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Noble Blood

iHeartPodcasts and Grim & Mild

Historical Analysis and Modern Findings

From Kaspar Hauser Came to TownMay 19, 2026

Excerpt from Noble Blood

Kaspar Hauser Came to TownMay 19, 2026 — starts at 0:00

This is an IiHart podcast Guaranteed human Paramount Plus is now the home of all your BET favorites. That sounds nice. W all new episodes of all the Queen's men. You stand up when you talk to the Qeen. Plus a whole new world of movies like Gladiator two. I must have power. Original series like The Shy. Life comes at you fast, whether you're ready for it or not. In live sports like UFC home Welcome to Paradise. Same family. That's all that mattered to me. Your BT favorites are now on Paramount Plus. Subscribe now The thing about AI for business They may not automatically fit the way your business works At IBM, we've seen this firsthand. embedding AI across HR, IT, and procurement processes We've reduced costs by millions, slashed repetitive tasks, and freed thousands of hours for strategic work Now we're helping companies get smarter by putting AI where it actually pays off Deep in the work that moves the business Let's create smarter business IBM. When it comes to your yard, reliability matters, shop with confidence at the Home Depot and get fourth of July savings on Riyobi, the number one cordless outdoor power brand. It's time to choose your power. Both the Ryobi eighteen Volt and forty Volt self propelled lower kits are on special buy for an even lower price ofll four hundred twenty nine dollars each was four doll seventy nine cents. Riobi's battery platform delivers the power, runtime, and dependability you need to tackle yard work with ease. Shop fourth of July savings on Ryoobi Outdoor powerower only at the Home Depot While suppies' last pring valid june twenty fifth through July, G only cease for online for details Hey, this is Danish Schwartz. Just one quick note of housekeeping. If you are listening to this on release Day, Today is also the release day of my brand new book, The Arcane Arts by S.D. Cverlely Estie Cverly is the pen name I use for me and my friend and co writer, Dan Frery. It is a magical fantasy book about a grad student and her professor studying illegal forbidden magic and solving a murder mystery while they do it. If that at all interests you, please pick up a copy of the Arcane Arts We had a great time writing it. I really think if you like this podcast, I think you'll enjoy it That said, let's get into the episode Welcome to Noble Blood, a production of IiHart Radio and Grim and Mild from Earon Mankey. Listener Discretion addvised On may twenty sixth, eighteen twenty six, a cobbler named Georg Leonard Weichman was walking through the town of Nuremberg Even though it was the afternoon, the city was sparse, almost abandoned It was a holiday and many of the town's residents were off in the countryside enjoying the nice spring weather Something caught Mckman's eye as he walked A young man Maybe a teenager of sixteen or seventeen. stumbling awkwardly down a nearby hill. The boy was stocky with an unusual lumbering gait and blue eyes that seem to Vkman almost vacant The boy shouted a phrase that can be translated to Hey lad casual greeting that masters would use to greet their apprentces Oddly casual for a teenager to use toward an adult man in his fifties, which Bkman was The boy also called out the name of a street And generously, Vgman agreed to help the strange vagrant boy to his destination It soon became apparent that this boy only knew a few phrases, which he repeated over and over One of those phrases was I want to be a cavalry man like my father was Where had this boy come from A wandering stranger who stumbled out of the forest and into Nuremberg Eventually, Vgman brought him to the police station, and more of the boys' story would emerge The boy's name was Casper Hauser And according to him The letters he had been carrying on his person He had lived his entire life up until this point in a solitary cell raised entirely alone in isolation A man wearing a mask had given him water and bread every day On occasion, the water would be more bitter than normal and Casper Hauser would awaken the next day to find that his hair and nails had been cut and his straw had been changed. That was the extent of his human interaction didn't know the difference between night and day. The story was astonishing And almost immediately, Casper Hauser became famous around Europe. A strange savage boy raised in conditions of such enthralling cruelty, under such mysterious conditions Philosophers from the seventeenth century on had become fascinated by legends and stories of enfant savages or children who were raised by animals for what those stories might reveal about humanity What was it that made us human? Was it something inherent inside of man or was it something learned There were also religious implications to these stories Would a child raised by animals understand or know God Would he be innocent of all of the sins of man Forever child like Beyond the salaciousness of his alleged origin From the moment Kasper Hauser stumbled down the hill into Nuremberg He became a symbol for the big philosophical questions that had been captivating Europe for a century A living experiment As Martin Kitchen wrote in his book, Casper Hauser, Europe's