Sunday, May 19, 2013

Vauban's Legacy

The other day an article in the Badische Zeitung informed readers about a plan of the Consortium for the Revitalization of Freiburg's Schlossberg to make a part of Vauban's fortifications, the Fort Carré, visible again. When thinking about Schlossberg many of my Madison friends know Toni's place, the Greiffenegg-Schlössle, that due to its diminutive form neither sounds nor looks like a fort.

The Greiffenegg-Schlössle above Freiburg
and its chestnut-shaded beer-garden behind
Well, the Greiffenegg-Schlössle is like the tip of an iceberg where more than 90% of what once existed on Schlossberg is no longer there or rather invisible.

Without going back in history to the Romans it was Bertold II, Duke of Zähringen, who in 1091 decided to build his Castrum de Friburch on the strategically important hill above the future city of Freiburg. No pictures exist but Hartmann von Aue ought have written songs about the most beautiful castle in the region.

Over the centuries buildings and fortifications on Schlossberg were frequently destroyed but just as frequently reconstructed.

The Burghaldenschloss at the time of the Thirty Years War
In Merian's Topographia Germaniae, volume Alsatiae, a copperplate print of Freiburg in 1644 shows a building on Schlossberg called Burghaldenschloss. This castle was destroyed in the Thirty Years War but rebuilt at the order of Emperor Leopold in the 1670ties as a stronghold against French aggression.

The Leopoldsburg in 1670 looks like a stronghold
All in vain. In 1677 Louis XIV's marshal François de Créqui besieged the city and eventually took it. The subsequent Nijmegen Peace Treaty required Leopold to hand Freiburg over to the French crown.

Genius Vauban

Immediately Louis XIV ordered his fortress architect Vauban to embattail the city according to modern standards as a French fort on German territory. Genius Vauban considered incorporating the Vieux Château (Burghaldenschloss) into the new fortification not as a problem but rather took it as an opportunity. In enlarging the existing installations on Schlossberg he transformed them into a refuge. Should Freiburg be taken by an enemy the city's troops would initially retreat to Fort de l'Aigle - due to its form also called chamber pot - then in case of need move even higher up into Fort de St. Pierre, and eventually as a last resort pull back to Fort Carré.


Vauban's fortification around Freiburg and on Schlossberg:
Fort de l'Aigle, Fort de St. Pierre
, and at the far end Fort Carré.
When in 1745 the French definitely had to leave Freiburg they blew up Vauban's fortifications and leveled the buildings. Over the years nature took over and the last vestiges of Vauban's work disappeared. Now the Consortium would like to make the foundations of Fort Carré visible as an historical heritage.

The Fort Carré, the last resort (©BZ)
In Freiburg Vauban had to construct his fortification into and around existing structures. His masterpiece, however, he could build from scratch a few kilometers away from Freiburg: Neuf Brisach.

Vauban's masterpiece: Neuf Brisach

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Freiburg's Second Founding Father

Otto Winterer in half-relief in Freiburg's minster
The day before yesterday Freiburg commemorated Otto Winterer, its legendary mayor who they say founded the city a second time. Winterer took this position on May 25, 1888, at the age of 42 and retired from office on May 25, 1913, exactly 25 years later. During his tenure he transformed Freiburg, the medieval city, into a modern town doubling its population from 45 000 to 90 000.

Speaking on the occasion of this double commemoration (held a week earlier because of the Whitsun holidays) were Winterer's great-grandson professor Tilman Mayer, the director of Freiburg's Augustinermuseum Tilmann von Stockhausen, and Lord Mayor Dieter Salomon. Note the difference in the spelling of the forenames.

Winterer's great-grandson Tilman Mayer addressing in a grey-headed crowd
 (©Michael Bamberger, BZ)
Winterer, a national liberal, was conservative in preserving Freiburg's cultural heritage and at the same time avant-garde building new schools and bridges, investing in affordable housing projects, assuring a modern water supply as well as effluent disposal, creating a central gas supply, and electrifying the streetcar system as early as 1901. As his great-grandson formulated it: Otto Winterer was designer, innovator, and preserver.

The Wasserschlössle or how to hide a drinking water reservoir behind a historicizing front (©Wikipedia)
Winterer not only preserved Freiburg's historical building stock, e.g., when founding the Münsterbauverein (Society for the Preservation of the Minster) but he longed to exaggerate the existing Gothic and Renaissance buildings vertically. Sometimes, however, he overshot, e.g., when acting according to his maxim: A village has roofs, a town sports steeples.

Exaggerating vertically

The Martinstor before 1900. There is a painting of Saint Martin on its frontface (©Wikipedia)
The Martinstor as it looks today except for the missing painting
Historisches Freiburg)

The Schwabentor in its original form (©Historisches Freiburg)

The Schwabentor highly exaggerated (©Historisches Freiburg)

After the war due to damage and static reasons the Schwabentor had to be stripped down. During the present renovations cracks in the walls of the gate were unexpectedly discovered demanding the strengthening of its foundations (©Historisches Freiburg).
How were all these building activities possible? Winterer was a man of action, straightforward and he had visions, twenty-five years in office, and money. It was the Gründerzeit of the 2nd Reich (founding period) following Germany's unification, a period of robust growth. Most of Winterer's developments were sustainable, e.g., his solid school buildings and most of the original effluent system are still in use.

Winterer's oversized theater (©Historisches Freiburg)
Since Winterer wanted to make Freiburg an attractive town for tourists and rich pensioneers (at that time Freiburg was nicknamed the all-German Pensionopolis) he rounded out the city's historical jewels and the natural beauties of the Black Forest with a generous cultural offerings. The municipal theater he had built by 1910 was the second biggest in the Reich for a population of less than 90 000. It was finished in a period when the times of plenty had elapsed. Otto Winterer died on 26 February, 1915, half a year after the outbreak of the First World War that ended the good old times.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Rethinking Marx

2013 is a year of anniversaries like one for Karl Marx who was born in the city of Trier on May 5, 1818. To honor this 195th non-decanal birthday a German artist placed 500 statues of the bearded thinker throughout his hometown of Trier. Artist Ottmar Hörl had said to Der Spiegel: I want to encourage passersby to rethink Marx reminding us that although the German thinker is associated with labor, capital, and an impressive fortress of facial hair, his true impact is arguably far more complex.

