Johann Conrad Dippel

Johann Conrad Dippel
Johann Konrad Dippel.

Johann Konrad Dippel (August 10, 1673 – April 25, 1734) was a German pietist theologian, alchemist and physician.

Contents

Life

He was born at Castle Frankenstein near Mühltal and Darmstadt, and therefore once (at his school) the addendum Franckensteinensis and once (at his university) the addendum Franckensteina-Strataemontanus was used.

He studied theology, philosophy and alchemy at the University of Giessen, obtaining a master's degree in theology in 1693. He published many theological works under the name Christianus Democritus, and most of them are still preserved. From 1700-1702 he engaged in a bitter dispute with the Reformed Court Preacher Conrad Broeske in Offenbach, with whom he shared millenarian hopes for soon-coming renewal in Christendom. He accused Broeske of compromise and collusion with the authorities after Broeske refused to publish Dippel's "The Scourging Papacy of the Protestants" on the Offenbach press.

Dippel's reputation as a controversial theologian earned him both defenders and enemies throughout all of Europe. Emanuel Swedenborg was probably both his most notable supporter and, later, staunch critic: Swedenborg began as a disciple of Dippel, but eventually dismissed him as a "most vile devil ... who attempted wicked things." Swedenborg clarified that he was at first enamored by Dippel's emotionally-charged writings and agreed with his attempts to dissolve traditional churches for a more personal faith and rejection of the Bible as the literal Word of God; however, he eventually criticized Dippel as "bound to no principles, but was in general opposed to all, whoever they may be, of whatever principle or faith ... becoming angry with any one for contradicting him." Swedenborg went so far as to suggest that Dippel was merely a cultish opportunist who used his theological charisma for his own financial gain and social influence, actively leading people away from traditional faith in order to "take away all their intelligence of truth and good, and leaving them in a kind of delirium."[1]

Dippel led an adventurous life, often getting into trouble because of his disputed opinions and his problems with managing money. At one point he was imprisoned for heresy. He created an animal oil known as Dippel's Oil which was supposed to be the equivalent to the alchemists' dream of the "elixir of life." At one point, Dippel attempted to purchase Castle Frankenstein in exchange for his elixir formula, which he claimed he had recently discovered; the offer was turned down.[2]

According to Stahl, Dippel and the pigment maker Diesbach used potassium carbonate contaminated with this oil in producing red dyes. To their surprise, they obtained a blue pigment "Berliner Blau", also called "Preussisch Blau" or "Prussian blue".[3]

There are claims that during his stay at Castle Frankenstein, he practiced alchemy and anatomy. He was allegedly working with nitroglycerin, which led to the destruction of a tower at the Castle Frankenstein. But this seems to be a modern myth, for it is an anachronism. Nitroglycerin hadn't been discovered in Dippel's time. And although the history of the castle during Dippel's lifetime is well documented, the destruction of a tower - though surely a remarkable event - is nowhere mentioned.

Other rumours about Dippel appear to be modern inventions too. For example, that which said that he performed gruesome experiments with cadavers in which he attempted to transfer the soul of one cadaver into another. While soul-transference with cadavers was a common experiment among alchemists at the time and was a theory that Dippel supported in his writings, thus making it possible that Dippel pursued similar objectives[4], there is no direct evidence to link him to these specific acts. There is also no evidence to the rumor that he was driven out of town, when word of his activities reached the ears of the townspeople--though he was often banned from countries for his controversial theological positions, notably Sweden and Russia.

Dippel did, however, experiment quite frequently with dead animals, to which he was an "avid dissector" [5]. In his dissertation Maladies and Remedies of the Life of the Flesh, Dippel claims to have discovered both the Elixir of Life and the means to exorcize demons through potions he concocted from boiled animal bones and flesh. This is the same essay in which Dippel claimed to believe that souls could be transferred from one corpse to another by using a funnel. [6]

