Online Encyclopedia

HANS KOHLHASE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 887 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HANS

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KOHLHASE  , a German
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historical figure about whose personality some controversy exists . He is chiefly known as the hero of Heinrich von Kleist's novel, Michael Kohlhaas . He was a merchant, and not, as some have supposed, a horsedealer, and he lived at Kolln in
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Brandenburg . In
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October 1532, so the story runs, whilst proceeding to the
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fair at
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Leipzig, he was attacked and his horses were taken from him by the servants of a Saxon nobleman, one Gunter von Zaschwitz . In consequence of the delay the merchant suffered some loss of business at the fair and on his return he refused to pay the small sum which Zaschwitz demanded as a condition of returning the horses . Instead Kohlhase asked for a substantial amount of
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money as compensation for his loss, and failing to secure this he invoked the aid of his
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sovereign, the elector of Brandenburg . Finding however that it was impossible to recover his horses, he paid Zaschwitz the sum required for them, but reserved to himself the right to take further
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action . Then unable to obtain redress in the courts of law, the merchant, in a Fehdebrief threw down a challenge, not only to his aggressor, but to the whole of Saxony . Acts of lawlessness were soon attributed to him, and after an attempt to settle the
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feud had failed, the elector of Saxony, John Frederick I., set a price upon the head of the angry merchant . Kohlhase now sought revenge in earnest . Gathering around him a
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band of criminals and of desperadoes he spread terror throughout the whole of Saxony; travellers were robbed, villages were burned and towns were plundered . For some time the authorities were practically powerless to stop these outrages, but in March 1540 Kohlhase and his
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principal associate, Georg Ivtagelschmidt, were seized, and on the 22nd of the month they were broken on the wheel in Berlin .

The

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life and
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fate of Kohlhase are dealt with in several dramas . See Burkhardt, Der historische Hans Kohlhase and H. von Kleists Michael Kohlhaas (Leipzig, 1864) .

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