Maximilian Dortu was shot on this date in 1849 for his part in that era’s failed revolutions, but posterity will always remember his dunk on the future German emperor Kaiser Wilhelm.
A kid fresh out of university when the intoxicating fires of revolution broke out in Europe in 1848, Dortu (the cursory English Wikipedia entry | the detailed German upon hearing that Wilhelm — Prince of Prussia at the time — had deployed artillery in the suppressions roasted him publicly as Kartätschenprinz — the Prince of Grapeshot. It’s a name the Prussian autocrat has never fully lived down.
That got him detained for several months but nothing daunted he emerged after release late in 1848 as a rabble-rousing orator in Potsdam, then took part in the May-July 1849 Palatine uprising — a secondary revolt that occurred after Prince Grapeshot annulled the constitution that the preceding months had nominally secured.
“An idealistic soul, fierce in battle, stormy and ardent on the rostrum, bursting with patriotic fervor at every moment,” a compatriot judged him.
All Dortu’s passion was no match for the grapeshot; the militia that he led dissolved as 19,000 crack Prussian soldiers under General Moritz von Hirschfeld poured in to smash the rebellion.
Dortu was captured in Freiburg and condemned as a rebel, pridefully refusing to petition for mercy. “Who has the courage to confess a conviction and fight for it, must also have the courage to die for it,” he wrote to his parents.
This romantic hero, “the first martyr of the Prussian court martial,” (there were two more shot in August) became for many years a democratic icon, of sufficient weight that Wilhelm, as King of Prussia in the 1860s, forbade Potsdam from accepting a memorial donative from Dortu’s widow. But the disdain of the Hohenzollern never sufficed to snuff out his memory; since 2004, he’s been honored annually by a commemorative ceremony at his tomb on the anniversary of his death.
On this day..
- 1909: Sheikh Fazlollah Noori, anti-constitutionalist martyr
- 1940: Udham Singh, Jallianwala Bagh massacre avenger
- 1934: Otto Planetta and Franz Holzweber, for the Juliputsch
- 1767: Obadiah Greenage, colonial gangster
- 1701: Esther Rodgers, repentant
- 1868: Stefan Karadzha, Bulgarian national hero
- 1812: Hölzerlips, Blood Court prey
- 1722: Cartouche's brother, hanged by the armpits
- 1602: Charles de Gontaut, duc de Biron
- 1903: Hilario Hidalgo and Francisco Renteria
- 1959: Cho Pong-am, Presidential runner-up
- 1963: 21 Iraqi Communists