Some of Dippel's contemporaries, notably Johann Heinrich Jung, believed that toward the end of his life, Dippel lost his faith altogether after years of bitter disputes with other Christian leaders. Calling Christ "an indifferent being" [7], Dippel shifted all of his energy exclusively on his alchemical experiments. He set up a lab in near Wittgenstein (which was eventually converted into a pub named after him, Dippelshof[8]), and it is at this point in his life that historical records are vague on his activities and thus grew folkloric in nature.[9]. During this time, least one local minister apparently accused Dippel of grave robbing, experimenting on cadavers, and keeping company with the Devil[10]. For the most part, Dippel kept to himself and his work; he perhaps even actively perpetuated the rumors that he had sold his soul to the Devil in exchange for secret knowledge, as relying on his reputation as a dark sorcerer better enabled him to find audiences with those willing to pay for his knowledge of the Philosopher's Stone and the Elixir of Life.[11]

He died at Wittgenstein Castle near Bad Laasphe, probably from a stroke, though some contemporaries suspected poisoning.[12]. Ironically, a year before his death, he wrote a pamphlet in which he claimed to have discovered an elixir that would keep him alive until the age 135.[13]

Connection to the novel Frankenstein

His connection to the Castle Frankenstein gave rise to the theory that he was a model for Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein, though that idea remains controversial. This hypothesis was first probably suggested by Radu Florescu in his 1975 book In Search of Frankenstein, which speculated that Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin visited the castle during her travels on the Rhine with Percy Shelley, where they might have heard local stories about Dippel, which by then would have grown legendary and notorious. Florescu also notes that the Shelleys reference a brief interaction while touring the countryside around Castle Frankenstein with students of the University of Strasbourg, of which Dippel was once a student; these students could have told them stories about the infamous alumni. In addition, the Shelleys knew several members of the so-called Darmstadt Society, which was known for meeting frequently at Castle Frankenstein; Dippel's legends could have come up during conversations.[14]

The local historian, Walter Scheele, believes that the legends told in the villages surrounding the castle were transmitted by Jacob Grimm to Mary Jane Clairmont, translator of Grimm's fairy tales and stepmother of Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin. Scheele also claims that in 1814 Mary, her half-sister Claire Clairmont and Percy Bysshe Shelley are said to have visited Castle Frankenstein, on their way to Lake Geneva. Other historians, whether their field of research is Grimm, Shelley, or the Castle Frankenstein, do not see any evidence for this. Scheele's claimed letter of Grimm is nowhere to be found. And no evidence can be found that Clairmont was considered as the translator for Grimm's Fairy Tales.[15]

Regardless, however, of the historical validity of the connection, Dippel's status as Frankenstein's prototype seems assured in current popular culture (similar to Count Dracula's equally controversial interchangeability with the historical Vlad the Impaler[16]). In addition to Florescu's speculative work, the Dippel/Frankenstein merging has appeared in several works of fiction: Robert Anton Wilson's fantasy novel The Earth Will Shake features Dippel as a monster-making, globe-hopping magician who calls himself Frankenstein;[17] the science fiction novel The Frankenstein Murders portrays Dippel as an assistant to Victor Frankenstein;[18] Topp's three-part comic book miniseries The Frankenstein-Dracula War lists Dippel as one of Dr. Frankenstein's chief inspirations;[19] Warren Ellis's graphic novel Frankenstein's Womb hypothesizes that Shelley indeed visited Castle Frankenstein and heard of Dippel before writing her famous work;[20] Christopher Farnsworth's debut novel Blood Oath features a vampire trying to stop an immortal Dippel (who had once worked for Adolf Hitler) from creating a Frankenstein-like army;[21] G.M.S. Altman's novel Dippel's Oil features a kindhearted Dippel living in modern times, bemused at his influence on the Frankenstein myth;[22] Larry Correia's novel Monster Hunter Vendetta makes reference to Dippel as the creator of an enigmatic character, 'Agent Franks'[23]; Kenneth Oppel's 2011 novel This Dark Endeavor: The Apprenticeship of Victor Frankenstein includes several homages to Shelley's influences, including the naming of Victor Frankenstein's twin brother Konrad, after the alchemist.[24]

Several nonfiction books on the life of Mary Shelley also confirm Dippel as a possible influence.[25][26] In particular, Miranda Seymour finds it curious that Mary speaks of "gods [making entirely] new men" in her journal so soon after her travels through the regions surrounding Castle Frankenstein[27]; if rumors indeed existed throughout the area that Dippel experimented on cadavers in an attempt to create life, Mary's phrasing could be more than merely coincidental. For now, however, the connection remains a subject of an ongoing debate.[28].