Ottmar Hörl and his Marx men (© Der Spiegel)
The miniature Marx men are all the same size and shape, yet all cast in different shades of red. Karl's historical importance no one will deny but have not his ideas about class struggle been interred with the communist regimes in eastern Europe? Not quite, for some regimes around the globe hold on although I would not call China a communist country where all goods are equally shared between the people. The problem with any regime claiming to be a government of the people, by the people, for the people is that by human nature some people are better off than others. When these persons are party functionaries like in the case of the Nazis or the GDR it is more than just annoying. The question is, are we in our democracies immune to inequalities that were recently caused by turbo capitalism?

In a TIME article: Marx's Revenge: How Class Struggle is Shaping the World I found Marx's statement: Accumulation of wealth on one pole is at the same time accumulation of misery, agony of toil, slavery, ignorance, brutality, mental degradation, at the opposite pole. Without describing the content of the article and considering that we are still far away from workers of the world uniting and even further away from a dictatorship of the proletariat we still may ask the question how those who govern us can assure fairer economic opportunities. Fact is that in recent years the gap between the rich and the poor has been widening. In the 1970s the richest 10% of Americans earned 33% of the total income, by 2007 the percentage had increased to 49.7%, to nearly one half. In Germany where in the 1960s nobody considered such a development the situation seems worse for in 2004 the richest 10% earned 49% of the total that increased to 53 % in 2008.

On April 24, I published a blog about our revolutionary hike from Günterstal to Freiburg's town hall and mentioned Freiburg's Social-Democrate MP Gernot Erler who on that occasion traced back the word combination social and democracy to 1849 and an article written by Ernst Elsenhans in Der Festungs-Bote No 10 (Newspaper of Fort Rastatt) published near the end of the Baden Revolution on July 18, 1849: Was ist und was will die soziale Demokratie? (What is social democracy and what is its aim?). I read the article and I was stunned by one paragraph:

Die Demokratie an sich wird uns weder Arbeit noch Brod geben, sie wird unsere fälligen Zinsen nicht zahlen, sie wird uns nicht von Sorgen und Leiden befreien, denn sie stößt bei Lösung ihrer Aufgabe, das Volk zur Herrschaft zu bringen, stets auf das Mißverhältnis des Eigenthums, des Besitzes. Diese Ungleichheit, dieses Mißverhältnis sucht nun der Sozialismus durch Herstellung der Gleichheit herzustellen ... Die Vertheilung der Güter soll nach dem Verlangen der Sozialisten von der Arbeit abhängig gemacht und dadurch die möglichste Gleichheit unter den Menschen erzielt, es soll jedem fleißigen, ordentlichen und geschickten Mann Gelegenheit verschafft werden, so viel Besitz zu erwerben, als zu einem vernünftigen Genuß des Lebens nötig ist ... (Democracy gives us neither jobs nor bread, it will not pay the interest on our debts, it will not liberate us from sorrows and sufferings for when trying to bring the people to power it always stumbles against the disproportion of property, of possession. Socialism tries to solve this disproportion by creating equality ... According to the socialists the distribution of goods shall depend on the work and thereby the best possible equality among people shall be achieved. Each hardworking, decent, industrious man shall have the opportunity to acquire enough property that is necessary to assure him a reasonable enjoyment of life...)

Der Festungs-Bote No 10 of July 18, 1849
For Ernst Elsenhans socialism does not mean dispossession or leveling down but that every person should be able to earn a living while working. In addition remunerations shall be such that they are more than just sufficient to survive. The text is burning hot for in my country where luckily unemployment is low many a man or woman needs two jobs to earn a living or depend while working on additional government money supplements. The victims are young people, single parents and their children, and old people with insufficient old-age pensions. This is a social scandal in a country like Germany.

Like Ottmar Hörl I want to encourage you to rethink Marx and would like to add: How deep do you like the shade of red for your miniature Marx man?

Marx monument in Berlin (© Andreas Höfert)

Friday, May 3, 2013

I Do Remember It Well

Robert's Logo
Today the Badische Zeitung published a column informing me that 20 years ago on April 30, 1993, the World Wide Web was baptized as such at CERN. Yes, it is well known that at the place where I worked Tim Berners-Lee together with Robert Cailliau not only developed the idea of a global communication platform but as one of my colleagues from SLAC once formulated: They gave it to the world.

I must admit that the exact date mentioned above came as a surprise to me for those of us working at CERN had a sliding start by first getting an e-mail service with which we could communicate on-line with our American colleagues. Later we were introduced to the Web and our first browser was Mosaic that was soon replaced by Netscape developed in the States.

Windows 95: Wikipedia on Netscape
My contact person in those pioneer days was Robert, the charming Belgian, with whom I as a simple user chatted quite often over a cup of coffee. Neither of us then imagined the impact the World Wide Web would have.

Saturday, April 27, 2013

The Last of The Franciscans

Near to my apartment at the corner Günterstalstraße/Prinz-Eugen-Straße there is a Franciscan monastery. Only five monks Bogdan, Desiderius, Eryk, Lucjan, and Marcjean still live in a building for 30 residents and they are all from Poland. All speak excellent German and are pastoring in Freiburg. Fact is that the number of catholic priests educated in Germany is on a steady decline and does no longer cover the needs. Up to now the gap was filled with young clerics from Poland being the best Polish export item as I learned when I visited Breslau in 2010.

These last Franciscans in high spirits will soon be "flying home" (Photo ©Badische Zeitung)
Note the beautiful park in the background.
The friars minor are gentle people. I used to pull their legs about their habits. As in the photo they wear their typical brownish frocks with a white cord around their waists but sandals with socks* whereas in the past they used to walk barefoot (Barfüßermönche). They answered: Our prior told us to wear socks so that we won't catch coldTheir order having resided in Freiburg for more than 750 years, the last Franciscans will now leave the city. Apparently their services are needed at home. An old proverb says: Das Kloster währt länger denn der Abt (The monastery lasts longer than the abbot). Is this still true? Although the building has been designated an historical landmark "building sharks" are already turning around the real estate, a beautiful natural park with old trees. I shall keep you informed.
*Usually when you see men wearing white socks in sandals you can be sure that those guys are Germans.

