Johann Georg Grasel

Johann Georg Grasel

Johann Georg Grasel (April 4, 1790 in Nové Syrovice near Moravské Budějovice – January 31, 1818, hanged in Vienna) was the leader of robber's gang. His name is used in Czech language as a common term for a rascal or villain (grázl) to this day.

Grasel was born into the poor family of a knacker. Both his father and his mother helped themselves by stealing, occasionally ending up in prison. Young Johann was forced to steal to survive and at the age of 9 he entered prison for the first time (for 2 weeks). Grasel became leader of several groups of brutal robbers in south Moravia and northern Lower Austria. He managed to escape from prison several times. In 1815 he and his group of 66 were caught by the authorities. Grasel was accused of 205 crimes, including several murders and sentenced to death. Sixty thousand people watched when he and his two colleagues were hanged.

Unlike many others of his kind Grasel entered folk legends, both as a noble hero who took from the rich to give to the poor and as a brutal rascal. The second interpretation made it into the Czech language and the word grázl (meaning villain) is now commonly used, even without knowledge of its origin.

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