He lives with some painters, and tries to become an artist.
Goethe in Italy
In 1787 he visits Naples, and meets the British ambassador Sir William Hamilton and his colourful mistress and later wife Emma, who subsequently became Horatio Nelson's mistress 'Lady Hamilton'. She staged tableaux vivants in scanty attire.
Lady Hamilton
His travels in Italy are described in the novel 'Everything the Light Touches' by Janice Pariat. This is basically four short novellas run together into one book. I don't particularly recommend the book as a whole, but the section about Goethe is interesting.
1788, he returns from Italy to Weimar. He got a cool reception from Charlotte von Stein. He began an affair with Christiane Vulpius, who subsequently became his wife.
Goethe was kept busy for the next few years with administrative tasks. He had control of the mines of the duchy, he was in charge of the Royal theatre and he was responsible for rebuilding the burned down castle. He became particularly interested in botany.
Jena is a small town 15 miles north-east of Weimar. Goethe was responsible for constructing the new botanical garden and Institute there.
Jena was also the place described in the book 'Magnificent Rebels: The First Romantics and the Invention of the Self' by Andrea Wulf.
It was there that Goethe met Friedrich Schiller, a younger successful playwright and philosopher. They became close friends.
Goethe and Schiller became the leaders of the movement called Weimar Classicism. It was important at the time, and also later when it became a symbol of German culture which contributed to the unification of Germany. The statue above was copied many times and can be found in many cities in America and Europe.
Schiller reads in the gardens of Schloss Tiefurt, Weimar. Amongst the audience are Herder (second person seated at the far left), Wieland (center, seated with cap) and Goethe (in front of the pillar, right).
This is a list of some of the participants in the Jena circle, as described in the book Magnificent Rebels.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832)
A poet and privy councillor to Duke Carl August in the Duchy of Saxe-Weimar. Goethe lived in Weimar but visited Jena regularly, often for several weeks. His lover and later wife Christiane Vulpius (1765–1816) was the mother of his son August von Goethe (1789–1830).
Auguste Böhmer (1785–1800)
The oldest daughter of Caroline Böhmer-Schlegel-Schelling. She lived with her mother and stepfather August Wilhelm Schlegel in Jena from 1796 to 1800.
Caroline Böhmer-Schlegel-Schelling, née Michaelis (1763–1809)
A writer, translator, literary critic and muse to the Jena Set. She was married to Franz Böhmer from 1784 to 1788, to August Wilhelm Schlegel from 1796 to 1803, and to Friedrich Schelling from 1803 to 1809. She lived in Jena from 1796 to 1803.
Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762–1814)
A philosopher who lived in Jena from 1794 to 1799. He moved to Berlin in July 1799. He was married to Johanne Fichte, née Rahn (1755–1819).
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831)
A philosopher who joined his friend Friedrich Schelling in Jena at the beginning of 1801. He lived in Jena until 1807.
Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859)
A scientist and explorer who often visited his older brother Wilhelm von Humboldt in Jena between 1794 and 1797.
Caroline von Humboldt, née Dacheröden (1766–1829)
Wife of Wilhelm von Humboldt. She lived in Jena (with interruptions) together with her husband from 1794 to 1797.
Wilhelm von Humboldt (1767–1835)
A linguist and Prussian diplomat who lived in Jena (with interruptions) from 1794 to 1797. He was married to Caroline von Humboldt and was Alexander von Humboldt’s older brother.
Novalis (1772–1801)
Friedrich von Hardenberg was a poet, writer and mining inspector who used the pen name Novalis. He studied in Jena from 1790 to 1791. His family estate Weißenfels was not far from Jena and he visited his friends regularly between 1795 and 1801. He was first engaged to Sophie von Kühn and then to Julie von Charpentier.
Friedrich Schelling (1775–1854)
A young philosopher who lived and taught in Jena from 1798 to 1803. He had an affair with Caroline Schlegel and married her in 1803.
Friedrich Schiller (1759–1805)
A playwright and poet. Schiller lived in Jena from 1789 to 1799. He moved to Weimar in December 1799. He was married to Charlotte Schiller, née von Lengefeld (1766–1826).