The complex of the Franciscan monastery in the center opposite the city hall located
 at the bottom on the Sickinger map of 1589.
St. Martin's church as yet without a steeple is on the left, i.e., the north.
The west wing of the cloister still exists
as well as the buildings on the south side of the complex.
The mendicant order of the Franciscans settled in Freiburg in 1246 after Count Konrad had endowed the ordo fratrum minorum (OFM) with a chapel located opposite to the city hall consecrated to St. Martin plus four standard plots of 100 times 50 feet (possibly 5% longer than the modern foot). Here the friars minor built their monastery and had the chapel enlarged to a church in 1317. While the church still exists the south wing of the cloister was demolished in 1846 to make room for a bigger square in front of the city hall, subsequently called Franziskanerplatz. When the Nazis seized power in Freiburg on March 31, 1933, the undemocratically installed mayor Franz (sic!) Kerber did not like residing on Franciscan Square and had it renamed Rathausplatz (City Hall Square).

After the war most streets and squares the Nazis had renamed got their original names back with two notable exceptions. Freiburg's central street before 1933 known as Kaiserstraße was renamed into Kaiser-Joseph-Straße reminiscent of the Habsburg rule. The city by all means wanted to avoid any allusion to the last Prussian Emperor Wilhelm. The Rathausplatz however kept its name. This was somehow far-sighted for about a year ago the Dominicans took over the original Franciscan premises.

The following photo shows the corner of the St. Martin's church and what is left of the inow glazed cloister. In this very corner a stage will be mounted on the occasion of Freiburg's Partnership Market on June 7 and 8. The city of Madison will be the guest of honor for this year we are celebrating the Silver Jubilee of the partnership between our two cities.

A quiet corner in Freiburg

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

April 24, 1848

Today Freiburg commemorates the 165th anniversary of a skirmish between revolutionists and troops of the Grand Duchy of Baden at the Jägersbrunnen (Hunters' Fountain) close to Günterstal, a nearby village.  On Easter Sunday, April 24, 1848, one of the most famous encounters of the Baden Revolution took place between the feudal government and people fighting for a democratic republic. In 1848 revolutionary uprisings all over Germany made the princes tremble. The Baden Revolution was the longest, starting in Offenburg on September 12, 1847, with a paper: Thirteen demands of the people of Baden that called for democratic changes in government and ending in Fort Rastatt on Juli 23, 1849, with the fall of this last revolutionary refuge. Carl Schurz, well known in the States, escaped his imprisonment and shooting according to martial law through the sewer system at the last minute. You may want to read more about the Badische Revolution in German.

Already last Sunday afternoon about 300 people walked from Günterstal to the Freiburger Rathaus (town hall) and commemorated the skirmish, visiting three historical places on their way:

 The memorial stone at the site where the skirmish took place in 1848.

The Dortu-Mausoleum (read more) at the old Wiehre cemetery.

The site of the last barricade at the Schwabentor (Swabian gate).


Having left Günterstal, the 2013-revolutionists follow the historical trail
 and approach the memorial site.


Many heads with more or less gray hair constrain the view. The guy in front is rapping the Revolution. To his right you can see the by now mossy memorial stone. The gentleman holding the mike and the people in the back with their black-red-golden ribbons are the organizers of the memorial march. To the left the man with the tie is Freiburg's Social-Democrate MP Gernot Ehrler (you met in an earlier blog) who too said a few words about the historical implications of the aborted fight for freedom and democracy in 1848. The upcoming federal election in September oblige. According to Gernot Erler the word combination social and democracy was first used and its meaning explained in Der Festungs-Bote No 10 (Newspaper of Fort Rastatt) published July 18, 1849.

Some participants wore historical-looking outfits

and made a terrible noise firing blank cartridges.

We all sang revolutionary songs at the old Wiehre cemetery. 
Note the boy with his Brezel on the left.

He had followed the crowd on its long march to the Rathaus. 
Now, he is looking tired but clings to his Brezel.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Merkiavelli and the Spiked Helmet

Photo AFP/Getty
Yesterday I read an article by Dominic Sandbrook in the right leaning Daily Mail, sometimes considered as The Newspaper that Rules Britain : Angela Merkel has made Germany master of Europe in a way Hitler and Kaiser Wilhelm only dreamt of. The implications are frightening.

What attracts the potential reader in the first place is a picture showing our chancellor crowned with a spiked helmet and naming her Merkiavelli. This is an interesting photo composition, for the headgear marked FR - mirror inverted, by the way - is the helmet of the tragic Emperor Frederick III, FR standing for Frederick Rex of Prussia. The British newspaper choose the wrong helmet, for the Emperor who only reigned for 99 days before he died of cancer of the larynx was anglophile and known for his liberal views. This was partly due to the influence of his wife Victoria Princess Royal, the oldest daughter of Queen Victoria.

Frederick, mourned even in Britain (Puck)
Frederick had been the hope of the progressive forces in German society pushing for a transformation of the authoritarian Second Reich into a democratic constitutional monarchy. Most historians are convinced that history would have taken a different course if Frederick had lived on.

Court ball in the White Room of the Berlin City Palace in 1886. Star of the evening is the impressive crown prince Frederick surrounded by members of the Progressive Party. To the left Berlin's mayor and speaker of the Reichstag Max von Forckenbeck, on his side wearing the red gown of the dean of the medical faculty of Berlin's Humboldt University is professor Rudolf Virchow whose motto was liberty with its daughters education and affluence. In between there is the physisist and president of the Physikalisch-Technische Reichsanstalt (equivalent to the National Bureau of Standards in the US) Hermann von Helmholtz. Painting by Anton von Werner.

Otherwise I learned from the article why Germany clings to the euro. It is trying hard to keep all those wobbling Mediterranean members in the eurozone. Its reason is not that it cares for the European Union but pure economic egoism. Admittedly, there is an element of truth in this statement.

Many countries spend more than their financial resources allow and they drown in their debts, not a good legacy to bequeath to our great-grandchildren. One way to escape the debt trap is to cut spending with all the consequences for the national economies. Bringing down social programs and reducing investments both give rise to an increasing unemployment. Will leaving the euro help those countries? I am not sure. Devaluating their new/old national currency will on the one hand help boosting exports and attracting euro-tourists, however on the other hand the debts remain counted in euro. Fact is that we Germans guaranteeing the eurozone bailout fund with billions of euros are slowly becoming fed-up by all those attacks by those who slipped under the so-called rescue umbrella and now moan about the consequences. Is there a solution to the problem?


Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Seume Two

In Seume who? I introduced you to Johann Gottfried Seume, the German writer, soldier, editor, frequent traveler and late enlightener. In the meantime I read his journal titled Mein Sommer im Jahr 1805 (My Summer in the year of 1805) containing his impressions of his journey to the Nordic countries around the Baltic Sea from April to September 1805. Take the blog Seume Two as a natural follow-up of Seume Who?.

