Maximilian Meyer Heine
German physician (1807–1879)
Maximilian Meyer Heine (November 6, 1807 - November 6, 1879) was a German doctor and Russian state councilor. He served with the Russian Army during the Russo-Turkish War. He was the youngest brother of Heinrich Heine.
He graduated from the universities of Berlin and Munich in 1829 and joined the Russian army as a surgeon.[1] He died in Berlin in 1879.
References
- ^ „Medicinische Zeitung Russlands“, Petersburg, 1. Jg. 1844 (Digitalisat) until 17. Jg. 1860 (Digitalisat)
- Biography in 'German literary lives in St. Petersburg'
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Heinrich Heine
- "On Wings of Song" (1827)
- "Die Lotosblume" (1840)
- "The Silesian Weavers" (1844)
- "Germany. A Winter's Tale" (1844)
- Die Harzreise (1826)
- "Der Doppelgänger" (1828)
- "Dichterliebe" (1840)
- Liederkreis, Op. 24 (1840)
- Frühlingslied, WAB 68 (1851)
- "Du bist wie eine Blume, WAB 64" (1861)
- William Ratcliff (1869)
- Guglielmo Ratcliff (1895)
- Deaf to Our Prayers (2006)
- The Gaze of the Gorgon
- Schwanengesang
- Lisztomania
- Der fliegende Holländer
- Gustav Heine von Geldern (brother)
- Maximilian Meyer Heine (brother)
- Salomon Heine (uncle/patron)
- Armand Heine (cousin)
- Michel Heine (cousin)
- Alice Heine (distant cousin)
- Robert von Heine-Geldern (grandnephew)
- Simon von Geldern (great uncle)
- Karl Marx (third cousin once removed)
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