Wilhelm Stieber

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Wilhelm Johann Carl Eduard Stieber (3 May 1818 – 29 January 1882) was

information gathering.[citation needed
]

Biography

According to his questionable memoirs,

Prussian Church
. He was then employed in 1841 in a criminal court. When his father learned that he was studying law, he ended all funding towards his education.

In order to earn his tuition, young Stieber began working for the

Revolution of 1848, he was promoted by King Frederick William IV of Prussia to chief of police. During the winter of 1850, he was ordered to investigate an exiled political extremist named Karl Marx
.

His unreliable memoirs claim that, posing as a doctor, he bluffed his way into Marx's London household and stole the membership listings of Marx's

Berlin Academy of Science out of 5,000 talers with a forged Ancient Greek manuscript. As the money had come from the king's private purse, Stieber was ordered to get it back as discreetly as possible. Using an elderly circus performer as an interpreter, Stieber forced Simonides to return the money by threatening to hand him over to the notoriously brutal Greek police. With the money secured, Simonides was escorted to the border and ordered never to return to Prussia.[3]

Stieber also investigated a

Berlin stock exchange
. He also became something of an expert on the prostitution trade in Berlin and recruited many of its denizens as informants.

He died in Berlin.

In popular culture

Works

  • Die Prostitution in Berlin und ihre Opfer in historischer, sittlicher, medizinischer und polizeilicher Beziehung beleuchtet. Hofmann, Berlin 1846 (English: Prostitution in Berlin and Its Victims)
  • Der erste politische Prozeß vor den Geschwornen Berlins, betreffend die Anklage des Ober-Staatsanwalts Sethe wider den Literaten Robert Springer wegen Majestätsbeleidigung : nach stenographischen Berichten dargest. vom Vertheidiger des Angeklagten. Robert Springer, Berlin 1849
  • Carl Georg Ludwig Wermuth / Stieber: Die Communistischen -Verschwörungen des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts. Im amtlichen Auftrag zur Benutzung der Polizei-behörden der sämmtlichen deutschen bundesstaaten. Erster Theil. Enthaltend: Die historische Darstellung der betreffenden Untersuchungen. Druck von A. W. Hayn, Berlin 1853 (Reprint: Olms, Hildesheim 1969 und Verlag Klaus Guhl, Berlin 1976)
  • Carl Georg Ludwig Wermuth / Stieber: Die Communistischen -Verschwörungen des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts. Im amtlichen Auftrag zur Benutzung der Polizei-behörden der sämmtlichen deutschen bundesstaaten. Zweiter Theil. Enthaltend: Die Personalien der in den Communisten-untersuchungen vorkommenden Personen. Druck von A. W. Hayn, Berlin 1854 (Reprint: Olms, Hildesheim 1969 und Verlag Klaus Guhl, Berlin 1976) [online] Available at: https://www.digitale-sammlungen.de/de/view/bsb10771201?page=11 [Accessed 8 Oct. 2014].
  • With Carl Georg Ludwig Wermuth: Die Communisten-Verschwörungen des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts, ASIN: B0000BU4N6 (English: Communist Conspiracies of the Nineteenth Century)
  • Denkwürdigkeiten des Geheimen Regierungsrathes Dr. Stieber. Aus seinen hinterlassenen Papieren bearbeitet von Dr. Leopold Auerbach.[4] Engelmann, Berlin 1884
  • Practisches Lehrbuch der Criminal-Polizei. Auf Grund eigener langjähriger Erfahrungen zur amtlichen Benutzung für Justiz- und Polizeibeamte und zur Warnung und Belehrung für das Publikum bearb. von Wilhelm Stieber. Hayn, Berlin 1860 (Reprint: Kriminalistik-Verlag, Heidelberg 1983)
  • Wilhelm J. C. E. Stieber: Spion des Kanzlers. Die Enthüllungen von Bismarcks Geheimdienstchef. Seewald, Stuttgart 1978, ) (English: The Chancellor's Spy. Memoirs of the Founder of Modern Espionage. Translated from the German by Jan Van Heurch, Grove Press, New York 1979)

See also

References

  1. ^ Wilhelm J. C. E. Stieber (1 January 1980). The Chancellor's Spy.
  2. ^ Wilhelm Stieber, The Chancellor's Spy, pp. 25–38.
  3. ^ Wilhelm Stieber, The Chancellor's Spy, pp. 47–50.
  4. ^ Leopold Auerbach, Jurist (1847–1925)

Literature

Further reading

  • Alex Butterworth: The World That Never Was: A True Story of Dreamers, Schemers, Anarchists and Secret Police (Pantheon Books, 2010)