|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TAV-THE |
|
|
TELL, WILLIAM . The story of William Tell's skill in shooting at and striking the apple which had been placed on the head of his little son by order of Gessler, the tyrannical Austrian bailiff of Uri, is so closely bound up with the legendary history of the origin of the Swiss Confederation that they must be considered together. Both appear first in the 15th century, probably as results of the war for the Toggenburg inheritance (143650); for the intense hatred of Austria, greatly increased by her support of the claims of Zurich, favoured the circulation of stories which assumed that Swiss freedom was of immemorial antiquity, while, as the war was largely a struggle between the civic and rural elements in the Confederation, the notion that the (rural) Schwyzers were of Scandinavian descent at once separated them from and raised them above the German in-habitants of the towns. The Tell story is first found in a ballad the first nine stanzas of which (containing the story) were certainly written before 1474. There is no mention made of the names of the bailiff or of his master, or of the hat placed on a pole. Tell is called " the first Confederate," and his feat is treated as the real and only reason why the Confederation was formed and the tyrants driven out of the land. It is probably to this ballad that Melchior Russ of Lucerne (who began his Chronicle in 1482) refers when, in his account (from Justinger) of the evil deeds of the bailiffs in the Forest districts, he excuses himself from giving the story. He goes on to narrate how Tell, irritated by his treatment, stirred up his friends against the governor, who castle on the lake of Lucerne, when a storm arose, and Tell, by reason of his great bodily strength, was, after being unbound, given charge of the rudder on his promise to bring the boat safely to land. He steers it towards a shelf of rock, called in Russ's time Tell's Platte, springs on shore, shoots the bailiff dead with his crossbow, and goes back to Uri, where he stirs up the great strife which ended in the battle of Morgarten. In these two accounts, which form the basis of the Uri version of the origin of the Confederation, it is Tell and Tell only who is the actor and the leader. We first hear of the cruelties of Austrian bailiffs in the Forest districts in the Bernese Chronicle of Conrad
The Tell story and the " atrocities " story are first found combined in a MS. known as the White Book of Sarnen. They are contained in a short chronicle written between 1467 and 1476, probably about 1470, and based on oral tradition. Many details are given of the oppressions of the bailiffs: we hear of Gessler, of the meeting of Stoupacher of Schwyz, Furst of Uri, and a man of Nidwalden at the Rfitli,- -in fact, the usual version of the legend. To give an instance of tyranny in Uri, the author tells us the story of the refusal of " der Thall " to do reverence to the hat placed on a pole, of his feat of skill, and of his shooting the bailiff, Gessler, from behind a bush
movement
sharp
chief
The task of filling up gaps, smoothing away inconsistencies, rounding off the tale, was accomplished by Giles Tschudi (q.v.), whose recension was adopted, with a few alterations, by Johannes von Muller in his History of the Confederation (178o). In the final recension of Tschudi's Chronicle (1734-36), which, however, differs in many particulars from the original
8th November 1307, at the Rutli, Werner von Stauffacher of Schwyz, Walter Fiiret of Uri, Arnold
The story was, on the ground of want of evidence, regarded 1 as suspicious by Guilliman in a private letter of 1607, and doubts were expressed by the brothers Iselin (1727 and 1754) 1 and by Voltaire (1754); but it was not till 1760 that the legend was definitely attacked, on the ground of its similarity to the story of Tokko (see below), in an anonymous pamphlet by Freudenberger, a Bernese pastor. This caused great stir; it was publicly burnt by order of the government of Uri, and many more or less forged proofs and documents were produced in favour of Tell. The researches of J. E. Kopp (Urkunden zur Geschichte d. eidgenossischen Biinde, 2 parts, 1835 and 1851, and Geschichte der eidgenossischen Bunde, vol. ii., 1847), first cleared up the real early history of the league, and overthrew the legends of the White Book and Tschudi. Since then many writers have worked in the same direction. Vischer (1867) has carefully traced out the successive steps in the growth of the legend, and Rochholz (1877) has worked out the