Background
Friedrich Adler was the son of innkeeper and soaper Joseph Adler, and his wife Marie Fürth.
Friedrich Adler was the son of innkeeper and soaper Joseph Adler, and his wife Marie Fürth.
There, he studied Romance studies, English, Czechoslovakian, and modern Greek. He later changed subjects and studied law and politics. He finished his studies in 1883 with a doctorate in law.
Despite this, he was admitted to a gymnasium in Prague, and to the Karl-Ferdinands University in Prague. After his studies he completed a legal clerkship in 1890. In the same year he was licensed to become a lawyer and opened a law office on 1 January 1891 in Prague.
They had two daughters: Marie-Elise and Gertrude.
In 1896, Adler became the secretary of the Prague trade body (which office he held until the start of World War I). He was also a lecturer for Romance philology at the German University in Prague and arts and theatre correspondent for the newspaper Bohemia.
From 1900 he taught Spanish at the German trade academy in Prague. After the First World War, Adler headed the translation department of the Czechoslovakian National Assembly.
Adler corresponded with Richard Dehmel and Gustav Falke, amongst others
Friedrich Adler died at the age of 81 on 2 February 1938 in Prague.
He was elected a member of the Society for the Promotion of German Sciences, Arts and Literature in Bohemia and was a prominent figure of the Prague literature scene at the turn of the century, alongside Hugo Salus. He was a member of the patriotic-liberal oriented German artists society Concordia, which met in the "Deutscher Casino". In addition to himself and Salus, the society included writers of the Bohemia.