From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
List of romantics
Brazilian Romanticism
Czech Romanticism
Dutch Romanticism
English Romanticism
Samuel Palmer (visual artist)
William Blake (painting, engraving, poetry)
George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron (poetry)
John Clare (poetry)
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (poetry, philosophy, criticism, German scholar)
John Constable (painting)
Thomas de Quincey (essays, criticism, biography)
Thomas Chatterton (poetry)
Ebenezer Elliot (Poet Activist)
William Hazlitt (criticism, essays)
John Keats (poetry)
Charles Lamb (poetry, essays)
Mary Shelley (novels)
Percy Bysshe Shelley (poetry)
Robert Southey (poetry, biography)
J. M. W. Turner (painting)
William Wordsworth (poetry)
Dorothy Wordsworth (diaries)
John William Waterhouse (painting, also a
Pre-Raphaelite )
Estonian Romanticism
French Romanticism
German Romanticism
Caspar David Friedrich (painter)
Johannes Brahms (composer)
Joseph Görres (writer, essayist)
Jakob Grimm (story collector, linguist)
Wilhelm Grimm (story collector, linguist)
Carl Gustav Carus (painter)
Karl Friedrich Lessing (painter)
Philipp Otto Runge (painter)
Adam Müller (literary critic and political theorist)
Novalis (poet, novelist)
Joseph von Eichendorff (poet, writer)
Friedrich Schlegel (poet, theorist)
August Wilhelm Schlegel (poet, translator, theorist)
Franz Schubert (composer)
Robert Schumann (composer, polemicist)
Ludwig Tieck (novelist, translator)
Ludwig Uhland (poet, dramatist)
E.T.A. Hoffmann (writer, composer)
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (philosopher)
Adolf von Henselt (composer)
Zacharias Werner (poet, dramatist)
Ludwig van Beethoven (composer)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (novelist, poet, scientist)
Richard Wagner (composer)
Friedrich Hölderlin (poet)
Heinrich Heine (poet)
Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (philosopher)
Johann Gottlieb Fichte (writer, theorist)
Adrian Ludwig Richter (painter)
Carl Spitzweg (painter)
Eberhard Wächter (painter)
Gerhard von Kügelgen (painter)
Members of the
Nazarene movement (visual artists)
Carl Maria von Weber (composer)
Felix Mendelssohn (composer)
Franz Liszt (composer)
Heinrich von Kleist (poet, dramatist, novelist)
Friedrich Schleiermacher (theologian, philosopher)
Wilhelm Heinrich Wackenroder (writer)
Irish Romanticism
Hungarian Romanticism
Italian Romanticism
North American Romanticism
Norwegian Romanticism
Polish Romanticism
Romanticism in Poland was followed, after the disastrous
January 1863 Uprising , by a period known as
Positivism .
Portuguese Romanticism
Almeida Garrett (writer, poet, dramatist, journalist)
Alexandre Herculano (writer, novelist, poet, journalist, historian)
Camilo Castelo Branco (writer, novelist)
João de Deus (writer, poet)
António Feliciano de Castilho (writer, poet, translator)
João de Lemos (writer, poet)
José Vianna da Motta (composer and pianist)
Romanian Romanticism
Vasile Alecsandri (poet, playwright)
Gheorghe Asachi (poet, short story writer, playwright)
Dimitrie Bolintineanu (poet)
Cezar Bolliac (poet)
George Coşbuc (poet)
Dora d'Istria (essayist, travel writer)
Mihai Eminescu (a Romantic for part of his career; poet, short story writer, essayist)
Nicolae Filimon (novelist and short story writer)
Ion Ghica (essayist and memoirist)
Andrei Mureşanu (poet)
Costache Negruzzi (short story writer)
Alexandru Odobescu (short story writer)
Bogdan Petriceicu-Hasdeu (historian and playwright)
Ion Heliade Rădulescu (poet, essayist)
Iosif Vulcan (dramatist, short story writer, essayist, novelist)
Russian Romanticism
Serbian Romanticism
Slovene Romanticism
Scottish Romanticism
Spanish Romanticism
Spanish Romanticism emerged in the years following the
Napoleonic Wars , and reached its apex in the 1840s. Much of Spanish Romanticism serves as criticism of contemporary Spanish society, as seen directly in the Articulos de Costumbre (essays on customs/daily life) by Larra. Important literary works in Spanish Romanticism include Larra's essays (each article published separately until 1836), Don Juan Tenorio by Zorrilla (1844), El Estudiante de Salamanca (1840) and Poesias (1840) by Espronceda, and Rimas y Leyendas by Becquer (1871).
Welsh Romanticism
Other countries
See also
Further reading
The Ardis Anthology of Russian Romanticism ; edited by Christine Rydel. Ann Arbor: Ardism 1984
ISBN
9780882337418
External links and references
Premodern (Western)
Modern (1863–1944)
1863–1899 1900–1914 1915–1944
Contemporary and
Postmodern (1945–present)
1945–1959 1960–1969 1970–1999 2000– present
Related topics