Jean Paul and Aubette: Difference between pages

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slightly rewritten, added Aubette building in Strasbourg
 
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There are five rivers that have the name '''Aubette''' is the name various rivers in France. It is the dimunitive form of ''[[Aube (river)|Aube]]''. It corresponds to the word ''alb''. It derives from the [[Latin]] words, ''[[wiktionary:albus|albus]]'', [[white]] or ''[[wiktionary:alveus|alveus]]'' ([[cavity]], [[river]]).
[[Image:jeanpaul.jpg|framed|Jean Paul]]
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'''Aubette''', a small [[Rivers of France|river]] of [[Seine-Maritime]] [[département]], its length is only 4.5 km. It begins near [[Saint-Aubin-Épinay]], and flows along the town [[Darnétal]]. It is joined by the river [[Robec]] before it flows into the [[Seine]] near [[Rouen]]. In the [[19th century]], the Aubette had a hundred mills, textiles, paper mills, etc. Although the river [[Robec]] is longer than the Aubette (14 km) it was considered to be a tributary of Aubette.
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'''Aubette de Meulan''' begins near [[Guiry-en-Vexin]] in [[Val-d'Oise]], it flows through [[Vigny, Val-d'Oise|Vigny]] and empties into the [[Seine]] in [[Meulan]] in [[Yvelines]] département. One commune is named after this river: [[Tessancourt-sur-Aubette]] (Yvelines).
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'''Aubette de Magny''', a tributary of the river [[Epte]] in [[Val-d'Oise]]. Its source is near [[Magny-en-Vexin]]. It flows into the Epte at [[Bray-et-Lû]].
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'''Aubette''', a river of [[Cote d'Or]] and [[Haute-Marne]], which empties into the [[Aube River|Aube]] near [[Dancevoir]].
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'''Aubette''' is also the name of a historical building in [[Strasbourg]], [[France]]. Between 1926 and 1928 it was redecorated by [[De Stijl]] artist [[Theo van Doesburg]].
 
[[fr:Aubette]]
'''Jean Paul''' ([[March 21]], [[1763]] – [[November 14]], [[1825]]), born '''Johann Paul Friedrich Richter''' was a German author.
 
[[Category:1763French birthsrivers]]
He was born in Wunsiedel (Fichtelgebirge), Germany, and his father was an organist and village pastor. He grew up in poor circumstances and went to school in Hof, where he lived with his grandparents. He studied theology and philosophy in [[Leipzig]] from 1781 to 1784, but he was unable to finish his studies due to poverty. From 1790 to 1794, he worked as a teacher in a school he had founded in Schwarzenbach and wrote on the side.
 
His first literary success was ''Die unsichtbare Loge'' in [[1793]]. Finally, he had sufficient income to devote himself entirely to his writing. In [[1795]], ''Hesperus'' was published. It was the greatest hit since [[Goethe]]'s [[Sorrows of Young Werther]] and made Jean Paul famous.
 
From 1798 to 1800, he lived in Weimar, where he met [[Herder]], [[Goethe]], and Schiller. In the spring of [[1800]] he met Karoline Meyer on a trip to [[Berlin]], and they married a year later. They had two children. Until 1803, he was ''Legationsrat'' in Meiningen, Coburg, and Bayreuth. His son Max died in 1821, and this was a great blow to Jean Paul. He became blind in 1824.
 
He died in Bayreuth of pneumonia.
 
===Works===
*''Leben des vergnügten Schulmeisterlein Maria Wutz'' 1790
*''Die unsichtbare Loge'' 1793
*''Hesperus'' 1795
*''Leben des Quintus Fixlein'' 1796
*''Siebenkäs'' 1796
*''Der Jubelsenior'' 1797
*''Das Kampaner Tal'' 1797
*''Titan'' 1802
*''Flegeljahre'' (unfinished) 1804
*''Levana oder Erziehlehre'' 1807
*''Dr. Katzenbergers Badereise'' 1809
*''Auswahl aus des Teufels Papieren''
*''Bemerkungen über uns närrische Menschen''
*''Biographische Belustigungen''
*''Clavis Fichtiana''
*''Das heimliche Klaglied der jetzigen Männer''
*''Der Komet''
*''Der Maschinenmann''
*''Des Feldpredigers Schmelzle Reise nach Flätz''
*''Des Luftschiffers Giannozzo Seebuch''
*''Die wunderbare Gesellschaft in der Neujahrsnacht''
*''Freiheits-Büchlein''
*''Grönländische Prozesse''
*''Leben Fibels''
 
[[Category:1763 births]]
[[Category:1825 deaths]]
[[Category:German writers]]
 
[[de:Jean Paul]]