Like in 1802 when Seume had made his famous hike to Syracuse he had again chosen a rather peaceful year although during 1805 Austria was preparing to battle Napoleon for a third time trying to lure Russia into the adventure. Napoleon had crowned himself emperor in 1804 and war eventually broke out in fall 1805. When in the Battle of the Three Emperors on 2 December Austria suffered a crushing defeat at Austerlitz Seume was already back home in Leipzig.

Starting out from there in April of 1805 Seume visited Dresden, Breslau, Warsaw, Kowno, Riga, Reval, Saint Petersburg with a detour to Moscow although most of the time he did not hike but rather used the stage coach. Following a longer stay in Saint Petersburg he then continued to Turku, Uppsala, Stockholm, Helsingborg, Copenhagen, Kiel, and Hamburg back to Leipzig.

Actually he visited only five countries: Saxony, Prussia, Russia, Sweden, and Denmark for Poland had ceased to exist in 1795 when Prussia, Austria, and Russia had occupied the rest of what had been left of the kingdom following the first and the second partition of Poland in 1772 and 1793. Seume had participated in the third partition of Poland as a Russian officier and adjutant of General Igelström in 1794.

Finland's situation occupied by Sweden and Russia was ethnically even worse than that of Poland for the border Seume crossed split a homogeneous population speaking neither a Slavic nor a Germanic idiom posing the risk that the Finnish language might become extinct.

A page of  Uppsala's Codex Argentus (Wikipedia)
Writing about Germanic idioms: Most impressive for me was that Seume was allowed to take in his hands in Uppsala's University Library the Wulfila Bible or what remained of it. Already in the 4th century Bishop Ulfilas (Wulfila) had the Bible translated into Gothic. The Bible text of the Codex Argenteus kept in Uppsala was written in Italy in the 6th century with silver letters on parchment. Of the original 336 folia the former Benedictine abbey of Werden (near Essen, Rhineland) had 187 remaining. Emperor Rudolph II interested in scholarship bought the pages and kept them at his imperial seat in Prague. When the Swedes occupied the city in 1648 at the end of the Thirty Years' War they took the pages to Sweden as war booty from where they found their way to Uppsala rather than to Gothenburg.

Below is the Lord's Prayer in Gothic that English, German, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish-speaking people are still able to understand at least in parts:

atta unsar þu in himinam,
weihnai namo þein.
qimai þiudinassus þeins.
wairþai wilja þeins,
swe in himina jah ana airþai.
hlaif unsarana þana sinteinan gif uns himma daga.
jah aflet uns þatei skulans sijaima,
swaswe jah weis afletam þaim skulam unsaraim.
jah ni briggais uns in fraistubnjai,
ak lausei uns af þamma ubilin;
unte þeina ist þiudangardi jah mahts jah wulþus in aiwins.
amen.

Note that the letter þ stands for the "th" that in German is frequently changed into "d".

All in all Seume's diary about his travel around the Baltic Sea is less entertaining than his book about his hiking tour to Syracuse. Was this the reason that no publisher wanted to print the manuscript? No, the reason was that the keen observer Seume had well noticed the misery of the peasants during his travels and had written it down. Throughout his text he criticizes the feudalistic society and outspoken passages like the one below about the superiority of the Napoleonic soldier compared to his German counterpart were politically dangerous:

Without any distinction a Frenchman fights for his country that has become his love, that not only keeps him and his family in view of all the advantages but offers these benefits in reality. In France a man is taken for what he is, in our country a man is estimated according to his entry in the Church register, the weight of his father's moneybag or what the Lord Stewart's office prescribes. For whom should a German grenadier throw himself on batteries and into bayonets? He stays what he is, carries on his knapsack, and hardly earns a friendly word from his grumpy ruler. He shall look death in the eye, while in drudgery at home his old, weak father is plowing the fields of a merciful Junker doing nothing, paying him nothing and rewarding him with maltreatment. The sweating old man brings in the harvest of the Court and has often let rot his own crop outside. However, he has the miserable honor of being the only coolie of the State, an honor that is better not recognized! Why should a soldier fight courageously only to enjoy such happiness later himself? He shall be brave while his sister or girlfriend are forced to serve at Court, for eight Gilders annually, year by year without any perspective in their lifetime; and his old, sick aunt barely living on dry bread must spin her allotted pile of flax for the Court lest she be forced to live on alms; and his little brother must serve as a messenger-boy running for a dime, day in, day out in cold and in heat. It is the small peasant who drives and pulls and gives; on the large farms no hoof will stir and no wheel will turn without him. That is what you call State, good order, and justice. Are you still wondering where the public unhappiness comes from?

I hope my translation has retained a little bit of Seume's emotional style.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Cliffhanger or Falling Off the Cliff

Looking through the Internet for an illustration I found out that others had the idea of a cliffhanger falling off the cliff earlier (©Cardow Cartoon)
Cliffhanger or falling off the cliff was the title of a discussion about the US monetary policy we recently had at the Stammtisch of the Freiburg-Madison Gesellschaft. In spite of a positive vote of both US Senate and House of Representatives in the early hours of January 1st, 2013 on the compromise American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 it seems that both the fiscal cliff and the debt-ceiling will remain cliffhangers in the States throughout the year.

For me as a layman it is always astonishing to see how national economies get away with accumulating debts while private persons, e.g., must leave "their" houses when they no longer can service the interest of their loans. The difference is that states will refinance their debts, an interesting practice particularly at this moment. With the massive volume of money circulating around the globe new bonds are issued at lower interest rates. This practice also means interest rates of private investments approach zero, future benefits of pension funds will no longer cover the needs of old age people, and inflation looms. Experts have coined the term: Financial Repression.

The following table presents the financial situation in 2012 for a couple of countries. For sake of comparison figures are given in US$ (source Wikipedia):

Country

Debt in TriUS$

Per cap US$

% of GDP

2012>13 in %

USA

17.48

5555

107

+4.7

Germany

2.85

3495

83

-1.2

Japan

14.65

11508

237

+3.4

Greece

0.49

4404

171

+6.4

Italy

2.65

4345

126

+1.6

France

2.50

3937

90

+2.2

Spain

1.36

2915

91

+6.6

Cyprus

0.02

2520

93

-6.5


The world's burden of debts (©The Guardian, UK)
As far a the indebtedness per capita is concerned Japan sets the pace. The figure of 11508 US$ looks impressive but the Japanese state only holds few foreign bonds, i. e., mainly owes the money to its citizens. Other countries buy their bonds in all major currencies at the lowest possible interest rate on the international money market. With respect to its debt per capita recently bailed-out Euro-country Cyprus looks remarkably good with only 2520 US$.