Child, quote Here was a blank screen on which could be projected the fantasies of those with whom he came into close contact Here was another of those wild children who people ancient mythology and who had appeared infrequently in Europe since the fourteenth century and had excited philosophers and medical men to speculate on the nature of men But of course, given just how salacious and mysterious this foundling child was There was also going to be rumors Why had this boy been hidden away for so long? and under such extreme conditions If not because those in power had a reason for doing it It sounds like something out of a fairy tale a lost orphaned child be something more than he first appears The rumors began swirling Casper Hauser, they said. It wasn't just a lost child She was a lost I'm Danish Schwartz, and this is Noble Blood It's a fantasy I think that everybody has probably had at least once. a fantasy popularized by Sigmund Freud that your parents secretly adopted you. and that your real parents are wealthy, powerful Royal And so maybe it's inevitable that when a boy stumbled into Nuremberg under mysterious circumstances, the questions would begin swirling about who he really was and where he came from. When Casper Hauser first appeared His walk unsteady and his language limited carried with him two letters. The first was purportedly written by his mother announcing that his name was Casper He was born on april thirtieth, eighteen twelve and that his father, now deceased had been a cavalrymen of the sixth Regiment. The second letter was from Casper Hauser's mysterious caretaker or jailer The masked man that Caspper recalled had brought him bread and water. The letter was addressed to Captain von Wessenning commommander of the Sth Cavalry Regiment. It read, quote I am a poor laborer with ten children of my own. I have enough to do just to keep them alive His mother asked me to bring up the boy. I raised him as a Christian, and since eighteen twelve, I have never let him go a step away from the house So no one knows where he has been brought up. and he himself does not know the name of my house nor of the place. You might ask him, but he can't tell you Ah. So anyone trying to figure out where Casper had come from? would be hitting a dead end there. The letter continued, saying that Captain von Wessening could take the boy into his regiment or, quote Hang him by the chimney The sort of cruelty, one might expect from a man who kept a child imprisoned in a cell his entire life When the people of Nuremberg asked Kasper more questions, trying to get any more information from him He only repeated I want to be a cavalry man as my father was or don't know He could also say, horse. Casper was delivered to Von Wessenning's stable The captain was understandably confused and put off A servant offered Casper beer and meat, but he refused He did, however, accept water and bread He was brought to the police station where they determined that Casper was able to write his own name and had basic familiarity with Christian prayers clothing was awkwardly sewn and ill fitting his boots were too small The initial K was sewn into his jacket and his handkerchief Among his personal effects were a rosary, a worn out key a prayer book, a few religious tracks And most odd of all Allegedly a folded envelope of paper containing a bit of gold dust Casper had no papers And given that he couldn't reply meaningfully to any questions It was assumed he was a vagrant and he was sent to prison. Although it was specified that given his strange circumstances, he would be locked up with quote Decent prisoners instead of the other random vagrants and beggars. Kaspper Hauser spent two months in prison in the castle in Nuremberg during which time he became a tourist attraction. with visitors stopping by in order to see the intriguing foundoundling raised in isolation Eper seemed to be making remarkable progress with regards to his physical condition where he had been awkwardly lumbering when he first appeared, seemingly barely able to walk He had been able to climb more than ninety steps up to his cell without a problem Gradually, more details about Casper's life would come to light Although notably, Casper had no ill will toward his captor, nor anger about how he was raised. Apparently every morning when he woke up You would find a loaf of black bread and a pitcher of water. He had only two wooden horse toys and one wooden dog toy to play with. and a wooden lidded container that he used as a commode His door was bolted on the outside. and wood was piled against the room's small windows so that he never saw sunlight Never learn the difference between night and day. One day, Casper had been given a sheet of paper and a pencil and his anonymous captor reached into the dungeon room to teach Casper how to write his own name He also taught him how to walk a few steps. and taught him the simple phrases to repeat that he had said when he had first arrived in Nuremberg And then Casper Hauser, approximately sixteen years old was released into the wilds of human civilization The people of Nuremberg could barely believe how cruel and strange this boy's saga had been. The presresident of the Bavarian Court of Appeals, a man named Anlm von Fuurerbach took a particular interest in investigating the case And the city of Nuremberg itself formally adopted Kasper Hauser