The first example was
Johann Christian Dieterich's
Göttinger Musenalmanach (GMA) of 1770. It was promoted by the mathematician
Abraham Gotthelf Kästner, and published by
Heinrich Christian Boie (in partnership with
Friedrich Wilhelm Gotter). As a literary outlet for students at the
University of Göttingen, it received contributions from
Johann Heinrich Voss,
Ludwig Christoph Heinrich Hölty,
Johann Martin Miller and his relative
Gottlob Dietrich Miller,
Johann Friedrich Hahn,
Johann Thomas Ludwig Wehrs,
Johann Anton Leisewitz, and others. In 1774 Boie made Voss editor, but Voss soon left for
Hamburg and started a competing almanac; in spring 1775, he was replaced by
Leopold Friedrich Günther Goeckingk; he was joined the next year by
Gottfried August Bürger, who became sole editor in 1779. After Bürger's death in 1795 he was replaced by
Karl Reinhard. A semi-pirated imitation by
Engelhard Benjamin Schwickert,
Leipziger Almanach der deutschen Musen, simultaneously appeared in
Leipzig. Despite including nineteen stolen items, it was on sale
before the GMA. The editor was
Christian Heinrich Schmid, and in subsequent years it would include the work of
Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock,
Christian Fürchtegott Gellert,
Johann Wilhelm Ludwig Gleim and
Karl Wilhelm Ramler. From 1776 it was titled
Leipziger Musen-Almanach, and from 1782 Benjamin took over as editor. The third almanac to appear was that of the
Johann Heinrich Voss previously mentioned, the
Hamburger Musenalmanach. The first issue of 1776 lost money, and Voss transferred management to
Carl Ernst Bohn, but continued to edit, with the help (from 1779 to 1786) of Goeckingk. In Vienna in 1777, the
Wienerischer Musenalmanach (or
Wiener Musen-Almanach from 1786) appeared. The editor was
Joseph Franz von Ratschky, and he was joined by
Aloys Blumauer in 1781, and later by
Gottlieb von Leon and
Martin Joseph Prandstätter. The last issue appeared in 1796. ==Schiller's
Musenalmanach==