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  1. The Captain of Köpenick (German: Der Hauptmann von Köpenick) is a satirical play by the German dramatist Carl Zuckmayer.First produced in 1931, the play tells the story, based on a true event that happened in 1906, of a down-on-his-luck ex-convict shoemaker (Wilhelm Voigt) who impersonates a Prussian Guards officer, holds the mayor of a small town to ransom, and successfully "confiscates ...

    • John Clifford Mortimer, Carl Zuckmayer
    • 1971
    • Wilhelm Voight – Early Years
    • Moving to Berlin
    • The Coup
    • How ID Ended
    • Aftermath

    Wilhelm Voigt was born in Tilsit on 13 February 1849 as the son of a shoemaker. Already at the age of 14, Voigt was arrested for stealing, and after this he became a shoemaker who traveled around Germany. However, in the following years, he was arrested several times for various crimes. Between 1864 and 1891 he was convicted four times for theft an...

    Thereupon he moved to Rixdorf near Berlin, where he lived with his older sister Bertha and her husband, the bookbinder Menz, and found work in a shoe factory. On 24 August 1906 Wilhelm Voigt was also banned from living in the greater Berlin area, although he did not adhere to it. Instead he stayed as a “Schlafbursche” in an unannounced accommodatio...

    Voigt started making plans for a coup. He purchased used parts of a captain uniform of the first regiment and gave orders to several soldiers he found on the streets. Those did not recognize his costume and together they took off for Köpenickand made a short stop for a couple of beers. On their way, he explained that he is going to have the mayor a...

    After the end of his action the captain of Köpenick gave his troops the order to keep the town hall occupied for half an hour. He himself went back to the station under the eyes of a curious crowd. According to newspaper reports, he was served a glass of light in the station restaurant, which he emptied in one go, and disappeared on the next train ...

    All over Germany, people laughed about this act of desperation and even the court saw that not having any perspective in life after prison caused this kind of behavior. Every newspaper in the country started writing about the false captain, poems, stories and even theater plays were created and kept the political and cultural scene Germany’s busy f...

  2. Mar 13, 2024 · The Captain of Köpenick Strikes. One evening he went for a stroll in his military garb and was astounded at how everybody was courteous towards a man they were accustomed to kicking into the gutter when he was in his working man's clothes. He realised he could put this submissiveness to his own use. He began to put together his master plan.

  3. Mar 4, 2020 · The Captain of Köpenick was the center of drama to the last—and well beyond. As the funeral procession was on its way to reinter Voigt’s remains at his new resting place in the Notre-Dame cemetery, it passed a platoon of French soldiers, and a member of the funeral cortège informed its commanding officer that the famous Captain of Köpenick was going on his last journey.

  4. Wilhelm Voigt (13 February 1849 – 3 January 1922) was a German con man and impostor.His most famous exploit was in 1906, when Voigt masqueraded as a military officer of the elite Prussian Guards, rounded up a number of Imperial German Army soldiers under his "command", arrested the Mayor of Köpenick, and "confiscated" 4002 marks from the city treasury.

  5. Dec 15, 2019 · The death of the princess also pretty much ended the royal history of Schloss Köpenick. The palace and the surrounding estate was later used by the Prussian military for storage. During the Vormärz, a period of time in German history between 1830 and 1848, Schloss Köpenick served as a prison for political opponents. Between 1851 and 1926, it ...

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  7. Nov 9, 2024 · In 1905, Köpenick’s prestige building, with its 54-metre-high tower, was officially opened. Köpenick was not incorporated into Berlin until 1920. The magnificent staircase and the large heraldic room in the Rathaus make it one of Berlin’s most attractive town hall buildings. The phoney Captain of Köpenick

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