C. Louis Leipoldt

C. Louis Leipoldt

Leipoldt c. 1915
Leipoldt c. 1915
BornChristian Frederik Louis Leipoldt
Worcester, Cape Colony
DiedCape Town
Resting placePakhuis Pass, Clanwilliam
32°08′11″S 18°59′57″E / 32.13637°S 18.999300°E / -32.13637; 18.999300
Pen namePheidippides, Africanus, CLL, FWB, FW Bancombe, FW Baxter, FW Baxcombe, GMK and KAR Bonade
LanguageAfrikaans, English
NationalitySouth African
EducationLondon Conjoint (M.R.eS., L.R.C.P.), Fellowship of the Royal Colleges of Surgeons (FRCS)
Alma materGuy's hospital
Literary movementSecond Afrikaans Movement
Notable awards
ChildrenJeffery Barnet Leipoldt (Adopted)

Christian Frederik Louis Leipoldt (/ˈlpɒlt/ LY-polt; 28 December 1880 – 12 April 1947), usually referred to as C. Louis Leipoldt, was a South African poet, dramatist, medical doctor, reporter and food expert. Together with Jan F. E. Celliers and J. D. du Toit, he was one of the leading figures in the poetry of the Second Afrikaans Movement. Apart from poetry, Leipoldt wrote novels, plays, stories, children's books, cookbooks and a travel diary. He is numbered amongst the greatest of the Afrikaner poets and was described by D. J. Opperman, himself a noted South African poet, as "our most versatile artist".[1]

  1. ^ D.J. Opperman (c. 1962). Senior verseboek (9th impression ed.). Cape Town: Nationale Boekhandel Ltd.

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