The Magnus Archives - MAG 23 Schwartzwald
Episode Date: June 15, 2016Case #8163103Statement of Albrecht von Closen, regarding a discovered tomb near his estate in the Black Forest.…Thanks to everyone who took the time to vote for us in the 2016 Podcast Awards. We wer...e completely overwhelmed by your support and look forward to finding out who won in the coming weeks.Be sure to subscribe using your podcast software of choice to get every episode automatically downloaded to your device. Visit www.RustyQuill.com/subscribe for quick and easy links. It’s more convenient for you and really helps us out.Like what you’re hearing? Let us know.Sound effects today from previously credited artists via www.freesound.comFor more information visit www.RustyQuill.comFind ad-free episodes and bonus content on our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/rustyquillCheck out our merchandise available in our official stores:RedbubbleTeepublicCrowdmadeYou can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice.Please rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear.Join our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillTHREADS: @rustyquillukINSTAGRAM: @rustyquillukEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comThe Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International Licence Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi, this is Alexander Newell, Director of the Magnus Archives.
We just wanted to take a quick moment to thank everyone who voted for us in the 2016 Podcast Awards.
We were completely overwhelmed by your support and look forward to finding out who won in the coming weeks.
So thanks from me, Johnny and everyone else at Rusty Quill. We hope you enjoyed today's episode.
You earned it. The Magnus Archives Episode 23
Schwarzwald The End
Statement of Albrecht von Closen regarding a discovered tomb near his estate in the Black Forest.
Original statement given as part of a letter to Jonah Magnus, March 31st, 1816.
Audio recording by Jonathan Sims, head archivist of the Magnus Institute, London.
Statement begins.
Magnus Institute, London. Statement begins.
My dearest Jonah, forgive my writing you this letter so soon after the last. You must think me dreadful for not even giving you a chance at a reply, but I recall that during your visit last
spring you mentioned your fascination with the macabre and the strange, and pressed upon me
as to whether there were any such lore or legends that I myself were familiar
with. Wolfgang writes me that you are acquiring quite the collection, and I feel that I now have
something that belongs with it, far more than any of the fairy stories or old maids' tales that I
told you before. Put quite simply, I have had a most terrifying encounter two encounters really i suppose and i pray to the lord that i shall have no more for i honestly believe i should die from fear if not from most dreadful bore speaking around the thing so, but I feel that to understand all I must begin my tale some time before the apparition itself appeared,
with my travels down to Württemberg.
My family has a small estate there, in the heart of the Schwarzwald, what you would call
the Black Forest, near a small town by the name of Schramberg.
This estate belonged to my brother, Henrik, and when he passed away
it descended to my nephew Wilhelm. He was barely in his fourteenth year when Henrik
died, and his mother had passed while birthing him, so myself and Clara have since made every
effort to provide him with guidance and such affection as he may have lost. This felt especially
keen as we have ourselves been unable to conceive
a child, and so we felt it our duty to teach Wilhelm what we would have impressed upon a son
of our own. The profligacy of youth is always a danger, and we felt it our duty to help guide him,
where we could, along the path of virtue. We needn't have worried ourselves overly. I have
never met so sober and prudent
a soul as seems to exist within young Wilhelm. Nonetheless, because of this we have remained
close with my nephew through the years, despite the distance. When he took ill this last winter,
naturally we made arrangements to travel to his home in the Schwarzwald, and offer what
comfort we could. The journey was difficult,
as I suppose is to be expected when travelling in winter, but Wilhelm's condition brooked no delays.
At first the worst we had to contend with, coming from Bavaria, was the lack of provision in the
inns where we took lodging, as we were told over and over again how rare guests were this time of
year. Still, say what you will about the German
Confederation, and I know you certainly have a lot of opinions on that, my friend, but it has
made travelling a lot quicker, and I was certainly grateful for that. When we entered Württemberg,
however, our way was much harder. The snow fell thicker in the Schwarzwald, compelling us at last
to trade the coach for a sleigh. You have known winter in the black forest have you i know that you will say you have snows and forests in england but i have seen what you call forests and can tell you that there can be no comparison to the schwarzwald covered in a dense canopy of untouched snow. There is such a silence there as I have never
encountered anywhere else on earth, with every sound seeming to die the moment it touches that
soft white blanket of virgin snow. By day it is the most beautiful serenity, this calm stillness. But by night, oh my friend, by night
it becomes something altogether else. The quiet of the forest, it becomes like the world is holding
its breath, waiting to strike. And in those parts where the canopy clears enough that the moon
shines down, it casts everything into the most ghostly shades. I lost count of
the number of times I swore I saw figures in the shadows, briefly illuminated by the moonlit glow
of that frozen land. At one point I even demanded the sleigh be stopped, so I could make an
examination of the area with a brace of pistols. But of course I found nothing.
