Karl Christian Ernst von Bentzel-Sternau
Born(1767-04-17)April 17, 1767
DiedAugust 13, 1849(1849-08-13) (aged 82)

Karl Christian Ernst Graf von Bentzel-Sternau, pseud. Horatio Cocles, (9 April 1767 – 13 August 1849) was a German statesman, editor and writer.

Life

Bentzel-Sternau was born in Mainz. After jurisprudential studies, in 1791 Bentzel-Sternau became government counsellor of the Electorate of Mainz under Karl Theodor von Dalberg in Erfurt. In 1803 he was State councillor of the Kur-Erzkanzler in Regensburg and in 1804 Secret State councillor. In 1806 he entered the Baden services, became ministerial director in 1808 and president of the upper court in 1810 in Mannheim.

Dalberg, now Grand Duke of Frankfurt appointed by Napoleon, appointed him Minister of State and Finance in 1811. He was also responsible, among other things, for Jewish emancipation and its bourgeois equality.

After the Grand Duchy of Frankfurt had been occupied by the German powers allied against Napoleon in the autumn of 1813 - it was not dissolved until the summer of 1814 - Bentzel-Sternau withdrew into private life. He lived alternately in Schloss Emmerichshofen and his country estate on Lake Zurich. In the following years he worked as an editor and writer.

He again proved his liberal and committed attitude as a delegate of the Bavarian Chamber of Estates in the years 1825 to 1828. In 1832 he sympathized with the participants of the Hambach Festival and sent them a letter to express his support.[1]

In 1827 he converted from Catholicism to evangelical faith.

Bentzel-Sternau died in Mariahalden/Zürichsee, Switzerland, at age 82.

Work

Bentzel-Sternau is known to posterity above all as the editor of the magazine 'Jason' and as a novelist. In 1831 he founded the short-lived magazine Der Verfassungsfreund, a newspaper of the Landtag for Germany.[2]

He became famous for his work "Anti-Israel-Rede" (1818), a projective satire which made him particularly hated by nationalist forces. During the Wartburg Festival his works were symbolically burned with other books.

This satire is a rare source for exploring the relationship between Jews and Christians in the 19th century. It is preserved today in only a small number of originals.[3] His best-known work is probably the prose text Das goldene Kalb. A Biography.[4]

In this satire, Bentzel takes up the arguments and demands of the literary Jew hunt, which had found fertile ground after the Congress of Vienna, and takes them to absurdity by exaggerating them.

Visionary, the author predicts a development that was soon caught up in the horrors of the anti-Jewish Hep-Hep riots in Germany. Bentzel was apparently aware of the pronounced anti-Jewish dynamics and the great potential for violence that had accumulated against the Jews in the period after the Congress of Vienna - spurred on by inflammatory writings and pamphlets published in many places. Exemplary here are the inflammatory writings of Friedrich Rühs and Jakob Friedrich Fries.[5]

In his literary publications he shows himself to be an "ingenious, outspoken and intelligent humorous writer" (Meyer 1858), often compared with Jean Paul.

Pseudonym

The pseudonym chosen by Bentzel-Sternau refers to Horatius Cocles (cocles: Latin for "one-eyed man"), who was a folk hero of Roman mythology. In 507 B.C. he is said to have defended the bridge over the Tiber to Rome alone against the Etruscans.

Quotes

"The mixture, called man, is probably the greatest ragout that ever escaped a heavenly cookbook."[6]

Sources

  • Der Verfassungsfreund, ein Landtagsblatt für Deutschland.[7] Hanau, 1831.

Further reading

  • Philipp Walther (1875), "Bentzel-Sternau, Karl Christian Ernst Graf von", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 2, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, p. 348
  • Franz Anselm Schmitt (1955), "Benzel-Sternau, Karl Christian Ernst Freiherr von, Graf von", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 2, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 59–60; (full text online)
  • Ewald Grothe: Verfassungsgebung und Verfassungskonflikt. Das Kurfürstentum Hessen in der ersten Ära Hassenpflug 1830–1837. (Schriften zur Verfassungsgeschichte.).[8] Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1996, ISBN 3-428-08509-4.

References

  1. Johann G. A. Wirth: Das Nationalfest der Deutschen zu Hambach. Heft 1. Christmann, Neustadt a/H. 1832, (Karl Christian Ernst von Bentzel-Sternau, p. 27, at Google Books).
  2. Ewald Grothe: Verfassungsgebung und Verfassungskonflikt. Das Kurfürstentum Hessen in der ersten Ära Hassenpflug 1830–1837. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1996, pp. 113229.
  3. Horatius Cocles: Anti-Israel. Eine Vorlesung in der geheimen Akademie zum grünen Esel als Entrittsrede gehalten. Sauerländer, Aarau 1818, Numerised, (Reprint: Anti-Israel. Eine projüdische Satire aus dem Jahre 1818. Nebst den antijüdischen Traktaten Friedrich Rühs' und Jakob Friedrich Fries' (1816) (Exempla philosemitica. Vol. 4). Published with an epilogue by Johann Anselm Steiger. Manutius, Heidelberg 2004, ISBN 3-934877-31-1).
  4. Das goldene Kalb. Eine Biographie on Google Books
  5. Also printed in the 2004 reprint by Manutius-Verlag.
  6. Karl Christian Ernst von Bentzel-Sternau. "Die Mixtur, Mensch genannt, ist wohl das tollste Ragout, welches je ..." aphorismen.de. Retrieved 22 November 2019.
  7. Der Verfassungsfreund, ein Landtagsblatt für Deutschland. in WorldCat
  8. Verfassungsgebung und Verfassungskonflikt : das Kurfürstentum Hessen in der ersten Ära Hassenpflug 1830-1837 in WorldCat
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