real history of Gessler as shown in authentic documents. The general result has been to show that a mythological marksman and an impossible bailiff bearing the name of a real family have been joined with con-fused and distorted reminiscences of the events of 124547, in which the names of many real persons have been inserted and many unauthenticated acts attributed to them. Th. von Liebenau has, however, shown (in an article reprinted from the Katholische Schweizerbldtter in the Bollettino Storico della Svizzera Italiana for 1899) that in 1283 the Emperor Rudolf of Habsburg i gave the right of receiving the tolls for escort over the St Gotthard Pass to his sons, the dukes of Austria. The levying of these tolls gave rise to various disputes between the men of Uri and the bailiffs of the dukes of Austria, and by 1319 (if not already in 1309) the claim to levy them was silently given up. These facts show (what could not hitherto be proved) that at the time when legend places the rising of Uri, Tell exploit, &c., the dukes of Austria really had disputes with Uri. The story of the skilful marksman who succeeds in striking some small object placed on the head of a man or child is very widely spread; we find it in Denmark (Tokko), Norway (two versions), Iceland, Holstein, on the Rhine, and in England (William of Cloudesley). How it came to be localized in Uri we do not know; possibly, through the story of the Scandinavian colonization of Schwyz, the tale was fitted to some real local hero. The alleged proofs of the existence of a real William Tell in Uri in the 14th century break down hopelessly. (I) The entries in the parish registers are forged. (2) As to the Tell chapels(a) that in the " hollow way " near Kiissnacht was not known to Melchior Russ and is first mentioned by Tschudi (1572).(b) That on Tell's Platte is first mentioned in 1504. The document which alleges that this chapel was built by order of a " landsgemeinde " held in 1388, at which 114 men were present who had been personally acquainted with Tell, was never heard of till 1759. The procession in boats to the place where the chapel stands may be very old, but is not connected with Tell till about 1582. (c) The chapel at Burglen is known to have been founded in 1582. Other documents and statements in support of the Tell story have even less claim to credit. It has been pointed out above that with two exceptions the bailiff is always called Gryssler or Grissler, and it was Tschudi who popularized the name of Gessler, though Grissler occurs as late as 1765. Now Gessler is the name of a real family, the history of which from 1z5o to 1513 has been worked out by Rochholz, who shows in detail that no member ever played the part attributed to the bailiff in the legend, or could have done so, and that the Gesslers could not have owned or dwelt at the castle of Kiissnacht; nor could they have been called Von Bruneck. In the Urnerspiel the name of the bailiff's servant who guarded the hat on the pole is given as Heintz Vogely, and we know that Friedrich Vogeli was the name of one of the chief
that the Hagenbachs had frequent transactions with the Habsburgs and their vassals. In general see two excellent works by Franz Heinemann, Tell-Iconographie, Lucerne, 1902 (reproductions, with text, of the chief representations of Tell in art froth 1507 onwards), and Tell-Bibliographie (including that of Schiller's play), published in 1908 at Bern. Among the vast number of books and pamphlets on the Tell story, the two most to be recommended are W. Vischer, Die Sage von der Befreiung der Waldstdtte ( Leipzig
Innsbruck
The setting up in 1895 in the market-place in AItdorf of a fine statue (by the Swiss sculptor Richard Kissling) of Tell and his son, and the opening in 1899, just outside Altdorf
Altdorf
claim the support of authentic history, while his attempt to find room for the atrocities of the wicked bailiffs elsewhere than at Altdorf consists only in suggesting an intricate series of possibilities, none of which are supported by any positive evidence. In his pamphlet Die Sagen v. Tell u. Stauffacher (Basel, 1899) August Bernoulli, and in his elaborate Geschichte d. Schweiz. Politik (vol. i. Frauenfeld, 1906) J. Schollenberger, have applied the same sort of method, but without attaining any greater degree of historical success. (W. A. B. C.) End of Article: TELL, WILLIAM If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/TAV_THE/TELL_WILLIAM.html"> TELL, WILLIAM </a> |
|
|
(Previous) TELL EL AMARNA |
(Next) TELLER, WILHELM ABRAHAM (1734-1804) |
|
Sponsored Advertisements