Leverages shown in the table range from 83 to 237% of the Country's Gross Domestic Product (GDP). The classical view had it that a country is considered bankrupt when this figure exceeds 100%. Here the number for Greece sticks out in particular in view of its projected increase from 171 to 182% in 2013 whilst Cyprus will decrease its leverage from 93 to 86% possibly due to the massive financial help the European Union had recently given to the country.

There were times when financial situations were worse like in Freiburg in 1477. With the choir of its Münster church still under construction the city had a debt per capita of an equivalent of 23 000 US$ for a population of only 6000. The leverage was 1000% such that 50% of Freiburg's budget had to be earmarked to pay the interest on the accumulated debt. There was no hope of paying off the loans. To remedy the financial situation at that time Freiburg's master, King Maximilian, increased the city's income by placing the trade of iron and salt under its control.

Today people complain about Freiburg's "enormous" indebtedness of an equivalent of 280 MioUS$. This however amounts to a debt per capita of only 1200 US$ and corresponds to 35% of the city's current budget. These figures are not negligible but low in comparison with cities in some regions of Germany where unemployment rates are permanently high: Duisburg, a city in the Ruhr district, has a debt of an equivalent of 2,9 BiUS$ or per capita US$ 5860.

.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Bundschuh in Lehen

The Bundschuh (peasants' boot) in the village Lehen near Freiburg in 1513 was a peasants' uprising for freedom and justice.
Admire the peasants' boot with strings attached
Festivities are scheduled for the 500th anniversary throughout the year. So far the highlight was a lecture by professor Horst Buszello titled: Joß Fritz und der Bundschuh zu Lehen 1513, a staging by the authorities and the reconstruction by historical scholarship. In his talk Buszello tried to crystallize the hidden truth behind the biased documentation the Freiburg city council had issued in 1513 in the aftermath of the Lehen Bundschuh.

As far as the known details of the uprising are concerned you may want to read the paragraphs of the following web site (in German): Bauernaufstand 1513 unter Joß Fritz, dem Bannwart in Lehen

In short: Towards the close of the Middle Ages most peasants were still held like slaves by their masters e.g. local nobility and rich monasteries. Increasing workload and financial burden led to great discontent. All it took was leaders to articulate the peasants' worries. Following some earlier uprisings in the Alsace 1493 the man the peasants listened to in Lehen in 1513 was experienced: Joß Fritz who in the bishopric of Speyer twelve years earlier had already headed a peasants' revolt that had aborted and who was now working as a ranger in Lehen.

The peasants in Lehen were no revolutionaries but like all people deeply rooted in their views in the Middle Ages. They respected the then valid God given order in formulating their demands: We do not recognize any other head than emperor, pope and God. We are willing to pay what is due to our masters but their demands should be reasonable. We ask that the interest rate on our loans is reduced to 5%. In addition our legal affairs should be treated in local courts instead of being dealt with either at the Clerical Court in Strasbourg or the Imperial Court at Rottweil. We would like to see the plurality of clergymen benefices reduced to one i.e. many clergymen happily lived with the benefices of several parishes while leaving the pastoral care to low paid priests.

The minutes of the city council meetings the Freiburg historian Heinrich Schreiber had relied on to write his 19th century history books read quite differently. In his text Schreiber actually focuses on bad Joß who had abused the confidence of the Lehen peasants, had told them about the bad times, about excessive drinking, blasphemy, and adultery and eventually had sneakily moved addressing the pressure the peasants were exposed to. He succeeded in bewitching the weakling, outsmarting the impartial and alluring the discontented. Only later did he tell them his intention to start (werfen, d.h. aufwerfen) a Bundschuh. At that moment many of those poor peasants were too deeply involved to go back such that they swore an oath of secrecy and loyalty to Joß.
Already for the 490th anniversary an open air spectacle:
Nothing else than God's justice

From a report of November 1513 we read how the Freiburg city councilors described the intentions of Joß Fritz and his men: We will break any yoke or slavery with the force of our arms for we want to be free like the Swiss (who had founded their Confederation in 1291). Never again we shall support a master and pay neither interest rate, tithe, tax, duty nor any other dues but get rid of all those hardships eternally. We will break princes and all nobility with force and banish or smite them including all clergymen and monks. Their goods we shall distribute.

Comparing the texts you will note big differences. Drawn from confessions under torture the City Council deliberately labeled the Lehen peasants as terrorists. This is one of many examples in history where historians use available sources uncritically, be it deliberately or unintentionally, painting a fresco of events that eventually fostered deeply rooted views that were copied again and again. One of the best known historical blunders concerns the Vandals, a German tribe accused of vandalism on the Iberian peninsula during the Völkerwanderung.

Coming back the to Lehen peasants: All in all 13 of them were executed, others had cut off their fingers they had used to swear the Bundschuh. Joß Fritz however escaped and fled to Switzerland. In those times the Confederacy was no safe heaven, for two of his colleagues were captured there and executed in Basel. Joß' fate however is lost in history.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Seume, who?

Johann Gottfried Seume
Johann Gottfried Seume (1763 - 1810) was a German writer, soldier, editor, frequent traveler and a late enlightener. He was born in Saxony and is presently rediscovered - in part due to his 250th birthday on 29 January - as an extraordinary man of his time. Already last year Bruno Preisendörfer had published Seume's biography titled: Der waghalsige Reisende (The audacious traveler).

Audacious indeed for in his most famous book Spaziergang nach Syrakus (Hike to Syracuse) Seume reports how he fell among the bandits on two occasions. He had started the long hike in Leipzig on 6 December, 1802 that brought him to Prague, Vienna, Florence, Rome, Naples, Palermo, Syracuse. He returned to Leipzig in August 1803 via Florence, Basel, Paris, Strasbourg, Frankfort still wearing his original boots. Whereas I was impressed by the quality of his boots and more so by his fresh and unorthodox style Caroline Herder, wife of Gottfried Herder, was disgusted: Seume's hike is unbearable stuff full of arrogance, vulgarity, and gloating with faineance. Today people tend to compare Seume's travel account with Goethe's Italien Journey although he had visited Italy and Sicily already as early as from 1786 to 1788 but wrote his account as late as in the years 1813 to 1817.

