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- German_Forest abstract "The German Forest (German: Deutscher Wald) was a phrase used both as a metaphor as well as to describe in exaggerated terms an idyllic landscape in German poems, fairy tales and legends of the early 19th century Romantic period. Historical and cultural discourses declared it as the symbol of Germanic-German art and culture, or as in the case of Heinrich Heine or Madame de Staël, as a counter-image of French urbanity. It was also used with reference to historical or legendary events in German forests, such as Tacitus' description of the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest or even the nature mysticism of the stylized Germanic national myth, the Nibelungenlied as the history of its multi-faceted reception shows.The early conservation and environmental movement, the tourism that was already under way in the 19th century, the youth movement, the social democratic Friends of Nature, the Wandervögel youth groups, the walking clubs and the right-wing Völkisch movement saw in forests an important element of German cultural landscapes.In Nazi ideology, the motif of the \"German Forest\" was comparable to their \"Blood and Soil\" slogan, a typical Germanic symbol. Propaganda, political symbolism and landscape planning drew on this as a central theme for the period after a German victory.Albrecht Lehmann has postulated the continuity of a romantic forest idealism in the German peoples from the Romantic period to the 21st century that transcends class and generation. Examples of the intense and distinctive handling of the cultural forest include the discussion of environmental damage and forest dieback, and the forms of commemoration and mourning associated with woodland cemeteries and natural burials.Polls show a specifically German notion of equating forests and nature. The forest as an educational medium and healthy environment has, in the context of environmental education (see, forest education and forest kindergarten) has a particular significance in the German-speaking region.".
- German_Forest thumbnail Adrian_Ludwig_Richter_013.jpg?width=300.
- German_Forest wikiPageExternalLink 310.
- German_Forest wikiPageExternalLink 361261470..
- German_Forest wikiPageExternalLink dfgproj.html.
- German_Forest wikiPageID "46649294".
- German_Forest wikiPageLength "7725".
- German_Forest wikiPageOutDegree "31".
- German_Forest wikiPageRevisionID "690952092".
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Association_of_German_mountain_and_hiking_clubs.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_the_Teutoburg_Forest.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Blood_and_Soil.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cultural_history_of_Germany.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Category:Environmental_history.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Category:Forests_and_woodlands_of_Germany.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Category:German_literature.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Cultural_landscape.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_education.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Environmental_movement.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Forest_dieback.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Forest_kindergarten.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Friends_of_Nature.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Germaine_de_Staël.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink German_Youth_Movement.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink German_folklore.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Heinrich_Heine.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink History_of_the_forest_in_Central_Europe.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Metaphor.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Natural_burial.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Nazism.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Nibelungenlied.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Protection_of_German_forests.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Romanticism.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Tacitus.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Uwe_Puschner.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Völkisch_movement.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Wandervogel.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink Woodland_cemetery.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink File:Adrian_Ludwig_Richter_013.jpg.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLink File:Waldfriedhof_2.JPG.
- German_Forest wikiPageWikiLinkText "German Forest".
- German_Forest wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-de.
- German_Forest subject Category:Cultural_history_of_Germany.
- German_Forest subject Category:Environmental_history.
- German_Forest subject Category:Forests_and_woodlands_of_Germany.
- German_Forest subject Category:German_literature.
- German_Forest hypernym Phrase.
- German_Forest type Person.
- German_Forest comment "The German Forest (German: Deutscher Wald) was a phrase used both as a metaphor as well as to describe in exaggerated terms an idyllic landscape in German poems, fairy tales and legends of the early 19th century Romantic period. Historical and cultural discourses declared it as the symbol of Germanic-German art and culture, or as in the case of Heinrich Heine or Madame de Staël, as a counter-image of French urbanity.".
- German_Forest label "German Forest".
- German_Forest sameAs Q1205478.
- German_Forest sameAs Deutscher_Wald.
- German_Forest sameAs Q1205478.
- German_Forest wasDerivedFrom German_Forest?oldid=690952092.
- German_Forest depiction Adrian_Ludwig_Richter_013.jpg.
- German_Forest isPrimaryTopicOf German_Forest.