| Literature DB >> 32696275 |
Reinhard Steinberg1, Peter Falkai2.
Abstract
In 1886, Bernhard von Gudden and three other expert psychiatrists diagnosed the Bavarian King Ludwig II with "paranoia (madness)," a diagnosis that the Bavarian government used to justify removing Ludwig from power. Although Ludwig was not evaluated in detail by the psychiatrists, in their opinion, sworn eyewitness accounts and general knowledge about Ludwig's behavior provided sufficient grounds for the diagnosis. Ludwig was a great admirer of the musician, Richard Wagner, and shared some of his ideas of an idealistic society. At first, he identified with Wagner's opera heroes, and he became Wagner's patron sponsor for life. However, he grew increasingly interested in an absolutist state, envisioning himself as a monarch with a role similar to that of Louis XIV. His multiple building projects, for which he incurred much debt, his conviction that he was descended from the Bourbons through baptism, his increasingly abnormal behavior, and his hallucinations together formed the basis for the psychiatrists' diagnosis. Although not mentioned in the expert opinion, Ludwig's homophilic behavior-a scandal at the time-was probably also an important reason for his removal from office. A review of the psychiatric knowledge and societal philosophy of the time indicates that the psychiatrists were correct with their diagnosis in their time.Entities:
Keywords: Bernhard von Gudden; Diagnosis; Expert opinion; Ludwig II; Paranoia (madness)
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32696275 PMCID: PMC8119274 DOI: 10.1007/s00406-020-01161-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci ISSN: 0940-1334 Impact factor: 5.270
Medical history of Ludwig II
| Age (years) | Medical history of Ludwig II | Page [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| August 25, 1845 | Difficult birth lasting > 10 h | – | |
| Family history of psychoses: Alexandra (aunt), Otto (brother) | GA 306 | ||
| 1846 | (7 months) | Meningitis, long failure to thrive | – |
| From 1851 | 6 | Anxious, agitated, shy | GA 307 |
| 1864 | Joint pain, headaches Becomes King of Bavaria. Friendship with Richard Wagner | – | |
| 1866 | 21 | Prussian–Austrian war; Ludwig does not visit his troops Wants to abdicate in favor of his brother Otto, but cannot because Otto is ill | – |
| 1969 | 24 | Groundbreaking for Neuschwanstein, building alterations at Linderhof, plans for Herrenwörth (Schloss Herrenchiemsee) Incomplete break with Richard und Cosima Wagner | – |
| 1870–71 | 25 | German–French war; foundation of the German empire (“Imperial Letter”). Ludwig feels overwhelmed | – |
| From 1870 | 25 | Secret society “Coalition”: should repeal constitution, depose government Wants to exchange Bavaria for a different kingdom | GA 314 |
| 1871/72 | 23 | Avoids contact: only private celebrations of Mass, private performances (“Separatvorstellungen”) at the theater, opera ( Alcohol abuse, rants for hours, curses Hardly any contact with the cabinet, mainly keeps company with lackeys, “people from the stables.” Day-night reversal (night rides, celebrations) | GA 307–309 |
| 1872 | 26 | Death of Solbrig; Gudden becomes Otto’s physician; isolation of Otto | – |
| From 1872 | Increasingly abnormal behavior | ||
| 1876 | 31 | First Bayreuth Festival (“The Ring of the Nibelung”); attends incognito | – |
| 3/1878 | 33 | Ludwig orders “guardianship” for Otto, involuntary commitment | – |
| 1880 | 34 | Wittelsbach 700th jubilee: extreme excitement, permanent ambivalence, does not participate | GA 308 |
| From 1881 | 36 | Image cult | GA 314 GA 314 |
| From 1881 | 36 | Hallucinations: sounds, voices (talks to himself when alone in a room, laughs); “imaginary” company at table outside in the snow (with Mme Pompadour, Mme de Maintenon) Motor function: unusual dancing/jumping movements, grimacing, frozen in one posture Affect: irritability, arousal, assaults against > 30 servants; exaggerated affection/abrupt aversion; footman Mayr has to wear a face mask, footman Bucher has to wear sealing wax on his forehead | GA 309 GA 311 |
| From 1881 | 36 | Fantasies of violence: King’s mother, Marie: “Pull on her pigtails, pound on her breasts”; King’s father, Maximilian: “Get his skull from the sarcophagus and box his ears.” Feed the Prussian Crown Prince water and bread and torture him; set fire to Munich, arrest ministers, beat them up; thinks for hours about punishments for “wrongdoers,” etc | GA 315 |