His hike to Syracuse was not Seume's only travel. Born as son of a farmer in Saxony the local pastor recognized young Gottfried's talent and provided good schooling such that in 1780 Seume started studying theology in Leipzig. But already one year later he fled the university for he had read books of the Earl of Shaftsbury (Inquiry concerning Virtue), the Viscount of Bolingbroke (Letters or Essays Addressed to Alexander Pope), and Pierre Bayle (Philosophical Commentaries) that had made him uneasy in his belief. Later he wrote in his Apokryphen: The reason for leaving Leipzig had been that I did not want to become one of those spitzköpfigen (pointed headed) clergymen supporting the nobility to preserve their privileges and keeping those Flachköpfe (flat headed country people) in slavery. For Seume: Humbleness is the first step to perfidy. In spite of all the Enlightenment that had officially abolished slavery in German territories farmers with the help of the Churches were still kept in dependence and fear of their masters like Luther had written more than two centuries ago: Farmers must suffer injustice and bear evil for even bad leaders come from God.

Leaving the university Seume had intended to travel to Paris but on his way crossing Hessian territory a press-gang apprehended him while he was staying over night in Vach. From then on in spite of all protest he writes: the Landgrave of Kassel, the great white slaver of that time, looked after my future night's lodgings in Fort Ziegenhain, Kassel, and further on in the New World.

Landgrave Friedrich of Hessen-Kassel had signed in 1776 a subsidy treaty between England and his country where he had to deliver 17000 soldiers against 21 million talers. Friedrich however had problems to fill the quota he had promised to King George III and so all means were good recruiting men being Hessians or foreigners. Bad luck for the Saxon Seume. He was in the wrong place at a wrong time. The press-gang simply tore to shreds his university papers and he was enlisted.

While navigating down the Weser river to Bremen Seume had nightmares about the Roman General Quinctilius Varus who had lost his legions in the dark German forests and Saint Bonifacius who had exorcized in his holy simplemindedness the heroic virtue and had spun the fine religious slavery that made the Germans the puppet of others.

The transport ship left Bremerhaven in June 1782. Because the Channel was infested with French and Spanish enemy ships the convoy of transport, merchant, and battle ships took the north route sailing by the Orkney Islands. Eventually the forced soldiers only arrived in Halifax in September 1782. Seume had been helpful on the ship during the passage so the captain approached him (English in Seume's original text): It is a pity, my boy you do not stay with us; you would soon become a very good sailor. Heartily I would, Seume answered, but you see, it is impossible. The captain shouted: So it is. God speed you well!

Life in the Halifax camp was one third of German usualness, one third of Huron savageness and one third of English refinement. According to the individuals present one of those thirds was predominant. I my case it was mostly German.

Already the following year the War of Independence was over such that Seume never saw any action. All Germans, a rifleman had not perforated their lungs, a Huron had not taken their scalps and who did not manage to escape joining the Republicans in Boston eventually were shipped back to Europe for Landgrave Friedrich intended to sell his capture to Frederick the Great. Seume remembers: The convoy taking us to Europe comprised 200 ships in particular two American frigates showing the new flag of the free States. For an old Englishman a heartbreaking sight since Britannia ruled the waves.

To make a long story short. Shipped back Seume served in Emden in the Prussian army. He escaped, went to Russia and became adjutant of General Igelström who had been charged to suppress the Polish uprising of 1794 against the Russians in Warsaw. Before his final journey Seume visited the Nordic countries in 1805. His journal titled Mein Sommer im Jahr 1805 (My Summer in the year of 1805) was so politically charged that no publisher dared to print it.

Seume was a remarkable person: I don't drink any wine, no coffee, no liquor, don't smoke or snort. I eat the simplest food and was never ill neither at sea nor at any point of the compass. On the other hand he had stated: I lived much and wrote little. That is better than the other way around. Because of his virtues and his small needs old Wieland called him the noble cynic, a man of great value.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

A Wicked Company

The first longer book read on my iPad
this is how the great actor David Garrick called a group of intellectuals around Denis Diderot and Baron Paul Thierry von Holbach he had first met in Paris in 1763. The reason for Garrick's remark was that those people who regularly met at von Holbach's salon rue des Moulins in Paris were avowed atheists discussing the retarding effect of religion on Enlightenment. As Diderot put it: The priest, whose system is a tissue of absurdities, secretly wants to uphold ignorance; reason is the enemy of faith, and faith is the base of the power, the fortune, and the social standing of the priest. Other known people enjoying the good food around von Holbach's table at various times were Edward Gibbon, Friedrich Melchior Grimm, David Hume, Adam Smith and Benjamin Franklin.

"Light" Enlightenment
Other protagonists of Enlightenment like Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Voltaire had likewise fought the Catholic Church but at the same time had developed a new deism. For both a godless world is hopeless as Voltaire wrote to Rousseau in 1756: No, I have suffered too much in this life not to expect another. All the subtleties of metaphysics will not make me doubt the immortality of the soul for a moment; I feel it, I believe it, I want it, I hope for it, I shall defend it to my last breath. Already Thomas Aquinas had written in his Summa Theologiae about the anguish of the damned: Hell was just ceasing of hope which meant for those living that hopelessness is Hell. Voltaire brought in his famous watchmaker when he stated: I have always regarded atheism as the greatest confusion of reason, because it is as ridiculous to say that the arrangement of the world does not prove a supreme artisan, as it would be impertinent to say that a watch does not prove a watchmaker.

Radical Enlightenment
There was however this so called radical Enlightenment advocated by Diderot and von Holbach Philipp Blom's book made me aware of: The radical philosophers had demolished the great church that centuries of Christian tradition had erected in the human soul - indeed, they had destroyed the very conception of a soul, leaving nothing but pure matter conscious of itself. There was no revelation, no divine law, no life after death, and, most important of all, no guilt induced by the age-old curse of original sin. Life was to be lived now. Diderot was the most radical proponent of Enlightenment when he stated: Christianity has committed the greatest possible abuse of the mind; to me this religion is the most absurd and the most atrocious of dogmas; the most unintelligible, the most metaphysical, the most convoluted, and therefore the most subjected to divisions, sects, schisms, heresies; . . . the most vulgar, the most depressing, the most gothic and the most sad of ceremonies; the most puerile and the most unsociable in its morals . . . the most intolerant of all. . . . I would say that because man, who is naturally superstitious needs a fetish, the simplest and most innocent fetish is the best of all.

