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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Marie_GrubbeMarie Grubbe - Wikipedia

    Biography. In culture. See also. Notes. References. Marie Grubbe. Fru Marie Grubbe (1643–1718) was a member of the Danish nobility who drew a lot of attention by her many extramarital affairs. She has been the inspiration for books, plays and operas. Biography.

  2. Marie Grubbe (ca. 1643-1718) var datter af Erik Grubbe til herregården Tjele øst for Viborg. Hun var en dansk adelsdame, hvis usædvanlige skæbne har fængslet både historikere, forfattere og læsere siden 1700-tallet.

  3. COMPARTE. [Marie Grubbe]. Pro­tagonista de la novela de su mismo nom­bre (v.), del escritor danés J. P. Jacobsen (1847-1885). De la María Grubbe histórica, mujer de noble origen muerta míseramente, nos habla L. Holberg (1684-1754), con la cu­riosidad de un contemporáneo que ha tra­tado en vano de comprender las vicisi­tudes de la ...

  4. 30 de abr. de 2024 · Jacobsen’s first novel, Fru Marie Grubbe (1876; Marie Grubbe: A Lady of the Seventeenth Century), is a psychological study of a 17th-century woman whose natural instincts are stronger than her social instincts and result in her descent on the social scale from a viceroy’s consort to the wife of a ferryman.

    • Poul Houe
  5. Marie „Maren“ Grubbe (* 25. August 1643 in Havreballegård; † vermutlich Juni/Juli 1718 in Allerslev) war eine Vertreterin des dänischen Hochadels, deren Lebensweg von ihren Zeitgenossen als unkonventionell und skandalös verstanden wurde und deren Person Eingang in die europäische Literatur fand, bzw. verfilmt wurde.

  6. The historical novel Fru Marie Grubbe (1876, Eng. transl.: Marie Grubbe: A Lady of the Seventeenth Century 1917) is the first Danish treatment of a woman as a sexual creature. Based upon the life of a 17th-century Danish noblewoman , it charts her downfall from a member of the royal family to the wife of a ferryman, as a result of ...

  7. …novel, Fru Marie Grubbe (1876; Marie Grubbe: A Lady of the Seventeenth Century), is a psychological study of a 17th-century woman whose natural instincts are stronger than her social instincts and result in her descent on the social scale from a viceroy’s consort to the wife of a ferryman.