See also

References

  1. ^ Swedenborg, Emanuel. A compendium of the theological and spiritual writings of Emanuel Swedenborg (1854). 418-420
  2. ^ Gothic Immortals: The Fiction of the Brotherhood of the Rosy Cross by Marie Roberts contains a translation of a letter Dippel wrote in which he requested to be the lord of Castle Frankenstein in exchange for the Elixir of Life.
  3. ^ Stahl, Georg Ernst: Experimenta, Observationes, Animadversiones, CCC Numero, Chymicae et Physicae, Berlin 1731, 281-283.
  4. ^ Eric John Holmyard, Alchemy. Dover Publications, 1990
  5. ^ Jared Christman. Grave Pawns. 2010, p. 48
  6. ^ Johann Konrad Dippel (writing as Christianus Democritus). Maladies and Remedies of the Life of the Flesh. Originally published in German in 1736
  7. ^ Jung, Johann Heinrich. Theobald, or the Fanatic (1835), p. 25-28
  8. ^ The pub's official website: http://www.dippelshof.de/
  9. ^ Florescu, Radu. In Search of Frankenstein. New York, NY: New York Graphic Society, 1975.
  10. ^ “Frankenstein's castle offers Halloween chills.” Today. MSNBC Travel, 28 Oct. 2008. http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/27405127/ns/today-travel/t/frankensteins-castle-offers-halloween-chills/#.Tp9dvXKyDSE
  11. ^ Curran, Bob. Man-Made Monsters (2010). p. 45
  12. ^ E. E. AYNSLEY and W. A. CAMPBELL. "JOHANN KONRAD DIPPEL, 1673-1734". http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/picrender.fcgi?artid=1034731&blobtype=pdf. 
  13. ^ Florescu
  14. ^ Florescu
  15. ^ http://www.renegadenation.de/darmstadt/frankensteinengl.html Frankenstein Castle, Shelley and the Construction of a Myth
  16. ^ "Filing for Divorce: Count Dracula vs Vlad Tepes" (from "Dracula: The Shade and the Shadow", ed. Elizabeth Miller, Westcliff-on-Sea: Desert Island Books, 1998)
  17. ^ Wilson, Robert Anton. The Earth Will Shake: The History of the Early Illuminati. New Falcon Publications, 1982
  18. ^ Bradshaw, Kathlyn. The Frankenstein Murders. Cormorant Books. 2008. pp 199. (ISBN 9781897151167)
  19. ^ Thomas, Dan. The Frankenstein / Dracula WarTopps Comics. February - April, 1995.
  20. ^ Ellis, Warren. Frankenstein's Womb. Avatar Press. August 19, 2009.
  21. ^ Farnsworth, Christopher. Blood Oath. Putnam Adult; May 18, 2010.
  22. ^ Altman, G.M.S. Dippel's Oil. Helenenthal Books, 2009
  23. ^ Correia, Larry. Monster Hunter Vendetta. Baen; September 28, 2010
  24. ^ Oppel, Kenneth. This Dark Endeavor: The Apprenticeship of Victor Frankenstein. New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 2011.
  25. ^ Hobbler, Dorthy and Thomas. The Monsters: Mary Shelley and the Curse of Frankenstein. Back Bay Books; August 20, 2007
  26. ^ Garrett, Martin. Mary Shelley. Oxford University Press, 2002
  27. ^ Seymour, Miranda. Mary Shelley. Atlanta, GA: Grove Press, 2002. pg 110-111
  28. ^ Fantasmagoriana (Tales of The Dead), edited and translated by A.J. Day. Fantasmagoriana Press; October 9, 2005
  • Douglas H. Shantz: Between Sardis and Philadelphia. The Life and World of Pietist Court Preacher Conrad Broeske. Leiden 2008. Chapter 8, Feud with Johann Konrad Dippel, pp. 187–219.

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