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  1. The film follows Kaspar Hauser, who has lived the first seventeen years of his life chained in a tiny cellar with only a toy horse to occupy his time, devoid of all human contact except for a man wearing a black overcoat and top hat, who fed him.

  2. Jul 5, 2013 · The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser is the true story an adult foundling who appeared out of nowhere and mystified 1820s Germany. Geoff Andrew wonders if the original German title does more justice to one of Werner Herzog’s greatest films.

    • Hauser ‘Bout That: A Mysterious Appearance
    • Horse Play - The Letters
    • Out of The Frying Pan – Kaspar in Prison
    • Kaspar The Celebrity
    • Stranger Danger – Kaspar’s Murder
    • Was He A Secret Noble?
    • Was He A Fraudster?

    Around four o’clock on the afternoon of 26th May 1828, a cobbler named George Weichmann was standing outside his house in Unschlitt Square in the medieval city of Nuremberg. As old George stood gazing about the still, deserted streets, he saw what appeared to be a teenage boy, limping and dressed in tattered clothes and ill-fitting boots. Someone’s...

    Once in the captain’s gaff, the servants and the cobbler watched in amazement as the youngster wolfed down bread and drained a whole pitcher of water, but left the ham and beer. He burnt his fingers on the flame of a candle, not knowing what it was, and was startled by the swinging pendulum of a grandfather clock. The only words he was able to say ...

    Hauser spent the next two months housed in the Nuremberg nick, as the authorities had no other ideas about what to do with him. There, to the astonishment of the police, he was able to scrawl his name on a piece of paper. While in the clink, Kaspar would sit as still as a statue for hours, without speaking or ever lying down to sleep. He sat in the...

    While locked up in Nuremberg he started to become a bit of a celebrity. Masses of locals would scramble to get to the barred window of his cell to catch a glimpse of the “Child of Nuremberg”and his peculiar ways. News of Hauser’s case spread far and wide. Cash rewards were offered for information, and investigators combed the Bavarian countryside l...

    By November 1831, Kaspar had been put up in the town of Ansbach, 25 miles west of Nuremberg, at the expense of English aristocrat Lord Philip Stanhope. It was here that Hauser met his grisly end. Kaspar came stumbling into the house one day with blood gushing from a deep stab wound to his side. He reportedly gasped to the occupants of the house, “M...

    Kaspar’s one-time guardian, von Feuerbach, certainly believed that the lad was of noble birth, and publicly stated as much. He stopped short of pointing the finger at any particular royal house or individuals, and he died of an apparent stroke in May 1833. Some believe that von Feuerbach was poisoned. A popular story from the beginning was that Cou...

    Critics of Hauser have picked holes in his story and suggested that he was simply a clever con artist, or at best a hapless victim of unscrupulous fraudsters trading off the notoriety of the case. His claims of having never left a dark room for 16 years and living on bread and water alone are at odds with the descriptions of him as a broad-shoulder...

  3. Kaspar Hauser (30 April 1812 – 17 December 1833) was a German youth who claimed to have grown up in the total isolation of a darkened cell. Hauser's claims, and his subsequent death from a stab wound, sparked much debate and controversy, both in Nuremburg and abroad.

  4. Dec 12, 2023 · But there remains the enigma of Kaspar Hauser – the vision, perhaps, of some immeasurable fall from grace by the world of rational man – which causes him such intolerable pain and despair that he yearns for the dark solitude of his cellar as a preferable alternative to society.

  5. Nov 17, 2007 · Kaspar Hauser was a real historical figure who in 1828 appeared in a town square early one morning clutching the Bible and an anonymous letter. In the movie, as apparently in reality, an unknown captor kept him locked up in a cellar for about the first 20 years of his life.

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  7. The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser: Directed by Werner Herzog. With Bruno S., Walter Ladengast, Brigitte Mira, Willy Semmelrogge. A young man named Kaspar Hauser suddenly appears in Nuremberg in 1828, barely able to talk or walk, and bearing a strange note.

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