It was in such a state of mind that we arrived at Wilhelm's estate near Schramberg. We were greeted by Wilhelm's servants and told of their master's
condition. The doctor had, apparently, braved the roads from Schramberg some few days ago,
and had given what medicine he could. Since then, the servants told us, he had been steadily improving,
but was still very weak. I will confess at this news to feeling slightly unnecessary,
but upon entering Wilhelm's chamber, the happiness evidence upon his face when he saw Clara and
myself put all such thoughts to rest. Wilhelm was in recovery, but I had no intention of travelling back through that silent icy stillness unless absolutely necessary, and Clara agreed.
We made plans to winter there with Wilhelm. There was room enough for us, though our chamber was more modest than what we would have been accustomed to.
I will admit that I didn't entirely relish the thought of staying in the Schwarzwald until
the spring thaw, but of the courses of action we had at our disposal, it was the one I found to be
the most agreeable. And so began what was to be a lengthy sojourn near Schramberg, and truly have I
never wished more keenly that I had been able to bring my library with me. I had but a few books with me,
and Wilhelm, despite his not inconsiderable intelligence, had even fewer. In the end we
played a lot of cribbage, and listened to Clara play many a tune on the pianoforte.
My wife has never had a singular voice, but her skills upon the keys more than make up for it.
I myself would often take
long walks through the surrounding woods during the early afternoon, when the cold was tolerable.
Sometimes I would make my way the two miles to neighbouring Schramberg, but more often I would
simply choose a direction and stroll into the trees for as long as my fancy held me,
and then simply follow my own trail of footprints back to
what was, for the moment, my home.
It was on one of these walks, some months into our stay, that I came upon that ancient
graveyard.
It must have been sunken slightly into the ground itself, as all I could see of the grave
markers themselves were the merest tip of worn and crumbled granite
above the snow.
I could not guess at the size of the place, as every few seconds, whichever way I walked,
I would spot another small bud of memorial stone blossoming through the frosted earth.
I dug some snow from in front of one of the headstones.
It had a broken angel atop it, both wings snapped and fallen.
But the inscription was far too worn
to make out any of the words.
I had all but made up my mind to leave,
as I knew I had little over an hour
before the light began to fail me.
As I turned to do so, however,
I spied something not far removed among the trees, far larger
and more intriguing than the graves I had found thus far.
It stood about five feet proud above the snow, and the stone was far better quality than
what I had seen so far.
A small mausoleum.
The door, once a sturdy iron grate, had long since rusted off its hinges, leaving only a gaping black aperture that seemed to lead deeper than the dimensions of the mausoleum would allow.
Over the top, barely readable, but still most definitely there, was the name Johann von Württemberg.
was the name Johann von Württemberg.
I was fascinated.
I knew my local history well enough,
and certainly was not aware of any noble of the Württemberg line named Johann.
I was sure he had never been a count or a prince.
More than that, there had never been, as far as I could recall,
any town or settlement near this spot that could have supported a cemetery of such size.
So who was Johann von Württemberg?
And why had he built a mausoleum here, in the middle of the Schwarzwald, six miles or more from Schramberg?
I had no time to investigate any further, for I realized that I needed to leave immediately if I was to return to my wife and nephew before sundown.
I turned away and followed my path back as quickly as I dared.
While I would normally be satisfied forging a new path the next day,
something in the thought of that silent tomb drew me back,
and I found myself marking trees with my pocketknife,
to make finding my way back the following day that much easier.
life, to make finding my way back the following day that much easier. I asked Wilhelm that evening over dinner whether he had ever heard of Johann von Württemberg,
or was aware of the mausoleum a few miles north from his home. He told me no to both,
he rarely spent time in the forest around save for hunting, and the hunting was usually
poor in the north, as the trees were too close together to easily navigate with a horse,
and he had never heard of this Johann.
I made some inquiries as to where I could look further into the history of the area,
but there was no library of a decent size within near distance of Schramberg,
and as I mentioned, Wilhelm had little in the way of books,
so I let the matter drop.
