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Georg Stiernhielm (August 7, 1598 –
April 22, 1672) was a
Swedish civil servant, mathematician,
linguist and poet. He has been
called "the
father of the...
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develop the
Swedish language further. Some key
figures include Georg Stiernhielm (17th century), who was the
first to
write classical poetry in Swedish;...
- discovery: the
German scholar Martin Fogel [de], the
Swedish scholar Georg Stiernhielm, and the
Swedish courtier Bengt Skytte. Fogel's
unpublished study of...
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Jacob Jordaens for a
ceiling in
Uppsala Castle. The
court poet
Georg Stiernhielm wrote several plays in the
Swedish language, such as Den fångne Cupido...
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probably originated in the
writings of the 17th-century
Swedish poet
Georg Stiernhielm, and has
since been used in
Nordic poetry,
mainly during the Baroque...
- (1900–1976)
actor Vincent Skoglund, (born 1974),
photographer Georg Stiernhielm, (1598–1672)
civil servant, mathematician,
linguist and poet. Gunnar...
- as
Silfversparre ("silver chevron"; in
modern spelling, Silver-) or
Stiernhielm ("star-helmet"; in
modernized spelling, stjärnhjälm), the
spelling is...
- Stjärna family, of the same
patrilineal background as the
noble family Stiernhielm, the
earliest known patrilineal member being Olof
Nilsson Stjärna of...
- expelled,
prompting poet Wacław
Potocki to
embrace Catholicism.
Georg Stiernhielm, a
nobleman of the
Swedish Empire,
publishes his epic poem Hercules....
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Robert Dudley,
English explorer and
cartographer (d. 1649) 1598 –
Georg Stiernhielm,
Swedish poet and
linguist (d. 1672) 1613 –
William Frederick, Prince...