It was Diderot who had made von Holbach an atheist as Blom describes: One day the baron had come to see his friend at the workshop of an engraver, where Diderot was checking the drafts for illustrations that were to be part of the Encyclopédie [for which Diderot in famous for], plates dealing with botanical subjects. "But surely," the baron insisted, pointing to the intricate depiction of flowers, leaves, blossoms, and fruit stems, "all this beauty, all this ingenuity is proof of a higher intelligence?” Diderot had simply looked at him, unmoved, whereupon the baron literally broke down, weeping.

Eventually Diderot and von Holbach extended their rejection of Christianity to all religions. They and the radical intellectuals around them venerated materialism, reason, and natural passions instead. They were against privileges for the aristocracy, absolute monarchs, and they criticized slavery.

The "Religious" Revolution
What looked as the ideal basis for the following French Revolution was rejected by its protagonists like Robespierre who rather followed the deism of Rousseau in creating a new state religion serving the Revolution: Oh, divine Rousseau, you taught me to know myself. . . . I wish to follow your venerated path. . . . Happy will I be if, in the dangerous course that an unprecedented revolution now lays out before us, I remain constantly faithful to the inspirations that I have drawn from your writings! As radical atheism was too difficult to accept by the French people brought up in the Catholic faith a Supreme Being replaced the Christian God. Pierre Bayle had already stated at the end of the 17th century: Ordinary people will believe anything, because they are lazy and unwilling to analyze their beliefs.

Eventually Rousseau's utopia of an ideal state ended in the Committee of Public Safety and bloody tyranny until the revolution had killed it's children. Napoleon - when he had taken over and to be on the safe side - returned to the bosom of the Catholic Church, a fact the German writer Johann Gottfried Seume when he saw the dictator in Paris on the 14th of July 1802 on his way home from his Spaziergang nach Syrakus (Hike to Syracuse) sarcastically commented: He [Napoleon] could have become the savior of the major part of humanity but he contented himself being the first re-born son of the Roman Church. 

Kings to Be Strangled with the Guts of the Priests
One of the earlier French philosophers Julien Offray de La Mettrie had set the tone for the people in von Holbach's salon in his book L'homme machine (Machine man): After all, human existence is governed not by reason but by natural laws. We can never know why we are here, but we must simply live and die, no different from and hardly more lasting than mushrooms appearing after a rainfall or spring flowers by the roadside. We must simply learn to live with our urge for ultimate meaning and accept that it cannot be satisfied. This was strong stuff even for Diderot although he agreed that nature is not concerned about good and evil. She has two ends: the conservation of the individual, the propagation of the species. And with the latter in mind Diderot aims below the belt in his novel Jacques le fatalist: Physical love is “natural, necessary and right,” but for most people it seems easier to pronounce terrible words such as “kill” and “betray” than “that word.” What hypocrisy, he scoffs. After all, “futuo" is no less common than the word "bread." It is known to every age and idiom.

For the contents of his book Man Machine La Mettrie was ousted even from liberal Holland eventually finding refuge in Potsdam at Frederick the Great's court. Diderot and Holbach were warned and published their books and papers using pen names thus avoiding persecution by the royal court and the church. So far this symbiosis of throne and altar somehow had kept human moral going but the priest Jean Meslier had attacked the charade in his testament that had only become known in 1761: On the one side the priests . . . command you on pain of eternal damnation to obey the magistrates, the princes and the sovereigns, because God has put them in their place to rule over others; and the princes, on the other hand, enforce respect for the priests, give them good appointments and good revenues, and maintain them in the vain function of their false ministry. Meslier’s maxim was that the world would only be happy once the last king has been strangled with the guts of the last priest. However, when these two are absent would not chaos result?

The Moral Question
Friedrich Melchior Grimm had no illusions: Let us not be infants, let us not be frightened of words. The fact is that there is no other right in the world except the right of the strongest, and that, since it must be said, this is the only legitimacy. Adam Smith being less pessimistic asked: How can people, who are driven by self-interest, act morally, even altruistically? His answer was "compassion": The greatest ruffian, the most hardened violator of the laws of society, is not altogether without it and Hume added: Values are not God-given; they are not even universal - they are simply an abstract way of articulating what appears humane and useful at a particular point in time.

Against this pessimistic attitude the philosophers around Rousseau placed their "natural" religion: If only people could learn to listen to their inner voice, to trust the voice of nature speaking through them, then they would automatically be in unison with God’s intentions, with his reason. What Rousseau calls the inner voice people should listen to the Church would possibly call the Holy Spirit. With respect to inter-human relation the proponents of moderate Enlightenment placed their hope on a "social contract that could raise people above this state of murderous anarchy and allow individuals to flourish, protected by the security of laws ... In fact, Rousseau’s ideal is the next best thing to a return to childlike simplicity: a community of contented, rural freeholders, living in harmony with nature and without competition, without property, oppression, or duplicity - a perfect kibbutz, in fact, long before the first socialist Zionist set foot in Palestine."

Diderot's Modern Ideas
In his rather pessimistic view of life Diderot came to the conclusion somehow anticipating Darwin's ideas: What counts in nature is the propagation of the species. For him morality boils down to a simple: Do good, know the truth, that is what distinguishes one man from the next. The rest is nothing. The duration of life is so short, its real needs so narrow, and once one is gone, it matters so little whether one was someone or no one. In the end, one needs nothing but a dirty rag and four planks of pine.

Diderot not only anticipated Darwin but the notion of DNA strands too when he stated: Birth defects have shown that each characteristic of an organism is programmed by a “filament” and if such a filament is missing from the sheaf of information, the resulting organism will be deformed. He also postulates an “infinity of successive developments” by which each organism is perfecting itself assuring the “survival of the species.

Atheism Harder Than Belief
Had not Noble Prize winner Jacques Monod called man's quest for God being a genetic defect? And did not geneticist Dean Hamer postulate a God gene predisposing man towards spiritual or mystic experiences? If belief is something natural then it is much harder to be a radical atheist than to believe in something. How would one interpret Diderot's attending mass when he returned from Holbach's salon to the village of his parents?


