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- Newsgroups: sci.military
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!gatech!hubcap!ncrcae!ncrhub2!ciss!law7!military
- From: PAUL D CHAPIN <pdchapin@unix.amherst.edu>
- Subject: Re: Frederick the Great, Bavaria and Ludwig II.
- Message-ID: <Bzq2uH.4p0@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Sender: military@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM (Sci.Military Login)
- Organization: Amherst College
- References: <Bzo8u9.CDy@law7.DaytonOH.NCR.COM>
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 17:20:41 GMT
- Approved: military@law7.daytonoh.ncr.com
- Lines: 38
-
-
- From PAUL D CHAPIN <pdchapin@unix.amherst.edu>
-
- Joe Johnson (jjohnson%astroatc.UUCP@cs.wisc.edu) wrote:
- :
- : Ludwig II (the "mad" king) was deposed by a group that included members of
- : his own family, mainly due to his spendthrift ways. I don't recall the date
- : offhand, but I think it was in the late 1880s. He had essentially
- : bankrupted the state with his castle building program. Bismarck liked
- : Ludwig and was sympathetic to his plight, but felt that he could not
- : interfere in what was an internal Bavarian dispute. After Ludwig's death
- : (suicide or murder?) he was succeeded by an uncle or maybe a cousin.
- :
- A few additional notes.
-
- 1) Ludwig was most certainly "mad". Even his current fans admit that.
-
- 2) The buildings may have been expensive, but they created jobs. The result
- was that he was a lot more popular with the people than with the government.
- According to local lore, the first time the government tried to grab him, he
- was in one of his castles in the south (I wouldn't even attempt to spell it)
- and the locals all got together to block the gate of the castle.
-
- 3) The government was also unhappy that Ludwig didn't back them in various
- disputes with Prussia. Ludwig's mother was Prussian and he had no complaints
- against them himself. The people liked the idea that he opposed going to
- war with Prussia.
-
- 4) Ludwig's death was ruled a suicide, but circumstances surrounding it were,
- and still are, disputed. It has probably generated more theories than the
- Kennedy assignation. If the government wasn't involved, it certainly was
- unhappy.
-
- 5) The Wittelsbach family still lives in Bavaria, or at least did when I
- was there in the early 70s. Still wealthy I believe. And I believe they
- have enough class not to go around claiming meaningless titles.
-
-
-