Tuesday, March 28, 2006
Matthew Buchinger - The Little Man of Nuremberg

'The tricks he plays at cups and balls,
Tis wrong in any man, who calls,
Them slight of hand, as he gives out,
Their slight of stumps, and are no doubt ...
I'm sure that's the worst thing about his life,
that he had to suffer these terrible poems.'
- from a handbill dating from 1726

Matthew Buchinger was born in Anspach, Germany in 1674 and was one of the most well known performers of his day. He played over a dozen musical instruments, danced the hornpipe, and was an expert calligrapher, magician, and bowler, built magnificent ships in bottles, and stunning marksman with a pistol. All of those accomplishments are even more impressive when you realize that he had no arms or legs and stood only 28 inches high.

His skills certainly seemed to impress ladies as he was married at least four times and fathered eleven children. There is a story that one of his wives was abusive and insulting - he put up with the behaviour until he simply snapped and he knocked her to the ground and thrashed her publicly. The event was immortalized in the form of a caricature published in the newspaper the following day.

During his lifetime, Buchinger performed for many kings – three successive kings of Germany – and several times before King George.

He died in Cork, Ireland in 1732

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

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Written by J. Tithonus Pednaud
Link to this Human Marvels article
3 Comments:
Anonymous Anonymous said...
nice he had no arms n legs and still beat his wife, Hed put the drunk guy down the street to shame you know the one in the trailer park that drives the primer trans am

Anonymous Anonymous said...
This guy looks incredibley weird and is mean,

Anonymous Anonymous said...
He didn't "beat" his wife. She was verbally and sometimes physically abusive to him, and he put up with it until he couldn't take any more. That's just the problem: no one cares if a wife mistreats her husband,but if he retaliates then suddenly he's a bad person. And this is coming from a girl.

He was neither mean nor abusive, and judging from his accomplishments despite his situation, he was a very successful individual.