Background
Rudolf Baumbach was born in Kranichfeld in Thuringia, Germany, the son of a local medical practitioner.
Rudolf Baumbach was born in Kranichfeld in Thuringia, Germany, the son of a local medical practitioner.
In Trieste Rudolf Baumbach caught the popular taste with an Alpine legend, Zlatorog (1877), and songs of a journeyman apprentice, Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen (1878), both of which ran into many editions. Their success decided him to embark upon a literary career. In 1885, he returned to Meiningen, where he received the title of Hofrat, and was appointed ducal librarian.
Rudolf Baumbach remained in Meiningen for the twenty years until his death on 14 of September 1905. Baumbach was a poet of the breezy, vagabond school and wrote, in imitation of his greater compatriot, Joseph Viktor von Scheffel, many excellent drinking songs, among which Die Lindenwirtin ("The Linden Hostess") has endeared him to the German student world. But his real strength lay in narrative verse, especially when he had the opportunity of describing the scenery and life of his native Thuringia.