Adolf Paul was a writer in the German, Swedish, and Finnish languages. He, along with figures such as August Strindberg, Edvard Munch, and Stanisław Przybyszewski was one of the circle of artists who gathered at the tavern Zum schwarzen Ferkel (the 'Black Piglet') in Berlin. As a student at the Helsinki Music Institute, Adolf Paul became a close friend of the composer Jean Sibelius.
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- Adolf Paul was a writer in the German, Swedish, and Finnish languages. He, along with figures such as August Strindberg, Edvard Munch, and Stanisław Przybyszewski was one of the circle of artists who gathered at the tavern Zum schwarzen Ferkel (the 'Black Piglet') in Berlin. As a student at the Helsinki Music Institute, Adolf Paul became a close friend of the composer Jean Sibelius. Sibelius later wrote incidental music to Paul's play, King Christian II, a piece about the Scandinavian king (1898); and a wedding march for another of Paul's plays, the comedy The Language of Birds (1911).
- Adolf Paul war ein deutsch-schwedisch-finnischer Schriftsteller. Er war Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts Mitglied des Berliner Künstlerkreises um das Lokal Zum schwarzen Ferkel. Er war ein Freund und Biograf August Strindbergs.
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- Adolf Paul was a writer in the German, Swedish, and Finnish languages. He, along with figures such as August Strindberg, Edvard Munch, and Stanisław Przybyszewski was one of the circle of artists who gathered at the tavern Zum schwarzen Ferkel (the 'Black Piglet') in Berlin. As a student at the Helsinki Music Institute, Adolf Paul became a close friend of the composer Jean Sibelius.
- Adolf Paul war ein deutsch-schwedisch-finnischer Schriftsteller. Er war Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts Mitglied des Berliner Künstlerkreises um das Lokal Zum schwarzen Ferkel. Er war ein Freund und Biograf August Strindbergs.
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