The Faust reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Faust

Faust is the protagonist of a popular tale that has been used as the basis for many different fictional works. It concerns the fate of a learned gentleman, Johann Faust, who summons the Devil, who in the tale is usually called Mephistopheles, and offers to sell him his soul if the Devil will serve him for a given period of time. A contract signed in blood is drawn up and is given the diabolical signature: ultimately, in most later versions of the tale Faust's soul remains his at the end of the devil's term of service.

The tale has some basis in history. Dr. Johann Georg Faust (approx. 1480 - 1540) was a German alchemist who was born in the village of Knittlingen, Württemberg. Luther's friend Melanchthon stated that Faust studied magic at the university of Cracow, in Poland. He was accused of practicing black magic, additionally there are reports of Faust disparaging Jesus' miracles and boasting that he could do the same as often as he liked. Feared and hated by Luther and Melanchthon (who claimed that the devil accompagnied Faust in the form of a dog), his followers induced him to teach. After being accused of molesting his students he had to flee to escape punishment. Other reports show that he was active in Erfurt's university, apparently while he lectured on Homer he, in order to entertain his students, confronted them with Homer's heroes in the flesh. It was in Erfurt where Faust, while confronted by a Franciscan monk named Konrad Klinge said "I have gone further than you think and haved pledged myself to the devil with my own blood, to be his in eternity, body and soul." Another story has him riding out of a Auerbach's Keller in Leipzig on a barrel (1525). In 1534 the German adventurer Philip von Hutten asked Faust to foretell his future before exploring the region around Venezuela, six years later he wrote his brother that everything had happened exactly as foretold by Faust. Faust was put to death in Staufen, Breisgau in 1540. A German chapbook about his sins was translated into English in 1587, where it came to the attention of Christopher Marlowe. Marlowe's Doctor Faustus, in turn, was studied by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, and as such the fictional Faust came to overshadow the historical Faust, about whom little is known.

Works which retell or allude to the Faust tale include:

Table of contents
1 Drama
2 Prose
3 Poetry
4 Opera
5 Music
6 Movies
7 Musicals
8 External links

Drama

Prose

Poetry

Opera

Music

Movies

Musicals

External links


Faust is also the name of a German krautrock band. See Faust (band). Faust is also the German word for fist, although the name "Faust" may be related to Italian "Fausto" rather than the German word.