Simon Dach
Simon Dach (born July 29, 1605, Memel, East Prussia [now in Lithuania]—died April 15, 1659, Königsberg [now Kaliningrad, Russia]) was a Prussian poet who was best known as the leader of the 17th-century Königsberg circle of middle-class poets, important in the early Baroque movement in literature, which reflects the stress and turmoil of the period of the Thirty Years’ War.
- Born:
- July 29, 1605, Memel, East Prussia [now in Lithuania]
- Died:
- April 15, 1659, Königsberg [now Kaliningrad, Russia] (aged 53)
After earning his living for many years as a private tutor for wealthy families, he became a professor of poetry at the University of Königsberg in 1639. His occasional poetry, which commemorated the births, deaths, and marriages of the Königsberg bourgeoisie, is characterized by a sweet simplicity and musicality. He went beyond this conventional manner, however, in poems with elements from folk songs and in religious poetry; these verses can be seen to anticipate the hymns of Paul Gerhardt, generally considered the greatest of the German hymnists.