P.S.: I did not know that the third president of the US Thomas Jefferson had a full collection of philosophical books he possibly had acquired while he was in Paris from 1785 to 1789 serving his young country. Blom writes: The salon members’ writings became an integral part of how the founding fathers thought about the nascent United States. Jefferson’s handwritten catalogue of books lists not only works by British empiricists such as Hume but also titles by Voltaire and a whole list of crucial books of the radical Enlightenment: the famous De l’esprit by Helvétius (the cause of the 1757 crisis of the Encyclopédie), Holbach’s Système de la nature his Théologie portative (here interestingly attributed to Diderot), a set of Oeuvres philosophiques by Diderot, several anonymous or pseudonymous works such as Holbach’s Christianity Unveiled (“by Boulanger,” in Italian) as well as Raynal’s Histoire des deux Indes and Beccaria’s Of Crimes and Punishments, and a wide selection of precursors, such as Montaigne, Francis Bacon, Baruch Spinoza, and Pierre Bayle. Holbach’s Paris library had the same books on its shelves—as philosophers he and Jefferson were speaking the same language. A notion straight from Holbach’s table and the sum of the philosophical ideas defended there is the "pursuit of happiness".

Monday, February 11, 2013

Baby-Gate


The problem child (Der Spiegel 6,2013)
A study commissioned by the German government has reached a damning verdict on the country's efforts to boost its low birth rate, saying billions of euros are being wasted on complex benefits and tax breaks that are largely ineffective and in some cases even counterproductive. Fact is that Germany has the one but lowest birthrate in Europe with 1.36 births per 1000 people in a year only beaten by Portugal with a rate of 1.32. Compare this to France's 1.99 exe quo with the States and to an impressive 2.96 for Israel trying to keep up with the birthrate of the Palestinians. The government tried to keep the commission's report under the hood until after the federal election in fall but Der Spiegel published from it risking that until September 22nd German family policy will degrade into family politics.

The result of the study is dynamite in an election year particularly since against strong opposition the Merkel administration had recently pushed through the Kinderbetreungsgeld (child care allowance) also called Herdprämie (hearth award) attributing €100 per month to women who stay at home looking after their children. According to the report this recent added benefit meant to boost procreation is counterproductive. Rather than looking for work some women will take the money. It means they are not only lost as taxpayers but also are an additional charge the federal budget with €2 billion yearly. The "hearth award" comes on top of a "child supplement," "parental benefit," an "allowance for single parents," a "married person's supplement," a "sibling bonus," "orphan money" and "child education supplement," not to forget the "child education supplementary supplement" as Der Spiegel enumerates. All this costs the taxpayer a total of €200 billion per year.

In discussing Germany's birthrate the report of the commission calls the efforts of all governments over the last 50 years to boost procreation a lost cause. Up to now even social democrats have stared at the traditional family with father earning and mother staying at home looking after hopefully many children. All the "experts" did not consider that an increasing number of women are moving into traditional male professions making careers, having no time for babies when young. In Germany there are now more women leaving university with a degree than men. So if at all, women now are birthing late, remain with only one child, and frequently are single parent. The latter fact excludes these mothers from many present benefits tailored to traditional families. The commission therefore recommends to extend massively the facilities for day-care, pre-, and all-day schooling, three domains where Germany terribly lacks behind in comparison with its European neighbours.

Local experience in rural areas has shown that such measures will help increasing birthrates but for many the change in paradigm still is unacceptable. The Christian Democrat Family Minister Kristina Schröder, 35, mother of a one-and-a-half-year-old child, defended the traditional values demanding: "The most important thing is to adapt working life more to the needs of families instead of going on requiring families to keep on adapting to the requirements of the working world." In fact, what she is asking for some enterprises particularly those in need of a female workforce already implemented locally. These examples only show that government money should be used differently stimulating birthrates rather than traditional family values. Fact is what Social Democrat Manuela Schwesig said: "The government's policy on families is shaped by a picture of the family that is half a century old. Single parents or couples with children but without a marriage certificate are virtually ignored."

Here we go again: Couples living together and having babies without license are devilish for those defending the traditional marriage.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

She Had High Hopes

but oops there goes another doctor's degree referring to our Minister of Science and Education and once more to Ol' Blue Eyes*.

Thirty-two years ago Annette Schavan had submitted a thesis titled: Person und Gewissen (Personality and Conscience) to the Heinrich Heine University in Düsseldorf. On February 5, the University revoked her degree because as a doctoral candidate, she systematically and deliberately presented intellectual efforts throughout her entire dissertation that were not her own. As such, she is guilty of intentional deception through plagiarism. The faculty board voting 12 to 2 arrived at the decision to declare German Science and Education Minister Annette Schavan's Ph.D. thesis invalid and to revoke her doctor title.
*I still remember that at one time Sinatra had changed the lyrics of High Hopes singing: Vote for Kennedy ...

Cartoon found in Badische Zeitung of February 6, 2013: In Goethe's play Faust the titular character sitting in his study deliberates about the recent plagiarism revealed:

Now here I sit, a fool for sure!
No wiser than I was before:
Master, Doctor’s what they call me,
Holding the titles already many years through
Still have to tremble all the time
That they will pin a plagiarism onto mine.


Why "oops" another doctor's degree? Remember Defense Minister Karl-Theodor von und zu Guttenberg stepping down from his position in the spring of 2011 after it was determined that he had plagiarized large sections of his Ph.D.? He somehow fled Germany and is now hiding somewhere in the US booed by students and professors alike whenever he tries to spread his wisdom on the relation between the US and Europe at one of the university in the States. Nevertheless Theodor kept his title of nobility whereas Annette lost her academic honours for without passing a bachelor or master degree she directly wrote her thesis - an unusual practice at a German university. Schavan is now without academic qualification. Although even the political parties in opposition to the Merkel government acknowledge her good work, is this sufficient for a minister of science and education supposed to present her clients?

What makes me angry is that at the time when von Guttenberg's thesis was under attack Schavan had declared openly: Pirating material is no trivial offence; for the protection of intellectual property is a great good. She had added with respect to her colleague that she was ashamed, not just secretly. What a pharisaical attitude compared to the title of her was a thesis!


While on an official trip to South Africa Schavan told some waiting journalists: I am not going to accept the decision and shall file a suit against the University of Düsseldorf.


Back from here business trip to south Africa where she was attributed a doctor honoris causa Annette Schavan resigned as minister on 9 Febrary.