with donations raised to pay for his care and schooling Dumber was placed in the household of a man named Friedrich Dahmer a schoolmaster and philosopher Dahmer, understandably, fascinated by Casper. began to treat him like a science experiment Kasper Hauser's physical condition continued to improve. He allegedly grew two inches in a single month And according to Dahmer, his senses were astonishingly acute. He had an animal like ability to see in the dark to make out impossibly faint sounds and to taste if his water had been diluted with even one drop of something else Despite attempts to feed him a more varied diet Caspper only wanted bread and water And only after a few months was he able to eat small amounts of meat. Occasionally, he would suffer extreme convulsions Rper continued to learn remarkably fast. Soon, he was able to write and speak Ididentifying jokes even And Dahmer discovered he had a talent for drawing Dahmer was also interested in using Casper for homeopathic experiments and experiments with animal magnetism popular idea in nineteenth century Germany He was given homeopathic tinctures, some of which made him sick and he was frequently waved over with magnets and fed magnetized water Personally, I'm not sure exactly what they were trying to accomplish with that As Kitchen wrote, quote He was used as a guinea pig by cranks and amateurs who gained nothing from their experiments. He was so frightened of these experiments that it was impossible to tell whether the often violent reactions were caused by the homeopathic medicines or by sheer terror. When he was ill, the medicines he was given made him feel worse And it seemed to him that the medical profession devoted its efforts towards torturing their unfortunate subjects and making the healthy sick. All the while, the mystery of his origin and his true identity continuue to be the center of conversations around Nmberg and all across Europe Casper Hauser The abused imprisoned child who escaped his mysterious confinement with an innocent, almost animal like naivete and who now among humanity, was making enormous strides of progress I mean, how could the writers resist Was he really just a random foundling It seemed unlikely Why had there been such an effort to keep him hidden? If not for the fact Casper Hauser was secretly someone important. Consider the fact that he had been confined and imprisoned but otherwise kept in remarkably good health and in hygienic conditions. No masked man had been identified and there were no leads as to where Kasper Hauser had actually come from despite large rewards from police for any information Surely, people whispered, It was a sign that this was the work of rich and powerful people able to cover their tracks so completely that they would never be caught And despite the fact that he had barely been able to write his name, Casper Hauser was by this point fluent and quick to learn There seemed to be something innately extraordinary about him This was no ordinary boy people believed. It seemed obvious that he was someone special someomeone noble Someone royal even But why had he been imprisoned and hidden away and by who And if he wasn't merely Kasper Hauser Then who was he Charles, the Grand Duke of Boden hadn't been happy about the fact that he had to marry Stephanie D Bournet. But Napoleon's France was becoming more powerful and Stephanie was Napoleon's de facto adopted daughter a relative of Napoleon's wife, Josephine And so the grand Duke married her And despite the fact that the two didn't really get along They managed to have five children. Unfortunately for them, none of their surviving children were male heirs And so after Charles, the grand Duke died in eighteen eighteen The Duchy of Baden went to his uncle, Louis I maybe things weren't quite as straightforward as they seemed Charles and Stephanie hadad had a son An infant prince born on september twenty ninth, eighteen twelve The baby boy died after only a few weeks Had he When Casper Hauser appeared on the European scene Rumors began to spread cururrent duke, Louis's mother, had schemed to put her son on the throne by stealing away the rightful prince and replacing him in his bassinet. with a sickly commoner Was Kasper Hauser the missing prince With those rumors in the words of kitchen Kasper Hauser quote It wasn't just a symbol for primitive beauty and the purity of man's animal nature but of the perfidity of the royal family. especially among the German radicals of the nineteenth century T those who had already hated the nobility that they saw as corrupt and indulgent It seemed perfectly in line with their cruelty They might steal away a baby and torture him in isolation for a decade so that their own son might inherit a throne supportupporting Casper Hauser as a missing prince became a way to attack and delegitimize the current regime There were other theories about who Casper Hauser was if he was a noble Maybe he was the son of a Hungarian countountess or an English royal But something about his appearance and the peculiarity of his case led many to believe that something nefarious was going on especially after the attack on Casper Hauser's life in October of eighteen twenty nine while living with the teacher, Dahmer Casper Hauser and his guardian had gotten into some small disagreements Casper was indulging in the dishonesties of a child Skipping school