'Klaus Störtebeker' (c. 1360 -
20 October 1401) was a leader and the best known representative of a companionship of
privateers known as the
Victual Brothers ("Vitalienbrüder" in German). The Victual Brothers were originally hired during a war between
Denmark and
Sweden to fight the Danish and supply the besieged Swedish capital
Stockholm with provisions (
Latin "''victualia''"). After the end of the war, the Victual Brothers continued to capture merchant vessels for their own account and named themselves "Likedeelers" (literally "equal sharers").
A large number of myths and legends surround what little facts exist on Klaus Störtebeker's life. Even the name Störtebeker is only a nickname meaning "empty the mug with one gulp" in Old German. The moniker refers to the pirate's supposed ability to empty a four-litre mug of beer in one gulp. At this time, pirates and other fugitives from the law often adopted a colorful ''
nom de guerre''. (His real name is said to have been Nikolaus Storzenbecher.)
Born in
Wismar, Störtebecker entered public consciousness around 1398, after the expulsion of the Victual Brothers from the
Baltic island of
Gotland, where they had set up a stronghold and headquarters in the town of
Visby. During the following years, Störtebeker and some of his fellow captains (the most famous of whom were
Gödeke Michels,
Hennig Wichmann and
Magister Wigbold) captured
Hanseatic ships, irrespective of their origin.
According to legend in 1401, a
Hamburgian fleet led by
Simon of Utrecht caught up with Störtebeker's force near
Helgoland.There according to some stories, Störtebeker's ship had been disabled by a traitor who cast molten lead into the links of the chain which held the rudder of Störtebeker's ship. Störtebeker and his crew were ultimately overcome and brought to Hamburg where they were tried. Legend has it that Störtebeker offered a chain of gold long enough to enclose the whole town of Hamburg in exchange for his life and freedom. However, Störtebeker and all of his 73 companions were sentenced to death and were beheaded. The most famous legend of Störtebeker is about the execution itself. It is said that Störtebeker asked the mayor of Hamburg to release as many of his companions as he could walk past after being beheaded. The rather riskless request was granted. After he was beheaded, Störtebeker's body allegedly got up and walked past twelve of Störtebeker's companions before the body was tripped by the executioner. The twelve men, however, were executed along with all of the others.
However, some historians have suggested that it is more likely that Störtebeker died in 1400, a bill for digging graves for 30 vitalien bruderern dated to this time survives in the Hamburg records. Incidentaly this would also suggest the story that Störtebeker was sentanced to death with 70 other privateers is atleast missleading, he certainly wasn't buried with 70 other men. The year 1400 also excludes the involvement of Simon of Utrecht and the "brindled cow" since the records show that this ship was only completed in 1401. Infact the Hamburg fleet was commanded by Hermann Langhe and Nikolaus Schoke, who set sail for Helgoland in August 1400, the course of the battle however is not described by any reliable sources. It seems probable that the privateers were vastly outnumbered, and to a certain extent caught by surprise.
source: "Die Vitalienbrüder: Klaus Störtebeker und die Seeräuber der Hansezeit", Matthias Puhle, Frankfurt am Main, Campus Verlag, 1992
Störtebeker's appearance
No authentic portrait of him is known. A portrait of
Kunz von der Rosen, the
court jester of Emperor
Maximilian I, is often erroneously identified as that of Klaus Störtebeker. It is actually an etching made by
Daniel Hopfer.
Störtebeker today
Long after his death, Störtebeker would become a figure of legend and political propaganda. Leftists made him a hero of medieval class struggle against the "capitalistic"
Hanseatic League and right-wingers turned him into a Germanic
Francis Drake. A statute depicting him stands in Hamburg.
Störtebeker was portrayed on television by
Ken Duken in ''
Störtebeker'', a 2006 miniseries based very loosely on his life.
Popular culture
The German
punk band
Slime wrote and recorded a song about the exploits of Störtebeker on their album
Alle gegen alle. There is also a song by the
heavy metal band
Running Wild about Störtebeker's life in their album
Death or Glory.
External links
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Agreement on reparations for injuries and damages by vitalians (made between King
Henry IV of England and the Hanseatic League)
★
Male Pirates: Klaus Störtebeker at
Outlaw Wolf, an Outlaws Blog
★
Pirates of the Caribbean - Klaus Störtebeker
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Stoertebeker festival on Rügen