Strut Von Winkelried
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Heinrich von Winkelried (d. after 1303), known as ''Schrutan'' or ''Strut'' "the giant", was a medieval knight in what is now Central Switzerland. As ''Strut von Winkelried'' he became the subject of a legend which makes him the slayer of a
dragon A dragon is a reptilian legendary creature that appears in the folklore of many cultures worldwide. Beliefs about dragons vary considerably through regions, but dragons in western cultures since the High Middle Ages have often been depicted as ...
. The legendary ''Strut'' is placed a generation before the historical character, with a ''flouruit'' in the 1240s, and his death due to poisoning by dragon-blood recorded for 1250.


Historical character

''Heinrich von Winkelried, genannt Schrutan'' is recorded in a document dated 22 April 1275. After this date and until 1303, his name figures repeatedly as that of a witness on official documents. Nothing beyond this is known about his life. The Winkelried family is well attested in 13th and 14th century, the first known member being the knight Rudolf von Winkelried, attested 1248 as a follower of Frederick II. Heinrich therefore may have been a son of Rudolf's. The home castle of the Winkelried may have been at Ennetmoos near Stans. The modern municipality of Ennetmoos has chosen dragon for its coat of arms due to the legend of Schrutan. The nickname ''Schrutan'' (also ''Strutan, Struthan, Struth'', etc.) is derived from German legend, where it is given to a giant, in particular one of the guardians of the Rosengarten in
Heldenbuch ''Heldenbücher'' (singular ''Heldenbuch'' "book of heroes") is the conventional title under which a group of German manuscripts and prints of the 15th and 16th centuries has come down to us. Each ''Heldenbuch'' contains a collection of primarily ...
literature, but it also occurs as the name of a knight at Etzel's court in the Nibelungenlied (v. 1880). Why the historical knight was given this nickname is not known, but it was not uncommon at the time for members of the knightly classes of the Holy Roman Empire to adopt pseudonyms taken from heroic fiction. Heinrich's sons would have been Rudolf and Walther von Winkelried, both d. c. 1325.
Hermann von Liebenau Hermann von Liebenau (3 October 1807 – 28 July 1874) was a Swiss historian. He studied medicine in Germany and Austria until 1836, but after this published in historiography exclusively. He moved to Lucerne in 1837, where he remained until h ...
further assumes that one ''Heinrich genannt Schrutan'' who was buried with his wife Mechthild in
Colmar Colmar (, ; Alsatian: ' ; German during 1871–1918 and 1940–1945: ') is a city and commune in the Haut-Rhin department and Grand Est region of north-eastern France. The third-largest commune in Alsace (after Strasbourg and Mulhouse), it is ...
, Alsace must be identical with the knight, who therefore would have left Switzerland at some point after 1303, but Oechsli (1898) does not accept the identity and ascribes the equality in name to coincidence.


Legend

The legend is first mentioned by Etterlin (1507), without the given name ''Strut'' and without a fixed year (but placed "before the time of king Rudolf). It is expanded into greater detail in the '' Chronicon Helveticum'' by Aegidius Tschudi (d. 1570), compiled in the 16th century and first printed in 1734. Tschudi now fixes the year of the event as 1250 and specifies the identity of the hero as one ''Struth von Winkelriedt'' (which name he emphasizes is recorded in the annals of Stans), who had been knighted by emperor Frederick at the battle of ''Favenz'' (1239). The legend was later included by the Brothers Grimm in their collection of German legends (''Deutsche Sagen'' 1865, no. 218). According to the story as reported by Tschudi, a dragon lived in a cave near Stans (the ''Drachenloch'' near the top of Mueterschwandenberg), destroying cattle and causing much damage to the people of ''Wilen'', to the point where the village had to be abandoned and came to be known as ''Ödwilen'' (deserted Wilen). The people of Unterwalden made several expeditions trying to kill the dragon with crossbows, but each time the dragon saw he was at a disadvantage, he quickly retired into his cave or ran up a steep slope like a lizard, where he was unreachable. At this point, Winkelried, who had been banished from Unterwalden for manslaughter, asked whether he would be allowed back into the land if he would kill the dragon. This was accepted, and Struth attacked the dragon single-handedly, armed with a spear, to the point of which he had attached sharp barbs. The dragon seeing that the attacker was alone came from his hiding-place and attacked with open jaws, and Winkelried was able to transfix the monster with his spear, hacking at it with his sword until it died. Glad for his victory, Winkelried lifted his sword over his head, thanking God, and the dragon's blood dripped from his sword blade on his body, poisoning him so that he died a few days later. Toponymy referring to a dragon is found in Ennetmoos, where the historical Winkelried family originated. A ''Drachenried'' (dragon's fen) and ''Drachenloch'' (dragon's cave) are to the west of the village, and a ''Drachenkapelle'' (dragon chapel), also known as ''Winkelriedkapelle'' dedicated to Struth is south of the village, next to ''Wychried'', the probable site of the original Winkelried estate. The story is probably a recontextualisation of a much older dragon myth, put into a new historical context in late medieval folklore. The "dragon" toponymy in this place has been associated with the older dragon narrative in the Nibelung cycle in 19th-century scholarship. Josef Anton Henne, ''Schweizerchronik in vier Büchern: aus den Quellen untersucht und dargestellt'', p. 110. ''Drachenkapelle'': Robert Durrer, ''Kunstdenkmäler im Kanton Unterwalden'' (1899-1928), 255-257.


References

* Hermann von Liebenau: ''Die Winkelriede von Stans bis auf Arnold Winkelried den Helden von Sempach. Nebst Beilagen (13 gedruckten Urkunden)'', Zürich 1856 {{DEFAULTSORT:Winkelried, Heinrich von Medieval knights 13th-century births 14th-century deaths Dragonslayers Folk saints Swiss nobility Swiss folklore
Heinrich Heinrich may refer to: People * Heinrich (given name), a given name (including a list of people with the name) * Heinrich (surname), a surname (including a list of people with the name) *Hetty (given name), a given name (including a list of peo ...