Eduard Kullmann

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Born(1853-07-14)July 14, 1853
DiedMarch 16, 1892(1892-03-16) (aged 38)
Height158 cm (5 ft 2 in)
Eduard Kullmann
Kullmann photographed in Bad Kissingen's prison on July 14, 1874
Born(1853-07-14)July 14, 1853
DiedMarch 16, 1892(1892-03-16) (aged 38)
Height158 cm (5 ft 2 in)
Criminal chargesAttempted murder, Insubordination, Assault
Criminal penalty3 months for assault

14 years imprisonment with hard labor for attempted murder

7 years imprisonment for insubordination

Eduard Franz Ludwig Kullmann (14 July 1853 – 16 March 1892) was a German cooper who tried to assassinate Otto von Bismarck on July 13, 1874.

Kullmann was the son of a poor fishmonger from the Catholic region of Eichsfeld,[1] and his mother was a deeply religious woman who later began to suffer from mental illness and was in psychiatric care several times as a result of trauma caused by her husband's drunkenness and neglect.[2][3] His mother's father also committed suicide because of a foot ailment, which contributed to her mental decline.[4]

Kullmann became a cooper's apprentice, and after becoming a journeyman he joined a Catholic journeyman organization in Salzwedel. Kullman became increasingly worried about the anti-Catholic sentiment in the German Empire, which ultimately reached its height with the Kulturkampf. The Falk Laws were the last straw for Kullmann, and he decided to kill Bismarck to end the Kulturkampf sometime around Easter of 1874.[1][5][6] He also reportedly called Bismarck a "liberal scoundrel" and a "liberal philistine".[7] Kullmann was reportedly infected with syphilis and had scars from the infection.[8]

Kullmann had a history of violence and of not controlling his anger. In one incident he got angry and threw a cooper knife at a fellow apprentice named Gustav Welsch. In July 1873, Kullmann stabbed his fellow journeyman Carl Otto in the back with his pocketknife twice. He claimed he did it because he was drunk, and his punishment was waived after Carl dropped the charges at the court proceedings. In Salzwedel, Kullmann allegedly attacked another apprentice with a knife named Friedrich Günther. Kullmann denied this and said it was a lie that there was a knife involved. However, the attack was stopped by an Uhlan who was slightly wounded in the mouth by Kullmann's knife. He was arrested in September for trying to stab Philipp Welsch, the brother of his former master he had apprenticed under in Magdeburg. The reason given by Kullmann was that Welsch called him a "Catholic prude", and later accused him of saying something he didn't say. One month later he was convicted of assault and given three months in prison. In February 1874, Kullmann was thrown out of a ball after insulting his former master August Welsch, and he later assaulted one of the journeymen who threw him out at a hotel.[9]

Attempted assassination of Otto von Bismarck

Imprisonment and death

References

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