Nothing else of note occurred that night, and so, making my apologies the next morning, I headed out early towards the old
cemetery. I made no secret of my destination, and even offered the opportunity to accompany
me to both Wilhelm and Carla, but neither saw the trip as worth the cold hours it would take
to reach. So it was alone that I once
again made my way to that forgotten place. My marking the trees had proven unnecessary,
as there had been no fresh snowfall the previous night, and my footprints from the day before
were still clear and very easy to follow. The mausoleum looked exactly as I had left
it, its door still yawning, and the sunlight seemed to
make it very little distance over the threshold before darkness once again swallowed it. I
had foreseen this and packed a lantern for the purpose of exploring the place. I was
about to light it when I noticed a figure watching me from the tree-line. Perhaps this
place was not so forgotten after all. I had heard tales of brigands using
places such as this for assignations, and was suddenly glad I had also thought to pack
a pistol and shot. I approached the man, but he didn't move to flee. As I got closer,
I saw him in more detail. He was short and squat, wearing an old-fashioned black frock coat
and knee breeches, though his head was shadowed by a wide-brimmed black hat. By his costume
I assumed him to be an old man, perhaps a groundskeeper for this place, or simply a
recluse that lived nearby. When I greeted him, though, the voice that answered held
no quiver of age within it.
He asked me in low, peasant German whether I was planning to explore the tomb.
I said I was, and asked if he was the keeper of the place.
He laughed at that, the sharp, guttural exclamation that surprised me,
and told me that the crypt I sought was a dangerous place.
I asked him what I had to fear from the dead, and he stared at me.
I could not see his eyes beneath the brim of his hat,
but I could still feel his gaze upon me.
He laughed again and told me,
No, sir, you have nothing to fear from the dead.
At these words I began to back away, ensuring my hand was on my pistol, not taking my eyes off this strange man until I reached the edge of the mausoleum.
Only then did I look down to make sure my lantern was where I left it, and when I returned my gaze to the trees, he was gone.
To speak plainly, I was rather shaken by my encounter,
and considered turning back and trying my luck another day. But something within me balked at having all my work and preparation be for naught because of a single farmer who
couldn't mind his business. I lit my lantern and... Martin, good lord, man, if you're going
to be staying in the archives, at least have the decency to put some trousers on.
Oh, God, sorry. Sorry I didn't think you were in until later. It's not even seven yet.
I've been coming in early in the hopes of leaving this place before dark.
It's been a week, and we've seen nothing. Do you really think she's still out there?
I have no idea. But I don't intend to take any chances.
No, I suppose not.
Now, if you'll excuse me.
Right-o.
Statement continues.
At first I was confused. Inside appeared to be empty.
No monuments or coffins stood inside, and no plaques or sigils adorned the wall.
Just a single slab of marble stood in the centre, like an altar.
At first I thought that perhaps that was where the coffin should have sat and someone had simply taken it.
But as I walked around, I saw what it was concealing.
Behind the sharp-angled block was a staircase,
descending deep into some unknown subterranean vault.
You will scoff at me, Jonah, when next we meet, I am sure of it. You will laugh at my bravado and
call me an unthinking adventurer, but the plain fact of it is that I descended those stairs with
hardly a qualm. Any fear I might have had was solely focused on the man I had met outside, and I foresaw no danger within the vault itself.
So I hoisted my lantern, and I descended the stairs.
They were old, of that there is no doubt, but they were not worn, and I would wager that I was the first soul to go down there in at least a century.
They descended for some time
until I was quite certain that I was deep within the frozen earth of the Schwarzwald.
At last the steps ended in a short corridor
and I could see the bricks that formed the walls and arched ceiling
had crumbled and shifted in places,
allowing ingress to the thick roots of the trees above,
which coiled and splayed across those parts of the passage in most need of repair.
After about a minute of walking, the passage opened out into a large chamber.
In the centre stood another block of marble, almost identical to the one I had seen upstairs,
but atop this one was a sealed stone coffin.
The name Johann von Württemberg was carved here too,
though preserved in much clearer detail without the elements to wear it away.
As I gazed at it, I noticed that the wall of the room did not appear to be stone, as the passage
or the mausoleum had been. I walked cautiously closer, until my lantern illuminated it clearly.
The walls were covered with bookshelves, packed in with such a density that it was impossible to
tell if there was a real wall behind them,
or if the books themselves formed the only bulwark against the soil.
They were, unfortunately, terribly rotten.
