German novelist
Born 1793 Died 1864
Charles Sealsfield, the pseudonym of Karl Anton Postl, who was born on the 3rd of March 1793 at Poppitz near Znaim in Moravia. His schooling completed, he entered the Kreuzherrenorden in Prague, where he became a priest, but in the autumn of 1822 he fled to America, where he assumed the name of Charles Sealsfield. In 1826 he returned to Germany and published a book on America (Die Vereinigten Staaten von Nordamerika), which was followed by an outspoken criticism of Austria, written in English (Austria as it is, 1828) and published anonymously in London. Meanwhile he bad returned to America, where he published his first novel, also in English, Tokeah, or the White Rose (1828). He now turned journalist, first in New York and subsequently in Paris and London, as correspondent for various journals. In 1832 he settled in Switzerland, and in 1860 purchased a small estate near Solothurn. Here he died on the 26th of May 1864. His will first revealed the fact that he was the former monk, Postl.
It is as a German novelist that he is best known. His Tokeah appeared in German under the title Der Legitime und die Republikaner (1838), and was followed by Der Virey und die Arislokraten (1835). Lebensbilder aus beiden Hemisphadren (1835-1837), Sturm-, Land- und Seebilder (1838), Das Kajutenbuch, oder Nationale Charakteristiken (1842). Sealsfield occupies an important position in the development of the German historical novel at a period when Scott's influence was beginning to wane. He endeavoured to widen the scope of historical fiction, to describe great national and political movements, without forfeiting the sympathy of his readers for the individual characters of the story.
Sealsfield's Gesammelte Werke appeared in 18 vols. (184.3-1846); his chief novels are also to be obtained in modern reprints. See Kertbeny, Erinnerungen an Sealsfield (1864); L. Schmolle, Charles Sealsfield (1875); L. Hamburger, Sealsfield-Postl, bisher unveroffentlichte Briefe (1879); A. B. Faust, Charles Sealsfield, der Dichter beider Hemispharen (1896).
Being the entry for SEALSFIELD, CHARLES in the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica, the text of which lies within the public domain.