Robert Hohlbaum

Robert Hohlbaum (28 August 1886 – 4 February 1955) was an Austrian-German librarian, writer, and playwright.

He was born as a son of an industrialist Alois Hohlbaum in what is now Krnov in the Czech Republic, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and known by its German name, Jägerndorf.

He gained employment as a scientific librarian, but maintained an avocation as a writer, writing principally for the journal Muskete, along with Mirko Jelusich and Rudolf Hans Bartsch.

After the war was over he became involved with the Austrian wing of the right-wing German People's Party.

His most significant work after the war ended was a book on Anton Bruckner, Tedeum.

Robert Hohlbaum