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Max und Moritz by Wilhelm Busch
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com · view the restored high-resolution scan ↗
The Ancestors

Max und Moritz

Wilhelm Busch · 1865

Wilhelm Busch's Max und Moritz (1865) tells, in rhymed German verse paired with his own brisk drawings, the story of two incorrigible boys and the seven pranks they inflict on the adults of their village — tormenting a widow, a tailor, a teacher, and a baker before their mischief brings a grim comeuppance at a mill, where they are ground up and eaten by fowl. Busch's economy of line and perfect timing between text and picture made the book an enormous, lasting success and a cornerstone of German popular culture. Its importance to comics is direct and well documented: in 1897 the cartoonist Rudolph Dirks, working for the American press, created The Katzenjammer Kids as an explicit descendant of Busch's terrible twosome, transplanting the pair of scheming boys into the color Sunday newspaper. That strip became one of the longest-running comics ever published, meaning a line of ancestry runs straight from this small German picture-book to the American funny pages. Max und Moritz stands as the great bridge between the European picture-story and the comic strip proper.

About this artifact

Creator
Wilhelm Busch
Date
1865
Rights
Public domain — free to view, share, and reuse.
Restoration
Digitally restored and hosted by comicbooks.com · high-resolution version available.

Part of our mission to preserve and restore the public-domain heritage of the medium.