(Redirected from Baron von Münchhausen):''This page refers to a historical and literary character. For the movie and radio personality, see
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Portrait of young Baron Münchhausen
'Karl Friedrich Hieronymus, Freiherr von Münchhausen' (
11 May 1720 –
22 February 1797) was a
German baron who in his youth was sent to serve as
page to
Anthony Ulrich II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and later joined the
Russian military. He served until 1750, in particular taking part in two campaigns against the
Turks. Returning home, Münchhausen supposedly told a number of outrageous
tall tales about his adventures. The Baron was born in
Bodenwerder and died there as well.
According to the stories, as retold by others, the Baron's astounding feats included riding
cannonballs, travelling to the
Moon, and escaping from a swamp by pulling himself up by his own hair.
Life
Münchhausen was page to
Anthony Ulrich II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, and moved with his employer to Russia. He was named a
cornet in the Russian cavalry when Anthony Ulrich became Russian
generalissimo in 1739. In 1740, he was promoted to
lieutenant. He was stationed in
Riga, but participated in two campaigns against the
Ottoman Empire in 1740 and 1741. When Anthony Ulrich was imprisoned in 1741, Münchhausen remained in the service of the Russian military. In 1750, he was named a cavalry
captain.
In 1744, he had married Jacobine von Dunten in Perniel near
Duntes Muiža in
Livonia. After his retirement, he lived with his wife at his manor in Bodenwerder until her death in 1790. Here, he acquired a reputation for his witty and exaggerated tales; at the same time, he was considered an honest man in business affairs. Münchhausen remarried in 1794; the marriage ended in a contested, ruinous divorce. Münchhausen died childless in 1797.
Adaptations

Doré's caricature of Münchhausen
The stories about Münchhausen were first collected and published by an anonymous author in
1781. An
English version was published in London in
1785, by
Rudolf Erich Raspe, as ''Baron Munchhausen's Narrative of his Marvellous Travels and Campaigns in Russia'', also called ''The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchhausen''. However, much of the humorous material in them is borrowed from other sources. Indeed, the Baron himself was not notable for immodesty within his profession and relative to his accomplishments, and Raspe's publication rather damaged his reputation.
In
1786,
Gottfried August Bürger translated Raspe's stories back into German, and extended them. He published them under the title of ''Wunderbare Reisen zu Wasser und zu Lande: Feldzüge und lustige Abenteuer des Freiherrn von Münchhausen'' ("Marvellous Travels on Water and Land: Campaigns and Comical Adventures of the Baron of Münchhausen"). Bürger's version is the one best known to German readers today.
In the 19th century, the story had undergone expansions and transformations by many notable authors and had been translated into numerous languages, totalling over 100 various editions. Baron Munchhausen's adventures have also been published in Russia, where they are quite commonly known, especially the versions adapted for children. In 2005 a statue of Munchhausen was erected in the city of
Kaliningrad (Königsberg).
It is not clear how much of the story material derives from the Baron himself; however, it is known that the majority of the stories are based on folktales that have been in circulation for many centuries before Münchhausen's birth.
Art
Münchhausen was an object of numerous works of art, but the final say to his visual image belongs to an edition of the book produced in
1862 and illustrated by the artist
Gustave Doré, who was also known for his work illustrating
Dante Alighieri's ''
Divine Comedy'' and the
Christian Bible.
_-_Baron_von_Münchhausen_(1862)_-_009.jpg)
Illustration 9 by Doré
The 1895 edition
Table of contents of the 1895 edition
Title: ''The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen'' by Rudolph Erich Raspe
Chapters 1-20: Volume 1, Chapters 21-34: Volume 2.
★ Chapter 1: The Baron relates an account of his first travels — The astonishing effects of a storm — Arrives at
Ceylon; combats and conquers two extraordinary opponents — Returns to
Holland.
