Karel JaromÃÂr Erben (; 7 November 1811 â 21 November 1870) was a Czech folklorist. He is best known for his collection Kytice, which contains poems based on traditional and folkloric themes. He also wrote PÃÂsnànárodnàv ÃÂechách ("Folk Songs of Bohemia") which contains 500 songs and ProstonárodnàÃÂeské pÃÂsnàa à ÂÃÂkadla ("Czech Folk Songs and Nursery Rhymes"), a five-part book that brings together most of Czech folklore.
He was born on 7 November 1811 in MiletÃÂn near JiÃÂÃÂn. He went to college in Hradec Králové. Then, in 1831, he went to Prague where he studied philosophy and later law. He started working in the National Museum with Frantià ¡ek Palacký in 1843. He became editor of a Prague's newspaper in 1848. Two years later, in 1850, he became archives' secretary of the National Museum. He died on 21 November 1870 of tuberculosis.
He was member of the Czech National Revival, and politically he was also a sympathizer of Illyrian movement and Russian Slavophilia for entrenched populations of Slavs in other parts of the world.
As practitioner of his ideals, he published Sto prostonárodnÃÂch pohádek a povÃÂstàslovanských v náà ÂeÃÂÃÂch pà ¯vodnÃÂch ("One Hundred Slavic Folk Tales and Legends in Original Dialects"), also known by its subtitle ÃÂitanka slovanská ("Slavic Reader"), that was influenced by the Grimms' collection of fairy tales. It included such pieces as tale No. 2, Dlouhý, à  iroký a Bystrozraký ("Long, Broad and Sharpsight", translated into English by Albert Henry Wratislaw). The entire volume was translated by W. W. Strickland, and eventually published as Panslavonic Folk-lore in 1930.
He is also considered an important poet of the Czech literary Romanticism in the mid-19th century, with his collection of a dozen literary ballads entitled Kytice z povÃÂstànárodnÃÂch ("A Bouquet of Folk Legends", 1853).