Peter Rosegger

Austrian writer
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Quick Facts
Born:
July 31, 1843, Alpl, Austria
Died:
June 26, 1918, Krieglach (aged 74)

Peter Rosegger (born July 31, 1843, Alpl, Austria—died June 26, 1918, Krieglach) was an Austrian writer known for his novels describing provincial life.

The son of a farmer, Rosegger became a travelling tailor and then studied at a commercial school in Graz, Austria. His first published work (1869) was a collection of poems in dialect, but he soon began to write mildly didactic stories and novels about the people, customs, and landscape of his native Styria.

Rosegger was a prolific writer and achieved a wide readership. His most famous works are the autobiographical Waldheimat (1877; The Forest Farm) and Die Schriften des Waldschulmeisters (1875; The Forest Schoolmaster). Always concerned with social reform, he especially favoured the spread of rural education. His autobiographical and religious writings also include Der Gottsucher (1883; The God-Seeker) and Mein Weltleben (1898). His Gesammelte Werke, 40 vol. (“Collected Works”), appeared in 1914–16.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.