King Ludwig II of Bavaria
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Ludwig II of Bavaria: The Swan King, Christopher McInto
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Ludwig II Mad King of Bavaria Richard Wagner Castles
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The Dream King. Ludwig II of Bavaria (With a Chapter on
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Ludwig II, The Mad King of Bavaria by Desmond Chapman-H
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The Swan King: Ludwig II of Bavaria
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King Ludwig II of Bavaria, circa 1870 Art Giclee Poster Print by German Photographer, 18x24
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Bavaria & The Black Forest
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Banquet for King Ludwig II of Bavaria
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Crown Prince Ludwig of Bavaria was born on 25 August 1845 in the palace of Nymphenburg in Munich as the first son of King Maximilian II of Bavaria and Queen Marie (a Prussian Princess).
He was very romantic, a bit of a dreamer, handsome looking and the people named him the fairytale King. He was 1.91 m tall. He adored Wagner's music and was a great builder. He gave Bavaria so much with all the palaces and castles which are world wide known. He loved Bavaria and the people. They loved him, even nowadays. Unfortunately, through continued intermarriage of royalty the result was that his brother Otto went mad. King Ludwig also withdrew because the government of Bavaria stated that he made Bavaria bankrupt with his building all those castles and palaces. Yet Bavaria was involved in a war with Prussia and then in the Franco-Prussia war.
16 June 1861 Crown prince Ludwig heard for the first time Wagner's opera 'Lohengrin' which is part of the Germanic mythology.
Richard Wagner an absolute genius but he was always on the run from his creditors. Ludwig was his saviour. If it wasn't for Ludwig's protection the world would have never had these magnificent operas. Also performed in the full magnitude they deserved.
Mid August 1864 The crown prince Ludwig had a meeting with the Chancellor Bismark and on 15 December the very ill King Maximilian I was persuaded to returned from Italy on the request of his people.
10 March 1864 King Maximilian died and Ludwig was crowned as King Ludwig II. Ludwig's Grandfather was King Ludwig I but had to abdicate and Ludwig's father Maximilian then became King.
King Ludwig's love and admiration for art and music was part of the decline in finances of Bavaria. Although he gave a lot of work to the people building all these palaces and castle but it had a tremendous strain on Bavaria's finances. Wagner was pressuring him and taking advantages of King Ludwig's friendship to further his music. Admittedly we wouldn't have had that amount of music of Wagner and all these beautiful buildings but the Bavarian government didn't see it that way and couldn't because Bavaria was on the verge of bankruptcy, so they said.
Ludwig's best friend was aide de Camp the Prince of Turn and Taxis from the very rich Bavarian family. Ludwig also had lifelong friendship with his half-first cousin once removed, Duchess Elisabeth in Bavaria, later Empressof Austria. It was assumed they were very fond of each other and had the same taste in art, music and poetry. Elisabeth was madeto marry the Emperor of Austria. Although the Emperor loved her, he could not stand up to his mother who was evil. At one stage Elisabeth was so ill they feared for her death, Most properly if Ludwig and Elisabeth married they would have been happy.
4 December 1864 First performance of Wagner's 'Flying Dutchman'.
10 June 1865 First performance of Wagner's 'Tristan and Isolde'
Yet on 11 Mai 1866 the Bavarian government was able to finance the war with Prussia and Bavaria was heavily defeated in June/July. 28 July a truce with Prussia and 22 August peace was declared. This had an traumatic impact on King Ludwig having to sendthousands of his beloved people into war. He himself rode with them. After that he refused to see his minister and loved the company of his mountain people. He withdrew from politics and started to build Neuschwanstein and Linderhof.
22 January 1867 King Ludwig II got engaged to the Duchess Sofie. which was annulled on 10 October 1867. The Duchess Sofie married on 28 September 1868 the Duke of Alencon.
21 June1868 was the first performance of Wagner's 'Meistersinger'. In that year the palace Linderhof and the castle of Neuschwanstein were planned and the building of Linderhof began.
