Shakespeare Stiftung

Weimar

Welcome

The German Shakespeare Foundation was established in 2000 in Weimar. Its founding body was the reunified German Shakespeare Society (Deutsche Shakespeare-Gesellschaft e.V.). This society was originally founded in 1864 at the initiative of the Dessau entrepreneur Wilhelm Ochelhäuser under the patronage of Grand Duchess Sophie of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, making it the oldest and one of the largest literary societies in Germany. For nearly 150 years, it has promoted engagement with the works of William Shakespeare throughout the German-speaking world, working closely with universities, schools, and theatres.

The German Shakespeare Foundation supports the work of the German Shakespeare Society by providing funding for its larger projects. For example, it annually awards the Martin Lehnert Prize for outstanding theses by students and doctoral candidates, made possible through a bequest from the Berlin-based Anglicist Martin Lehnert.

The foundation supports the Shakespeare Yearbook, which the Shakespeare Society has published almost continuously every year since its founding, making it an outstanding cultural-historical record of Shakespeare reception and scholarship over the past 150 years. Since 2022, it has also honoured individuals from the fields of art and culture with the Shakespeare Prize, recognising those who have made exceptional contributions to the work of William Shakespeare and its dissemination.

To provide the many visitors to the annual Shakespeare Days with special highlights in the form of theatrical, musical, literary, or cinematic events, the German Shakespeare Foundation also subsidises these gatherings of German-speaking Shakespeare enthusiasts.

Spring Conference 2006, Weimar

Shakespeare-Days in Weimar 2006 Violence and Terror The conference took place from April 20-23, 2006 in Weimar. The German Shakespeare Society thanks its members and Shakespeare enthusiasts from all around the world for their interest. Speech on the occasion of the Shakespeare Days: Elisabeth Bronfen, Zürich Programme

Autumn Conference 2005, Hamburg

King Lear The conference took place on November 25 and 26, 2005 in Hamburg.    Speakers: Jochen Baier (Schwäbisch Gmünd) Julia Briggs (Leicester) Hanna Scolnicov (Tel Aviv) Johann Schmidt (Hamburg) Roland Weidle (Hamburg) Stanley Wells (Stratford-upon-Avon) Further contributors: Nina Stedmann und die University Players (Hamburg) Programme

Spring Conference 2005, Bochum

Shakespeare – Teller of tales and myths Die Tagung fand vom 21. bis 24. April 2005 im Museum Bochum statt.   Speech on the occasion of the Shakespeare Day: Barbara Hardy, London Speakers: Ingeborg Boltz, München Stephan Laqué, München David Lindley, Leeds Kate McLuskie, Stratford Patricia Parker, Stanford Manfred Pfister, Berlin Roy Sommer/Ansgar Nünning, Giessen…

Autumn Conference 2004, Bochum

Henry IV – Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown The conference took place on November 12 and 13, 2004 in the library of the Ruhrgebiet in Bochum. Speakers: Jens Malte Fischer (Munich) Marta Gibinska (Krakow) Michael Hattaway (Sheffield) Ingrid Hotz-Davies (Tübingen) Norbert Timm (Münster) Wolfgang Weiß (München) Workshop: Norbert Kentrup/Vanessa Shormann, Shakespeare and…

Spring Conference 2004, Weimar

Goethe – Schiller – Shakespeare: Three Weimar Classics The conference took place from 22 to 25 April 2004 at the “mon ami” cultural center in Weimar. It was sponsored by the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Literarischer Gesellschaften und Gedenkstätten with funds from the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media, the Thuringian Ministry of Science, Research and…

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