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Wallenstein (trilogy of plays)

Wallenstein is the popular designation of a trilogy of dramas by German author Friedrich Schiller. It consists of the plays Wallenstein's Camp (Wallensteins Lager), a lengthy prologue, The Piccolomini (Die Piccolomini), and Wallenstein's Death (Wallensteins Tod). Schiller himself also structured the trilogy into two parts, with Wallenstein I including Wallenstein's Camp and The Piccolomini, and Wallenstein II consisting of Wallenstein's Death. He completed the trilogy in 1799.

In this drama, Schiller addresses the decline of the famous general Albrecht von Wallenstein, basing it loosely on actual historical events during the Thirty Years' War. Wallenstein fails at the height of his power as successful commander-in-chief of the imperial army when he begins to rebel against his emperor, Ferdinand II. The action is set some 16 years after the start of the war, in the winter of 1633/1634, and begins in the Bohemian city of Pilsen, where Wallenstein is based with his troops. In the second and third acts of the third play the action moves to Eger, where Wallenstein has fled and where he was assassinated on 26 February 1634.

Content summary[edit]

Wallenstein's Camp[edit]

Serving as an introduction to the second and third parts, Wallenstein's Camp is by far the shortest of the three. Whilst the main action takes place among the higher ranks of the troops and nobility, Wallenstein's Camp reflects popular opinion, particularly that of the soldiers in Wallenstein's camp. They are enthusiastic about their commander, who to all appearances has managed to bring together mercenaries from a wide variety of locations. They praise the great freedom he allows them—to plunder, for instance—whenever they are not engaged in fighting, and his efforts on their behalf in negotiations with the Holy Roman Emperor, of whom some of the troops are critical. They also praise the war for improving their own lives despite its toll on the civilian population. Still, we hear a peasant complain that the troops steal from him, and a monk criticize their wicked life. At the end of this part, the soldiers find out that the emperor intends to place a section of the army under the command of Spanish Habsburgs. Unhappy, they agree to ask Max Piccolomini, one of their commanders, to urge Wallenstein not to fulfill the emperor's wishes.


The Capuchin's sermon in Wallenstein's Camp is based on the Discalced Augustinian Abraham a Sancta Clara's 1683 book, Auf, auf, ihr Christen. Schiller, who like Abraham was from Swabia, wrote to Goethe, "This Father Abraham is a man of wonderful originality, whom we must respect, and it would be an interesting, though not at all an easy, task to approach or surpass him in mad wit and cleverness."[1]


Some scenes in Giuseppe Verdi's opera La forza del destino are based on the play.

Wallensteins Lager, 12 October 1798 (under the title Das Lager, for the re-opening of the rebuilt Weimarer Hoftheater)

Die Piccolomini, 30 January 1799

Wallensteins Tod, 20 April 1799 (under the title Wallenstein)

(in German) Barthold Pelzer, Tragische Nemesis und historischer Sinn in Schillers Wallenstein-Trilogie. Eine rekonstruierende Lektüre; (=Forschungen zur Literatur- und Kulturgeschichte 60); Diss. (TU Berlin), Frankfurt am Main u.a. (Peter Lang) 1997 ( 3-631-31936-3)

ISBN

(in German) : Friedrich Schiller: Wallenstein. Königs Erläuterungen und Materialien (vol. 440). Hollfeld: C. Bange Verlag 2005. ISBN 978-3-8044-1825-7

Bernhardt, Rüdiger

(in German) Fritz Heuer und Werner Keller (ed.): Schillers Wallenstein (, volume 420), Darmstadt, 1977

Wege der Forschung

(in German) Elfriede Neubuhr (ed.): Geschichtsdrama. (= Wege der Forschung, volume 485) Darmstadt, 1980

English from Librivox

The Camp of Wallenstein

(in English)

Wallenstein's Camp

(in German)

Wallensteins Lager

(in German)

Audio-feature on the content and history of Wallenstein on Bayern2 Radiowissen Mediathek

(in German) (Director: Peter Stein)

Wallenstein at the Berliner Ensemble 2007

(in German)

Productions of 'Wallenstein' in German-speaking theatres

(in German)

1630: Wallenstein-Festpiele in Memmingen

(in German)

Wallenstein-Festspiele Altdorf in Nürnberg

(in German) Freely accessible at

www.wissen-im-netz.info

(in German)

Wallenstein at the Schauspiel Leipzig

public domain audiobook at LibriVox

The Camp of Wallenstein