Oskar Becker
German activist

Oskar Becker

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German activist
A.K.A.
Oskar Wilhelm Becker
Gender:
Male
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Birth:
1839(Odesa, Odessky Uyezd, Kherson Governorate, Russian Empire)
Death:
1868(Alexandria, Alexandria Governorate, Egypt)
Education:
Leipzig University
Leipzig, Kreishauptmannschaft Leipzig, Germany
Kreuzschule
Dresden, Dresden Directorate District, Germany
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Introduction

Oskar Becker
Oskar Wilhelm Becker (Russian: Оскар Вильгельм Беккер)

Oskar Becker (18 June 1839 in Odessa – 16 July 1868 in Alexandria) was a German political fanatic, known for his attempted assassination of William I of Prussia. His niece was the German expressionist painter Paula Modersohn-Becker.

Biography

In 1859 he enrolled at Leipzig University, and in 1861, at Baden-Baden, endeavored to kill king William I of Prussia by firing two shots from a Terzerol pistol, at a distance of three paces. However, the monarch suffered only a slight injury of the neck. The assailant, in a letter found upon him, stated as his motive the conviction that William was inept at the task of uniting Germany. The assailant was sentenced to twenty years' imprisonment, but was pardoned by the Badish sovereign on William's plea, and released in 1866, with the stipulation that he should leave the German Confederation forever. He lived in Chicago for some time, and subsequently went to Alexandria, Egypt, where he died.