★ Chapter 2: In which the Baron proves himself a good shot — He loses his horse, and finds a
wolf — Makes him draw his sledge — Promises to entertain his company with a relation of such facts as are well deserving their notice
★ Chapter 3: An encounter between the Baron's nose and a door-post, with its wonderful effects — Fifty brace of
ducks and other fowl destroyed by one shot — Flogs a
fox out of his skin — Leads an old
sow home in a new way, and vanquishes a wild
boar
★ Chapter 4: Reflections on
Saint Hubert's
stag — Shoots a stag with cherry-stones; the wonderful effects of it — Kills a
bear by extraordinary dexterity; his danger pathetically described — Attacked by a wolf, which he turns inside out — Is assailed by a mad dog, from which he escapes — The Baron's cloak seized with madness, by which his whole wardrobe is thrown into confusion
★ Chapter 5: The effects of great activity and presence of mind — A favourite hound described, which pups while pursuing a hare; the hare also litters while pursued by the hound — Presented with a famous horse by Count Przobossky, with which he performs many extraordinary feats
★ Chapter 6: The Baron is made a
prisoner of war, and sold for a slave — Keeps the Sultan's
bees, which are attacked by two bears — Loses one of his bees; a silver
hatchet, which he throws at the bears, rebounds and flies up to the moon; brings it back by an ingenious invention; falls to the earth on his return, and helps himself out of a pit — Extricates himself from a carriage which meets his in a narrow road, in a manner never before attempted nor practised since — The wonderful effects of the frost upon his servant's
French horn
★ Chapter 7: The Baron relates his adventures on a voyage to North America, which are well worth the reader's attention — Pranks of a
whale — A
sea-gull saves a sailor's life — The Baron's head forced into his stomach — A dangerous leak stopped а posteriori
★ Chapter 8: Bathes in the
Mediterranean — Meets an unexpected companion — Arrives unintentionally in the regions of heat and darkness, from which he is extricated by dancing a
hornpipe — Frightens his deliverers, and returns on shore
★ Chapter 9: Adventures in
Turkey, and upon the river
Nile — Sees a balloon over
Constantinople; shoots at, and brings it down; finds a French experimental philosopher suspended from it — Goes on an embassy to Grand
Cairo, and returns upon the Nile, where he is thrown into an unexpected situation, and detained six weeks
★ Chapter 10: Pays a visit during the siege of
Gibraltar to his old friend General
Elliot — Sinks a Spanish man-of-war — Wakes an old woman on the African coast — Destroys all the enemy's cannon; frightens the Count d'Artois, and sends him to
Paris — Saves the lives of two English spies with the identical
sling that killed
Goliath; and raises the siege
★ Chapter 11: An interesting account of the Baron's ancestors — A quarrel relative to the spot where
Noah built his ark — The history of the sling, and its properties — A favourite poet introduced upon no very reputable occasion — queen
Elizabeth's abstinence — The Baron's father crosses from England to Holland upon a marine horse, which he sells for seven hundred
ducats
★ Chapter 12: The frolic; its consequences —
Windsor Castle —
St. Paul's —
College of Physicians — Undertakers, sextons, &c., almost ruined — Industry of the apothecaries
★ Chapter 13: The Baron sails with Captain Phipps, attacks two large bears, and has a very narrow escape — Gains the confidence of these animals, and then destroys thousands of them; loads the ship with their hams and skins; makes presents of the former, and obtains a general invitation to all city feasts — A dispute between the Captain and the Baron, in which, from motives of politeness, the Captain is suffered to gain his point — The Baron declines the offer of a throne, and an empress into the bargain
★ Chapter 14: Our Baron excels Baron Tott beyond all comparison, yet fails in part of his attempt — Gets into disgrace with the
Grand Seignior, who orders his head to be cut off — Escapes, and gets on board a vessel, in which he is carried to
Venice — Baron Tott's origin, with some account of that great man's parents —
Pope Ganganelli's amour — His Holiness fond of shell-fish
★ Chapter 15: A further account of the journey from
Harwich to
Helvoetsluys — Description of a number of marine objects never mentioned by any traveller before — Rocks seen in this passage equal to the
Alps in magnitude;
lobsters,
crabs, &c., of an extraordinary magnitude — A woman's life saved — The cause of her falling into the sea — Dr. Hawes' directions followed with success
★ Chapter 16: This is a very short chapter, but contains a fact for which the Baron's memory ought to be dear to every Englishman, especially those who may hereafter have the misfortune of being made prisoners of war
★ Chapter 17: Voyage eastward — The Baron introduces a friend who never deceived him: wins a hundred guineas by pinning his faith upon that friend's nose — Game started at sea — Some other circumstances which will, it is hoped, afford the reader no small degree of amusement
★ Chapter 18: A second visit (but an accidental one) to the moon — The ship driven by a whirlwind a thousand leagues above the surface of the water, where a new atmosphere meets them and carries them into a capacious harbour in the moon — A description of the inhabitants, and their manner of coming into the lunarian world — Animals, customs, weapons of war, wine, vegetables, &c
★ Chapter 19: The Baron crosses the
Thames without the assistance of a bridge, ship, boat, balloon, or even his own will: rouses himself after a long nap, and destroys a monster who lived upon the destruction of others
★ Chapter 20: The Baron slips through the world: after paying a visit to
Mount Etna he finds himself in the
South Sea; visits
Vulcan in his passage; gets on board a Dutchman; arrives at an island of cheese, surrounded by a sea of milk; describes some very extraordinary objects — Lose their compass; their ship slips between the teeth of a fish unknown in this part of the world; their difficulty in escaping from thence; arrive in the
Caspian Sea — Starves a bear to death — A few waistcoat anecdotes — In this chapter, which is the longest, the Baron moralises upon the virtue of veracity