August Wilhelm Schlegel (1767–1845)
A writer, poet, translator and literary critic. He lived in Jena from 1796 to 1801. He was married to Caroline Böhmer-Schlegel-Schelling and was Friedrich Schlegel’s older brother.
Friedrich Schlegel (1772–1829)
A writer and literary critic. He lived in Jena from 1796 to 1797 and from 1799 to 1801. He met his married lover Dorothea Veit-Schlegel in Berlin in 1799. They married in 1804. He was August Wilhelm Schlegel’s younger brother.
Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768–1834)
A theologian and chaplain. Although Schleiermacher never visited Jena, he was a regular correspondent with members of the Jena Set and his views on religion became important to them. Friedrich Schlegel met him in 1797 in Berlin and shared his lodgings.
Ludwig Tieck (1773–1853)
A writer, poet and translator. He met Friedrich Schlegel in Berlin and lived in Jena from 1799 to 1800. He was married to Amalie Tieck.
Dorothea Veit-Schlegel, née Brendel Mendelssohn (1764–1839)
A writer and translator. She was married to Simon Veit from 1783 to 1799. Friedrich Schlegel was her lover for several years before they married in 1804. She lived in Jena from 1799 to 1802.
Schiller, Wilhelm and Alexander von Humboldt and Goethe in Jena
The Humboldt brothers, Wilhelm and Alexander, were an interesting pair. Alexander Humboldt is described in another book by Andrea Wulf, The Invention of Nature.
Here is a taster.
THE INVENTION OF NATURE from Ant Palmer on Vimeo.
Alexander von Humboldt
He had a remarkable life. It's worth reading his Wikipedia entry. Here is another summary.
These thinkers were operating during the time of major political events in Europe. The French Revolution took place between 1789 and 1799, leading to the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte.
1792 Goethe accompanies the duke in the campaign against revolutionary France. He took part in the Battle of Valmy.
1805. Schiller dies.
Prussia’s disastrous defeat by Napoleon at the battles of Jena and Auerstedt on October 14, 1806, and the occupation and plunder of Weimar by the French. Goethe was in danger of losing everything in those days: his property, his office, his duke, and even his life.
The battle on October 14 1806 ended with the devastating defeat of the Prussian army, its final skirmishes reaching the eastern edge of Weimar.
Napoleon convened a congress of European princes in Erfurt two years later—from September 27 to October 14, 1808—the duke brought Goethe along in order to impress the assembly. Napoleon then summoned Goethe to a private audience. Goethe thereafter proudly wore the cross of the Légion d’Honneur.
1808 Faust, Part I is published.
Faust and Mephisto
1810 The Theory of Colour is published.
In 1814, Goethe fell in love with a young woman called Marianne Jung (29).
A few intense weeks in the late summer and fall of 1815. Marianne was brimming with ideas for Goethe’s birthday celebration at the Gerbermühle. Early in the morning, musicians awakened Goethe with a serenade from a boat on the Main River. Marianne had decorated the garden house in Divan style with oranges, dates, figs, and grapes. Bundled reeds between the windows represented palm trees, below which were wreaths of flowers in the order of the color wheel. The ladies wore turbans of the finest Indian muslin. They all dined at a long table. Willemer poured a 1749 Rhine wine. Marianne sang Goethe songs she had set to music, accompanying herself on the guitar. There were speeches both formal and playful. Marianne set a turban on Goethe’s head, echoing the verse Come Darling, come, and wrap my head in muslin! / The turban’s only lovely from your hand. The company remained together until evening, when the celebration culminated with Goethe reading his “Oriental poems.”
In the West-Eastern Divan, it is the spirit of love that pervades everything and appears everywhere, enchantingly presented in the poems of the “Book of Suleika”:
1816 His wife Christiane dies.
1822 (aged 72) In Marienbad. Falls in love with Ulrike von Levetzow (18), is with her at dances, parties, and rock collecting. Goethe subsequently proposed marriage, but Ulrike turned him down.
1829 The first production of Faust in the Weimar theatre.
1832 Goethe died on March 22 aged 82.
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