and not telling the truth about it Dahmer was also getting a little frustrated with his Qote unquote scientific experiments on Casper Seeing that the more Casper adjusted to civilized society the more he seemed to be losing whatever mystical quality he had had in the first place One day, in October of eighteen twenty nine, more than a year after Casper had first arrived in Nuremberg Caspper and Dahmer had quirreled after Casper had been caught playing hookie The next day, Dahmer returned home to a startling scene Casper had a large gash on his forehead It had dripped blood all the way from the outhouse through the first floor of the house According to Casper, a hooded man had attacked him in the outhouse, shouting, You still have to die before you leave the city of Nuremberg And though Casper wasn't able to see the man's face, He knew it was the man who had kept him captive all of those years. mysterious man who had brought him bread and water and taught him how to write his own name The incident garnered sympathy among Casper's supporters and renewed public interest in his case One person who found himself fascinated by this strange story out of Germany was a British nobleman named Lord Stanhope. Stanhope was the nephew of Prime Minister William Pitt But his immediate family was notably eccentric, and he himself was a much remark upon germanophile Stanhope met Casper Hauser in may eighteen thirty one, and he became obsessed the sort of flare of quick intimacy that sometimes happens among a new friends Stanhope declared that there was no doubt in his mind that Casper Hauser was, in fact, of noble birth And he began to shower him with expensive presents. He gave Casper a life annuity of five hundred gooldnd and one hundred goldnd as pocket money. which I'm sure was something of a weight off of the shoulders of the town administrators of Nuremberg who had up until that point been paying for Casper Hauser's upkeep Within no time at all, Stan Hope and Hauser were calling each other by their first names So close that some speculated that the relationship was sexual in nature Stanhope got it into his mind that Casper Hauser's true mother was a Hungarian countess, and so he took Casper on a trip to Hungary to see if anything might jog his memory Though Hauser seemed to recognize a few Hungarian phrases The trip itself did not prove anything, and ultimately it was a failure and in failure, The eccentric, impatient Stanhope. found that Hauser now left a bad taste in his mouth with the same speed that had characterized the beginning of their friendship. Now Stanhope turned against Casper Hauser. This wholesome, wide eyed innocent was now clingy and annoying And though Stanhope had promised that he would take Hauser with him back to England He changed his mind and instead deposited the young man in Ansbach with a schoolmaster and under the patronage of Anlm von Furrbeach. That legal scholar and president of the Bavarian Court of Appeals I had mentioned earlier. Stanhope wasn't alone in souring on Casper Hauser There were plenty of people who saw him as a sidhow distraction or else an abject fraud to quote Kitchen again, quote Many resented his fame, found his character unattractive, commented bitterly on his arrogance, his mendacity, and his absurd pretensions to gentility It was grotesque to people of a conservative bvent that this somewhat ridiculous figure should be the darling of assorted radicals, devotees of alternative medicine and practitioners of experimental pedagogy Anti Hussarians saw the whole fuss as further evidence of the absurdity of radical pretensions and as an underhand attack on the established order. endnd quote But was it possible he wasn't just pretentious and absurd posossible he was a complete fraud Had he stabbed himself shallowly in the outhouse in order to garner sympathy Was it possible Casper Hauser had never been imprisoned at all. never raised in his strange isolation After all, there was no proof of it. No criminal had been caught It seemed that Casper Hauser was simple minded and innocent to some degree. He also had a mean edge And he could be vain and prone to Small self aggrandizing lies although even his sins could be explained away by his most ardent supporters See see how even a short time among the so called civilized society corrupts the pure and innocent among us? The schoolmaster that Kasper Hauser was living with in Ansbach was named Johann Meyer Meyer seemed uninterested and unwilling to indulge Hauser's behavior when he acted out And he found the young man a job at a local law office doing menial work as a copyist As a side note, it is extraordinary to imagine J just from a psychological development perspective, that if Kaspper Hauser did in fact live his entire life in isolation that five years after re entering society be capable of working a standard administrative job But he was. Even so Johann Meyer and Kasper Hauser didn't get along And on december ninth, eighteen thirty three They had a fight less than a week later Casper Hauser would have his final adventure The last mysterious piece of the puzzle in his mysterious life On december fourteenth, eighteen thirty three, Kasper Hauser stumbled back into Johann Meyer's house bleeding from a slash across his chest while he gasped for air He managed to explain what had happened to him A stranger had found him in the Endback