Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock already was a devout patriot as a youth, as is shown by a
War Song written in 1749 honouring the
Prussian king
Frederick the Great. When the king, however, did not patronize German artists and poets but declared his love for French culture, Klopstock thought that it was up to him to defend German poetry. Due to the political development during his lifetime, the disappointment with regard to the king's distaste of German culture, and the
zeitgeist, his patriotism did not refer to Klopstock's present but to the past. The
War Song consequently was rededicated to
Henry the Fowler, and
Arminius became a regular figure in Klopstock's œuvres. Among these works dedicated to the "liberator of Germany" are the poem "
Hermann und Thusnelda" and the "Bardiete" (Klopstock's term for the genre of '''' or "battle song" after
Tacitus'
Germania) ''Hermann's Schlacht
(1769), Hermann und die Prinzen
(1784) and Hermann's Tod'' (1787). who still was a child in 1770. ==Klopstock's lyrics==