★ Chapter 21: The Baron insists on the veracity of his former Memoirs — Forms a design of making discoveries in the interior parts of Africa — His discourse with Hilaro Frosticos about it — His conversation with Lady Fragrantia — The Baron goes, with other persons of distinction, to Court; relates an anecdote of the Marquis de Bellecourt
★ Chapter 22: Preparations for the Baron's expedition into Africa — Description of his
chariot; the beauties of its interior decorations; the animals that drew it, and the mechanism of the wheels
★ Chapter 23: The Baron proceeds on his voyage — Convoys a squadron to Gibraltar — Declines the acceptance of the island of Candia — His chariot damaged by
Pompey's Pillar and
Cleopatra's Needle — The Baron out-does
Alexander — Breaks his chariot, and splits a great rock at the
Cape of Good Hope
★ Chapter 24: The Baron secures his chariot, &c., at the Cape and takes his passage for England in a homeward-bound
Indiaman — Wrecked upon an island of ice, near the coast of
Guinea — Escapes from the wreck, and rears a variety of vegetables upon the island — Meets some vessels belonging to the negroes bringing white slaves from Europe, in retaliation, to work upon their plantations in a cold climate near the
South Pole — Arrives in England, and lays an account of his expedition before the
Privy Council — Great preparations for a new expedition — The
Sphinx,
Gog and Magog, and a great company attend him — The ideas of Hilaro Frosticos respecting the interior parts of Africa
★ Chapter 25: Count Gosamer thrown by Sphinx into the snow on the top of
Teneriffe — Gog and Magog conduct Sphinx for the rest of the voyage — The Baron arrives at the Cape, and unites his former chariot, &c., to his new retinue — Passes into Africa, proceeding from the Cape northwards — Defeats a host of
lions by a curious stratagem — Travels through an immense desert — His whole company, chariot, &c., overwhelmed by a whirlwind of sand — Extricates them, and arrives in a fertile country
★ Chapter 26: A feast on live bulls and kava — The inhabitants admire the European adventurers — The Emperor comes to meet the Baron, and pays him great compliments — The inhabitants of the centre of Africa descended from the people of the moon proved by an inscription in Africa, and by the analogy of their language, which is also the same with that of the ancient
Scythians — The Baron is declared sovereign of the interior of Africa on the decease of the Emperor — He endeavours to abolish the custom of eating live bulls, which excites much discontent — The advice of Hilaro Frosticos upon the occasion — The Baron makes a speech to an Assembly of the states, which only excites greater murmurs — He consults with Hilaro Frosticos
★ Chapter 27: A proclamation by the Baron — Excessive curiosity of the people to know what
fudge was — The people in a general ferment about it — They break open all the granaries in the empire — The affections of the people conciliated — An ode performed in honour of the Baron — His discourse with Fragrantia on the excellence of the music
★ Chapter 28: The Baron sets all the people of the empire to work to build a bridge from their country to Great Britain — His contrivance to render the arch secure — Orders an inscription to be engraved on the bridge — Returns with all his company, chariot, etc., to England — Surveys the kingdoms and nations under him from the middle of the bridge
★ Chapter 29: The Baron's retinue is opposed in a heroic style by
Don Quixote, who in his turn is attacked by Gog and Magog — Lord Whittington, with the
Lord Mayor's Show, comes to the assistance of Don Quixote — Gog and Magog assail his Lordship — Lord Whittington makes a speech, and deludes Gog and Magog to his party — A general scene of uproar and battle among the company, until the Baron, with great presence of mind, appeases the tumult
★ Chapter 30: The Baron arrives in England — the
Colossus of Rhodes comes to congratulate him — Great rejoicings on the Baron's return, and a tremendous concert — The Baron's discourse with Fragrantia, and her opinion of the Tour to the
Hebrides
★ Chapter 31: A litigated contention between Don Quixote, Gog, Magog, &c. — A grand court assembled upon it — The appearance of the company — The matrons, judges, &c. — The method of writing, and the use of the fashionable amusement quizzes — Wauwau arrives from the country of
Prester John, and leads the whole Assembly a wild-goose chase to the top of
Plinlimmon, and thence to
Virginia — The Baron meets a
floating island in his voyage to America — Pursues Wauwau with his whole company through the deserts of North America — His curious contrivance to seize Wauwau in a morass
★ Chapter 32: The Baron harangues the company, and they continue the pursuit — The Baron, wandering from his retinue, is taken by the savages, scalped, and tied to a stake to be roasted; but he contrives to extricate himself, and kills the savages — The Baron travels overland through the forests of North America, to the confines of Russia — Arrives at the castle of the Nareskin Rowskimowmowsky, and gallops into the kingdom of Loggerheads — A battle, in which the Baron fights the Nareskin in single combat, and generously gives him his life — Arrives at the
Friendly Islands, and discourses with Omai — The Baron, with all his attendants, goes from
Otaheite to the isthmus of
Darien, and having cut a canal across the isthmus, returns to England
★ Chapter 33: The Baron goes to
Petersburgh, and converses with
the Empress — Persuades the Russians and Turks to cease
cutting one another's throats, and in concert cut a
canal across the Isthmus of
Suez — The Baron discovers the
Alexandrine Library, and meets with
Hermes Trismegistus — Besieges
Seringapatam, and challenges
Tippoo Sahib to single combat — They fight — The Baron receives some wounds to his face, but at last vanquishes the tyrant — The Baron returns to Europe, and raises the hull of the "
Royal George"
★ Chapter 34: The Baron makes a speech to the
National Assembly, and drives out all the members — Routs the fishwomen and the
National Guards — Pursues the whole rout into a Church, where he defeats the National Assembly, &c., with
Rousseau,
Voltaire, and
Beelzebub at their head, and liberates
Marie Antoinette and the
Royal Family
Movies
In
1943 Raspe's book was adapted into a
German language film ''
Münchhausen'' directed by
Josef von Báky, with
Hans Albers in the title role and
Brigitte Horney as the empress Katherine the Great, written by
Erich Kästner. This was Germany's fourth full-color motion picture, lushly filmed with amazing effects for the time, and produced at
UFA studios.
