MM56 - Ancient Buildings
My entry for MonoMonday today - it's not ancient but old and more importantly: I was able to get there in daylight after work.
It's the house situated in the historical part of Niederzwehren, today also called Märchenviertel, Fairy Tale Quarter, where Dorothea Viehmann used to live between 1787 and 1798.
Dorothea who?
Dorothea Viehmann (November 8, 1755 – November 17, 1816) was a German storyteller. Her stories were an important source for the fairy tales collected by the Brothers Grimm. Most of Dorothea Viehmann's tales were published in the second volume of Grimms' Fairy Tales.
Dorothea Viehmann was born as Katharina Dorothea Pierson in Rengershausen as the daughter of a tavern owner. Her paternal ancestors were persecuted Huguenots who fled to Kassel (Hesse-Kassel) after the Edict of Nantes was revoked. As she grew up, Viehmann picked up numerous stories, legends and fairy tales from the guests of her father's tavern.
In 1777 Dorothea Pierson married the tailor Nikolaus Viehmann who soon died in 1787. After the death of her husband, she had to provide for herself and her seven children by selling products from her garden at the local market. Since 1787, she lived in Niederzwehren, which is part of the city of Kassel today.
She became acquainted with the Brothers Grimm in 1813 and told them over forty tales and variations. Because of Viehmann's Huguenot ancestors, many of her stories are based on French fairy tales. Wilhelm Grimm wrote about her saying that it was out of an amazing chance that he and his brother had met this woman. The brothers were especially impressed that Dorothea could retell her stories again and again without changing a word. There are, however, several examples of her stories which remained incomplete.
By courtesy of Wikipedia
- 11
- 2
- Nikon COOLPIX P520
- 1/30
- f/3.7
- 4mm
- 80
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