Simplicissimus (magazine)

E858341

Simplicissimus was a satirical German weekly magazine renowned for its bold political caricatures, literary contributions, and influential role in early 20th-century European art and culture.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

Observed surface forms (1)

Surface form Occurrences
Simplicissimus 0

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf satirical magazine
artist Bruno Paul NERFINISHED
Eduard Thöny NERFINISHED
Olaf Gulbransson NERFINISHED
Rudolf Wilke NERFINISHED
Thomas Theodor Heine NERFINISHED
associatedMovement German modernism
Jugendstil NERFINISHED
basedOnWorkBy Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen NERFINISHED
contributor Frank Wedekind NERFINISHED
Heinrich Mann NERFINISHED
Hermann Hesse NERFINISHED
Ludwig Thoma NERFINISHED
Rainer Maria Rilke NERFINISHED
Thomas Mann NERFINISHED
countryOfOrigin German Empire NERFINISHED
dissolved 1944
editorialFocus anti‑authoritarian commentary
political caricature
social criticism
finalPublication 1967
founder Albert Langen NERFINISHED
genre caricature
political satire
satire
historicalPeriod German Empire NERFINISHED
Nazi Germany NERFINISHED
Weimar Republic NERFINISHED
inception 1896
influenced European satirical press
political cartooning in Germany
language German
namedAfter Simplicius Simplicissimus NERFINISHED
notableFor bold political caricatures
criticism of militarism
criticism of the German monarchy
criticism of the clergy
influence on early 20th‑century European art
literary contributions
placeOfPublication Munich NERFINISHED
politicalOrientation anti‑militarist
left‑liberal
publicationFrequency weekly
publisher Albert Langen Verlag NERFINISHED
resumedPublication 1954
targetOfCensorshipBy German Empire authorities NERFINISHED
Nazi regime NERFINISHED

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Jules Pascin workedFor Simplicissimus (magazine)
Bruno Paul workedFor Simplicissimus (magazine)