In
1979 Mark Zakharov shot the Russian film, based on the play written by Grigori Gorin,
That Very Munchausen relaying the story of the baron's life after the adventures portrayed in the book, particularly his struggle to prove himself sane.
In 1983 a French cartoon version was made, called
Le Secret des sélénites. It's available in English under the name "Moon Madness."
Terry Gilliam adapted the stories into the
1988 film ''
The Adventures of Baron Munchausen'', shot in
Belchite,
Spain, and at the
Cinecitta Studios in
Rome. The movie starred
John Neville as the Baron and nine-year-old
Sarah Polley as Sally Salt. Supporting the Baron as his faithful crew were
Eric Idle,
Charles McKeown,
Winston Dennis and
Jack Purvis. The movie also featured
Uma Thurman,
Oliver Reed,
Jonathan Pryce,
Sting and
Robin Williams (credited as Ray D. Tutto).
Various shorts are also known to have been made about the baron's life, including one by
George Méliès.
★
★
★
★
Role-playing game (RPG)
In 1998 a multi-player storytelling game titled ''The Extraordinary Adventures of Baron Münchhausen'' was produced by James Wallis of Hogshead Publishing. Players of the game
take on the role of a noble person and challenge one another to relate an
improvised tale based on an opening line given by another player (for example: "Grand Poobah, please tell our assemblage about the time you singlehandedly defeated the entire Turkish army using only a plate of cheese and a corkscrew!"). Players are able to interject and introduce a limited number of complications to the tall tale at any time ("But, my dear Grand Poobah, is it not true that you have a horrible allergy to cork?), and eventually all vote for the best storyteller. The game has several adaptions into
drinking games.
Fandom
There is a club "Munchhausen's Grandchildren" (Внучата Мюнхаузена) in
Kaliningrad (Königsberg). With the help of the
sister city of
Bodenwerder,
Germany, which is the birthplace of the Baron, the club amassed a number of "historical proofs" of presence of the Baron in Königsberg: an ancient silver
thaler "returned" to Kaliningrad by Bodenwerder's mayor as a debt for a mug of beer drunk by Munchhausen,
Order of Saint Anna issued to the Baron by
Pavel I of Russia for his "faultless service", and the skeleton of the
whale in whose belly the Baron was entrapped for a while. On 18 June 2005 there was the grand opening of a monument of the Baron, which was presented to Kaliningrad by Bodenwerder. The monument portrays the Baron's cannonball ride.
A monument of the Baron is also installed in his city of birth.
An international tour over the places visited by Baron Munchhausen is established as a joint venture of
Germany,
Lithuania,
Latvia, and Kaliningrad.
Psychology
Additionally, the Baron lends his name to the psychological
Munchausen syndrome in which a patient will feign illness in order to receive the sympathy and attention of others; and also
Munchausen syndrome by proxy in which a patient is someone (usually a child) in the care of the person suffering the disorder. The patient in the latter case may suffer abuse at the hands of the sufferer in order for the patient to receive medical attention, whilst the sufferer receives the sympathy of others.
See also
★
Mr. Munchausen
★
Karel Zeman
References
★
Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie, vol. 23, p. 1-5
External links
★
The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen. Online and fully illustrated
★
Project Gutenberg e-text of ''
The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen''
★
Bürger's Adventures of Münchhausen at Project Gutenberg (in German)
★ Munchausen-Library
[1]