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  1. German Romanticism (German: Deutsche Romantik) was the dominant intellectual movement of German-speaking countries in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, influencing philosophy, aesthetics, literature, and criticism. Compared to English Romanticism, the German variety developed relatively early, and, in the opening years, coincided with ...

  2. Romanticism originated in the second half of the 18th century at the same time as the French Revolution. [1] Romanticism continued to grow in reaction to the effects of the social transformation caused by the Revolution. There are many signs of these effects of the French Revolution in various pieces of Romantic literature.

  3. British Romanticism. An introduction to the poetic revolution that brought common people to literature’s highest peaks. By The Editors. Excerpt from "Wanderer above the Sea of Fog" (1818), by ‎Caspar David Friedrich. “ [I]f Poetry comes not as naturally as the Leaves to a tree it had better not come at all,” proposed John Keats in an ...

  4. El Museo del Romanticismo es un museo español, de titularidad estatal, situado en Madrid. Conserva una importante colección de objetos históricos y artísticos centrada en la vida cotidiana y las costumbres del siglo XIX, con especial atención a la corriente estética del Romanticismo . En un primer momento el museo fue conocido con el ...

  5. Romanticism. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Romanticism. This category covers the cultural movement known as Romanticism, which in broader terms ran from approximately 1770 to 1850. It should not be confused with other uses of the term, for example from music, where the "Romantic" period overlaps, but does not coincide with, the general ...

  6. Romantic nationalism (also national romanticism, organic nationalism, identity nationalism) is the form of nationalism in which the state claims its political legitimacy as an organic consequence of the unity of those it governs. This includes such factors as language, race, ethnicity, culture, religion, and customs of the nation in its primal ...

  7. The founder of German Romanticism, Friedrich Schlegel, identified the "three sources of Romanticism": the French Revolution, Fichte's philosophy and Goethe's novel Wilhelm Meister. [4] In the words of A. Lavretsky: In the person of Fichte, German idealism put forward its most militant figure, and German Romanticism found the philosophy of its ...