court gardens, had handed him a purse, and then, when Casper accepted it stabbed him As Casper bled in Meyers's house, he tried to explain that they needed to find the purse. He had dropped it somewhere in the gardens But Casper was going pale He managed to mutter a few more phrases that were impossible to make out And then he fainted Six days later, Casper Hauser died He had been murdered His exit from German society was as mysterious as his entrance Policemen trarawled the court gardens and found what they assumed to be the purse from Hauser's story with a penciled note. written in backwards mirror writing When translated it read in German Hauser will be able to tell you quite precisely how I look and from where I am To save Huser the effort, I want to tell you myself where I come And then there's a blank space I come from, from Bank space, the Bavarian border, blank space on the river blank space I will even tell you the name M L O Who had written this note and what did it mean? Was Casper Hauser secretly a noble that needed to be done away with Before the truth about his origin was revealed was the man that murdered him the same man who had kept him prisoner. Surely his violent murder proved that he was someone that those in power were trying to quiet. There was no real consensus at the time The alleged murderer was never found and no more details came to light. His headstone red Here lies Casper Hauser Riddle of his time His birth was unknown, his death mysterious ninetteen thirty three. Was he actually a missing prince Even in the nineteenth century, plenty of people pointed out that It was unlikely Otto Middelstad wrote in eighteen seventy six about how impossible it would have been to reasonably swap out the Ryal Baden baby. you wrote, quote The baby's father, grandmother, and aunt with the ten court physicians the nurses and others would have seen a swap in death. And it is too absurd to suppose on no authority that they were all parties to the plot There were enough inconsistencies in Hauser's story to wonder even if he had ever been captive at all in the manner he described Casper Hauser A hoax. He was well developed, physically and relatively capable cognitively in a way most people today would find implausible For someone who had been raised for years in a single room with no human interaction. As for his mysterious injuries, his stabbings by a mysterious man who was never caught Did Hauser actually do them to himself For sympathy for attention to bring people around to his side to make himself feel important For people to pay attention to his story again Today, some historians believe that Casper Hauser's death was actually a tragic accident that he invented the story of the masked man and the purse in the garden and that he had written and folded the mirror code letter and then stabbed himself but made a mistake. and accidentally went too deep with the knife A twenty twenty three study indicated that Kasper Hauser had the mark of having received a cowpox vaccination to prevent smallpox which was mandatory in Bavaria since eighteen oh seven. A mark from a vaccination indicated that he had, in fact grown up not in isolation but in contact with other people A much publicized DNA test of the mitochondrial DNA from Kasper Hauser's blood stained undergarments by the German magazine Der Spiegel in nineteen ninety six. proved once and for all, that Casper Hauser was not, in fact, a member of the Royal House of Baden Although of course those who still believe that he was a prince findind ways to claim that the test was either mistaken or corrupted We'll probably never discover the truth behind the strange story of Casper Hauser Qote, H story acquired an import which in no way belonged to it Stan Hope wrote after he was disillusioned. And yet, Casper Hauser has captivated audiences for literal centuries You might be familiar with the Werner Herzog film about him The most likely version of the story if you had to ask me is something somewhere in the middle Maybe Casper Hauser was a boy from the countryside who was treated very poorly, even abused Maybe he was the illegitimate son of a woman whose family hid him in shame. Maybe he was born with some disabilities That would have been treated with care and sympathy today When he was sixteen, whoever had been feeding him had dropped him off to fend for himself And from there, This young man became both victim and benefactor to the desires of a rapacious public who saw in him whatever they wanted to see He was a perfect innocent. He was a science experiment He was a philosophical riddle for gossiping about after dinner He was a manipulative liar He was an example of the system's depravity He was a murder mystery He was a prince In the end, maybe he was just a person That's the story of Casper Hauser, but keep listening after a brief sponsor break to hear about another murder that led to even more questions in this mysterious case ODeck is built to back small businesses, like yours. Whether you're buying equipment, expanding your team, or bridging cash flow gaps, ONDecks loans up to four hundred thousand dollars help make it happen fast. Rated A plus by the Better Business Bureau and earning thousands of five star trrust pilot reviews, ONDeck delivers funding you can count on. Apply in minutes at onndDeck dot com d

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