The centuries had not been kind to them, and as I tried to move one of them,
I realised that the damp had, over time, caused them to merge into a single mass of paper and bookcloth.
Predictable as this may have been, I still felt the most acute pang of loss. To see such a volume
of knowledge, possibly unique in all the world, utterly destroyed, was incredibly painful to me.
The actual shells were formed of the same marble as the two
blocks, and seemed to have fared better. As I looked at them, I noticed a small engraving
carved at regular intervals along the edge of each one. It was a small eye, open and
staring. For some reason, it was only at that moment that I began to feel afraid. Of what, I couldn't tell you, but those small eyes filled me with a dread that I have trouble describing to you now.
on something in the corner of the room, or more precisely two things. The first was a small gold coin that glinted on the floor. The second was a book, perhaps fallen from
the shelves long ago. It was in far better condition than the others, perhaps due to
where it had lain, and I was able to very carefully open it. I was disappointed to see that it was not written in German, or even French,
or Latin, but appeared to be in Arabic. It seemed to be an illuminated manuscript of sorts,
produced by hand, and utterly beautiful, though I could not for the life of me have told you what
it concerned. I took the book and the coin to study later, and hastily left the vault, the lingering fear making me feel as though some unseen pursuer might come upon me if I hesitated.
I drew my pistol as I left the mausoleum, just in case the strange short man from earlier was waiting to accost me.
There was no sign of anyone outside in that clear daylight.
I hurried back, though I still had many hours
before dusk. As I went, I noticed that the snow on the trees was beginning to thaw, and
took comfort in the knowledge that Carla and myself would likely be able to return to Klosum
soon. Wilhelm was fully recovered from his fever, and by the time I was at dinner, all
traces of my earlier fear had disappeared,
and I was in excellent spirits. I retired afterwards to smoke a pipe or two, and examine
my finds at greater length. The book, though beautiful, stubbornly refused to offer up any
clues to its contents. With your permission, I'll bring it over for your expert eyes next time I
have the pleasure of your company.
The coin, on the other hand, was more interesting.
On one side, it had an engraved profile of a sharp-faced young man with long, flowing hair.
Over the top ran the letters J.W., and at the bottom was the number 1279.
If this was the date the coin was produced,
then I don't need to tell you how exciting a find this might be.
The other side was blank,
save for three words, very small and worn,
but I could just about read them.
They read,
Für die Stille. I was about to retire to bed when one of the serving
girls Hilda was it Helga I forget asked me for a moment of my time I obliged and
she said had I been asking about the old graveyard out in the forest I told her
yes I had and she paled ever so slightly she told me that she never went near the place, that no one
in the town did. You see, Jonah, apparently there was an old man in Schramberg by the name of Tobias
Coller. He had lived nearly eighty years, and told tales of when he was a child, and he and his
friends would play a game they called Johann's Steps. It was a game of bravery, where you had to creep
down as many steps as you could into the tomb of Johann von Württemberg until you were
seen, and then run back out as fast as you could. Tobias would never say who or what
you were seen by, and always ignored the question. Well, apparently the parents of these children found
out about this game, and one of them, the mother of Tobias's friend Hans Winkler, decided
to put an end to it. She stormed into the cemetery, and, seeing Hans entering the museum
for his turn, she ran inside after him and down the steps. None of the children saw what happened, but they all heard the scream.
They fled back to town, and when they told of what had happened, the town priest, whose
name Tobias does not remember, simply nodded, and gathering up six strong, though deeply
fearful men, they headed out towards the cemetery. None of that party ever spoke of what they saw or found there,
but Hans went to live with the Becker family out on their small farm.
No one played Johann's steps again, and the cemetery was once again left deserted.
The only other thing Tobias remembered was that he had once heard a great-uncle refer
to Johann von Württemberg as Ulrich's bastard, which, if the date on the coin was correct,
may be referring to Ulrich I or Ulrich II, but either way that place's history must
stretch back almost 600 years.
But now I feel I have talked around it long enough.
I could fill a dozen more pages with preamble and research, yet none of that is why I have
written to you as I have. No, I am writing to you to describe what I saw the last night
I stayed at Wilhelms, the event that led to my and Carla leaving a week earlier than we had planned.
It was three days after I had heard Tobias's story that it happened.
I had packed the coin and the book away in a fit of superstition, and had decided to take a short stroll as the sun was setting.