Behavior: communicates through gestures (scratching at the door); punishments; servants may not look at Ludwig/his sleigh/food to be served (“Defilement by unseemly looks”); Private orders (“Kammerbefehle”), “boring state business”; Hairdresser Hoppe/Valet Hesselschwerdt are given official tasks: Minister: “Pack, riffraff, rabble…the people do not deserve that I show myself to them…If the chambers [of government] are stubborn, dissolve them, put in others and work on the people.” | GA 312–315 GA 316 | ||
| 1882 | [Formal disorders:] obsessive thoughts (e.g., long discussion about table cover), ideas of reference Affect: “Main enjoyment in life is construction,” abdication, suicide | ||
| 1885/86 | Mortgage lending: “Immediate covering of funds, not an advance, that is disrespectful of me…make the Civil List only available to me again!” Orders bank robbery, burglary; “Nanette Wagner affair” (fraudulent loan of 25 million marks); demanded loans up to 80 million: “The people and their representatives should fulfill their allegiance, whereby they could again garner great favor from his Majesty (“Allerhöchste Gunst”)” | GA 316 | |
| From 1884 | 38 | Physical decay: dental status; lack of sleep (chloral hydrate, other hypnotics), headaches (painkillers); neglect. Delusion concerning the Bourbon lineage [ | GA 318 |
| June 13, 1886 | 41 | Death of Ludwig II and Bernhard von Gudden in Lake Starnberg | – |
From: Gudden et al. [15]; Förstl [4]; Steinberg and Hippius [5]; pages numbers in expert opinion are according to Wöbking 1986 [23], parts of medical history not mentioned by Gudden or he is not aware of them
Fig. 1:Left: King Ludwig II. Photograph by Joseph Albert, Munich 1885 (Geheimes Hausarchiv, Wittelsbach Picture Collection, King Ludwig II, 38/46c; Courtesy of Secret Royal Family Archives (Department of Bavarian Central State Archives). Right: Bernhard von Gudden: detail: photograph by Joseph Albert, Munich, 1886 (Stadtarchiv München, DE-1992-C1886076; Courtesy of the City Archives Munich)
Kraepelin E (1883) Compendium: Chapter V: primary madness [31], p 284–312
| Kraepelin, Compendium of Psychiatry [ | Gudden et al. [ | |
|---|---|---|
| V. Primary madness | + | |
| (A) Definition | Acute Chronic | − + |
| (B) Heredity | Congenital, predisposing (original madness) Acquired (unitary psychosis) | + − |
| (C) 1. Delusions | Illusions/ hallucinations and illusions of apperception | + |
| 2. Primordial delusion | Sudden delusional ideas, unchanging, delusional system (nothing is a coincidence) | (+) |
| (a) Depressive delusion | Sinfulness, guilt, abnormal indecision, suicidality | + |
| (b) Persecutory delusion | Suspicion, shyness, irritability, withdrawal | + |
| (c) Delusion of grandeur | Focus is on own personality | + |
| (d) Delusion of ancestry | Not the child of one’s parents | (+) |
| (e) Religious delusion | Feeling of rapture, transfiguration, enlightenment | + |
| (f) Delusion of love | Infatuated character, often platonic, secretiveness, masturbation | (+) |
| (D) Alcoholism | Later predisposing moment | (?) |
| (E) Degeneration | Skull shape, puerile appearance, juvenile spasms, irritability | + |
| (F) Course | Acute: good course Chronic: “Prognosis…extremely poor” | − + |
| (G) Treatment | Shielding from stimuli, mental hospitals, family care, electrotherapy | + |
Level of agreement with the expert opinion by Gudden et al. [15]
+, Extensive; (+), probable;−, absent
Kraepelin E (1883) Compendium: chapter VII B: moral insanity [31], p 351–354
| Kraepelin, Compendium of psychiatry [ | Gudden et al. [ | |
|---|---|---|
VII. Mental disabilities (B) Moral insanity (moral delusion, moral insanity) | ||
| (a) Definition | Disorder of inner life and actions although intelligence is “normal” “To the untrained eye, often a morally bad individual” Thoughtless satisfaction of his egoistic tendencies | (−) |
| (b) Heredity | Congenital, but also after e.g., head injury, alcoholism Deep, organic-degenerative explanation | (?) (?) |
| (c) Symptoms | Lack of compassion, abuse of animals as an adolescent, Early sex drive, early masturbation, sexual excesses Wildness, covertness, deceitfulness, craftiness Acts of violence, lies and deception, theft, riots Lack of a sense of honor and attachment to parents/siblings Pronounced selfishness | − ? − ? ? (−) |
| (d) Intelligence | “Normal,” certain cunning, disorder is not very evident “Blurry” abstraction possible Like in Italian psychiatry: “Born criminal” [Lombroso; 19] | + − − |
| (e) Course | Stable condition, but depends on demands on “moral ability” | − |
| (f) Prognosis | Substantial change not to be expected | − |
| (g) Treatment | If too sick, then “permanent custody in mental hospital necessary” | ? |
Level of agreement with the expert opinion by Gudden et al. [15]
+, Extensive; (+), probable; ?, questionable;−, absent