22 September 1869 The first performance of Wagner's 'Rheingold' and in the same year they started building Neuschwanstein.
26 June 1870 The first performance of Wagner's 'Walkuere' and on the 16th July King Ludwig signed the mobilization against France. On the 1 September there was the Victory at Sedan. After that Bismark made Ludwig to include Bavaria into the unification of the German Empire with Prussia being the leader. Bavaria lost its sovereignty and King Ludwig was just a figurehead. It was all a tragic build-up in Ludwig's life. He withdrew from an unkind world into a world of his own making.
6 May 1872 the start of opera house in Bayreuth which was purely designed and build to perform Wagner's operas. Wagner became more and more domineering.
1873 King Ludwig bought the Herreninsel in the lake Chiemsee.
5 and 5 August and 26 till 31 August 1876 King Ludwig attended the performance of Wagner's opera 'Ring der er Nibelungen' at the Bayreuth opera house.
King Ludwig began more and more to retreat and showed depressions.
1878 The building of Linderhof is more or less finished and the building of Herrenchiemsee started.
1883 Wagner died in Venice.
1886 King Ludwig II moved to Neuschwanstein. On 11 June Dr. von Gudden, a psychologist, came to Neuschwanstein. King Ludwig said, "How can you declare me for mad? You have not examined me."
They moved the King to the small castle Berg at the shore of lake Starnberg. On the 12 June Ludwig went for a walk with Dr Gudden. Gudden told the guards not to follow. Both were found, in shallow water, dead.
Ludwig's death was established as suicide by drowning but Ludwig was know as a strong swimmer. The autopsy showed no water in the lungs. People belief he was murdered by his enemies.
Jacob Lidl, the king's fisherman said, "Three weeks after the king's death I was made to swear an oath that I would never say a certain thing, not to my wife, nor on my deathbed and not to a priest. The state has undertaken to look after my family if anything would happened to me either in peace or war". Lidlekept his oat, but only orally. He left a note saying that he had hidden behind bushes with his boat, waiting to meet the king, to row him out into the lake, where loyalist were to help him to escape. As the king stepped out and put his foot into the boat a shot rang out from the bank and killed him. Officially there were no scars or wounds on his body. Another theory is that King Ludwig died naturally )heart attack) brought on by the extreme cold of the lake during the attempt of escape.
King Ludwig II of Bavaria in the News
- Van Bommel ready to pen new Bayern dealESPN Soccernet21 hours ago
Bayern Munich captain Mark van Bommel wants a new contract with the club next season and hinted he would like to end his career in Bavaria.
- Franz Ackermann Fills the Rooms of the Kunstmuseum Bonn with Colorful PaintingsArt Daily33 hours ago
Franz Ackermann, Terminao Tropicao 2008/9 (Installation Bonn, 2009). Mixed Media. Courtesy The Artist. Foto: Jens Ziehe, Berlin. BONN.- Franz Ackermann who was born in Neumarkt St. Veit (Bavaria) in 1963 is one of the most innovative painters of the past ten years.
- Big chill kills at least 80 across EuropeBrisbane Times15 hours ago
The death toll from winter storms across Europe rose to at least 80 on Monday as transport chaos grew amid mounting anger over the failure of Eurostar high-speed trains.
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Comments
I thank you very much for your appreciation.
A fascinating piece of research, Hello, Hello. I was intrigued by Ludwig's strong admiration for and aid to Wagner. Keep up the good work
I really thank you for your great comment.
Sorry, but it's a legend that Ludwig's castles "bankrupted Bavaria." He lavishly spent Wittelsbach family money (nearly bankrupting *them*), but used no State funds. No wonder his relatives had him declared insane!
Hello, solicitr, thank you for stopping by and writing this interesting comment. I knew the bankrupcy of Bavaria was made up or exaggerated and so did the people. I didn't know that he used the Wittlesbach family money. So most properly it was them who killed him and the doctor not to have any witness.






lyricsingray says:
3 months ago
You really do have fascinating Hubs-so much to learn-Thanks!