It was beautiful. The crimsons of the darkening sky danced upon what snow was left, staining it the deepest red.
I walked around the house, smoking my pipe, until I came upon the tracks I had left when heading towards the old graveyard.
As the snow melted, it had formed my footprints into packed dirt and ice that almost seemed to glow in the waning daylight. I gazed
at them, and froze. I had made two trips to the mausoleum that winter, and sure enough
there were two stark sets of footprints heading north. But coming back towards the house. There were three sets of footprints. I felt the presence behind me,
and I turned around. It was the man from the cemetery. His wide-brimmed hat was removed,
and he stared at me. His head was completely bald, and his eyes were missing.
They were just empty sockets, but they stared at me.
They saw me.
Believe or dismiss anything else in my letter as you wish, Jonah,
but I swear to you that I stood face to face with a man with no eyes, and he saw me.
I backed away too quickly and slipped, falling hard upon the ground. In a second he was above me, and he smiled. He said something to me, but my mind was aflame
with panic, and I didn't hear what it was. He reached towards me slowly, insolently,
as though he sought to savour this moment and would not be rushed. Then quite without warning he stopped. His
head snapped up to stare at something like a gundog that hears a shot. He stood there,
hand poised as though in indecision. And then, and then, he vanished, as though he had never been there, and I simply lay upon the ground,
winded and afraid.
Night had fallen by the time I finally pulled myself together enough to run back into the
house and begin packing.
I told Carla we had to leave as soon as possible, though was vague as to the reasons.
I still haven't told her why.
How do you tell your wife something like that has happened to you?
We took the first coach the following morning and haven't stopped.
I didn't even realise the coin was missing until I checked my luggage later.
Whether to a light-fingered servant or just my own carelessness,
it is gone, so I must apologise that I will not be able to share that particular piece of history
with you. I must also apologise for the handwriting. I have been committing this to paper as well as
can be done on a long coach journey. Still, I look forward to showing you the book I have acquired,
and the revelations you will no doubt glean from it.
Yours in trust, Albrecht.
Statement ends.
Always a treat to find a piece of history tucked into the wrong section of the archive.
Still, I can't say I know much about Jonah Magnus or the origins of the Institute, so this is a rather pleasing discovery in some ways.
Obviously there isn't much follow-up to be done here,
but to slake my own interest, I have done a little bit of digging myself,
which I include here for completeness' sake.
I've only found one reference to any Johann von Württemberg
in any of the German history reference material we have available.
Jan Moira's Cradle of Germany, Württemberg through the Centuries mentions rumours that Ulrich
I, Count of Württemberg, had a second son out of wedlock in 1255. No name is listed,
but certain enemies of the Count were known to spread rumours that this exiled son was keeping the company of witches.
1279 was also the year that Ulrich I's successor, Ulrich II, died. This may simply have been
coincidence, however, as he was succeeded by his half-brother, Eberhard I. Something else I
stumbled across, quite by accident during my research, was in Grim Tales, H.T. Moncrief's exploration of unexplained and macabre deaths in early 19th century Europe.
It mentions a death that took place in Schramberg in 1816.
The man, one Rudolf Zeigler, was found dead at his home on the outskirts of town.
Rudolf Zeigler, was found dead at his home on the outskirts of town. What is interesting is that it says he worked in service on an estate nearby. Shortly after his death, one Wilhelm von Klosen
was investigated for the crime, as it was discovered that the dead man had been stealing
jewellery from the estate. It was eventually dropped, however, after four
doctors attested that the ferocity of the wounds inflicted on Herr Zeigler were, and
I quote, beyond the capacity of human violence. It was ruled an animal attack.
I did try to find out what happened to Ulbricht von Closen and his book, but I can find no mention of him in any volume of history nor anywhere online.
Perhaps I might find out more if I spent months sifting through the historical statements in the archives' back rooms, but I simply don't have time to indulge my own curiosity like that.
I have located a genealogy for Wilhelm von Closen, though.
He married and had children, and the family remained located in and around Schramberg for
almost another century, before one branch emigrated to England in 1908. They had a daughter, Elsa, who went on to marry a man by the name of Michael Key in 1920.
In 1924, they had one daughter, whose name was Mary Key.
This may be simple coincidence, but it concerns me.
End recording. share-alike international license. Today's episode was written and performed by Jonathan Sims.
It was produced by Alexander
J. Newell, Mike LeBeau,
and Murray Porter, and directed
by Alexander J. Newell.
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