![]() He is the subject of the historical novel, 98 Reasons for Being. From 1851, he was director of the municipal psychiatry in Frankfurt. In Frankfurt/Germany there is a Heinrich-Hoffmann-Museum Frankfurt. Zwiebel (As a common noun, this would mean "onion") Peter Struwwel (This name reverses the order of the components of "Struwwelpeter".) Heinrich Kinderlieb (The surname means roughly "love of children") Heinrich Hoffmann, Struwwelpeter,' Der Struwwelpeter, 1845, first edition, Wikipedia. Heinrich Hoffmann-Donner (The second half of the compound surname would mean "thunder" as a common noun, or a name for the Germanic thunder-god Thor.) ![]() Polykarpus Gastfenger (The given name is the German version of that of a Christian martyr the surname sounds like "Gastfänger", which could be a common noun for "guest-catcher".) Official Site of The Worlds Most Nightmarish Childrens Book. ![]() ![]() Heinrich Hoffmann was a German psychiatrist, who also wrote some short works including Der Struwwelpeter (German for either "slovenly Peter" or "shock-haired Peter"), an illustrated book portraying children misbehaving. Note: There is more than one Heinrich Hoffman. ![]()
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