In 1828 a teenage boy was discovered on the streets of Nuremberg. Barely
able to walk, he clutched a letter in his hand. This youth, Kaspar
Hauser, who couldn't properly speak or write, was soon to become an
international phenomenon known as "the Child of Europe."
The story of Kaspar Hauser presents many mysteries. According to his
account, the young boy spent most of his life confined in a darkened
space. Unable to stand up, and with no knowledge of his captors, he was
fed a diet of bread and water. Eventually released from this macabre
prison, he survived an assassination attempt only to be stabbed to death
in 1833.
Why was a child kept in such squalid circumstances? Who were his
parents? Who was responsible for such a cruel attack on childhood? Who
murdered him? In this seminal work Peter Tradowsky addresses these
questions through the insights of Anthroposophy. His analysis reveals
some of the secrets of Kaspar Hauser's short life, and the occult
significance of his incarnation, spiritual nature and individuality.
C O N T E N T S
Foreword
Introducion
1. Kaspar Hauser's Path of Sacrifice
2. Kaspar Hauser's Karmic Surroundings
3. Kaspar Hauser in the Karmic Proceedings of the Nineteenth and
Twentieth Centuries
4. Kaspar Hauser and Rudolf Steiner
5. Kaspar Hauser's Character
Appendices