From My Farming Days

http://dbpedia.org/resource/From_My_Farming_Days an entity of type: Thing

Ut mine Stromtid ist ein umfangreicher Roman des niederdeutschen Schriftstellers Fritz Reuter, der erstmals 1862 erschienen ist. Die hochdeutsche Übersetzung lautet Aus meiner Volontariatszeit. Gemeint ist eine Art Praktikum der Landwirtschaft, was ungefähr der Fernsehserie Onkel Bräsig entspricht. rdf:langString
From My Farming Days (Low German: Ut mine Stromtid) is a novel by Fritz Reuter, originally published in three volumes between 1862 and 1864. Written in Low German, it portrays life in rural Mecklenburg in the 1840s in the context of the Revolutions of 1848. The novel was autobiographically-inspired as Reuter had himself worked as an apprentice farmer during the era. In 1878 it was translated into English by M.W. MacDowell. Although not the main character, the genial land inspector "Onkel" Zacharias Bräsig became the most well-known and his role was often emphasised in adaptations of the story. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ut mine Stromtid
rdf:langString From My Farming Days
rdf:langString From My Farming Days
rdf:langString From My Farming Days
xsd:integer 64793989
xsd:integer 1123635700
rdf:langString Drama
rdf:langString low German
rdf:langString Print
xsd:integer 1862
rdf:langString Ut mine Stromtid ist ein umfangreicher Roman des niederdeutschen Schriftstellers Fritz Reuter, der erstmals 1862 erschienen ist. Die hochdeutsche Übersetzung lautet Aus meiner Volontariatszeit. Gemeint ist eine Art Praktikum der Landwirtschaft, was ungefähr der Fernsehserie Onkel Bräsig entspricht.
rdf:langString From My Farming Days (Low German: Ut mine Stromtid) is a novel by Fritz Reuter, originally published in three volumes between 1862 and 1864. Written in Low German, it portrays life in rural Mecklenburg in the 1840s in the context of the Revolutions of 1848. The novel was autobiographically-inspired as Reuter had himself worked as an apprentice farmer during the era. In 1878 it was translated into English by M.W. MacDowell. Although not the main character, the genial land inspector "Onkel" Zacharias Bräsig became the most well-known and his role was often emphasised in adaptations of the story.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2233

data from the linked data cloud