Ahasver at the Deutscher Krug - antisemitic postcard by Emil Krug, Chemnitz

This card frames the Jew as "the stranger" to be expelled. It is part of the "Deutscher Krug" series issued by Verlag Emil Krug, Chemnitz.
What the card shows
- Figure label: Ahasver (Wandering Jew) - the eternal outsider.
- Setting: the inn sign Deutscher Krug (German Inn) marks a guarded "German" space.
- Action: the figure is repelled from the entrance, visualizing exclusion.
Printed caption and meaning
Da warf der Hausknecht aus Nubierland den Fremden vor die Thür. Frei nach Scheffel.
- Fremden means "stranger" and refers to the Jewish figure.
- Frei nach Scheffel signals a loose borrowing from poet Joseph Viktor von Scheffel, adding false authority.
- Nubierland adds a mocking "exotic" touch that heightens othering.
Antisemitic attributes to document
- Label Ahasver equals the Wandering Jew stereotype.
- Expulsion scene at a place named "German Inn".
- Verse defines the Jew as the "stranger" to be thrown out.
- Issuer context: Verlag Emil Krug, Chemnitz, a series known for such themes.
Provenance and identification
- Imprint shows Nachdruck verboten: Emil Krug, Chemnitz and Verlag von Emil Krug, Chemnitz.
- Artwork includes the Deutscher Krug inn sign.
- Caption uses the "Frei nach ..." formula naming Scheffel.
Deltiology
Artist: Emil Krug
Publisher: Emil Krug
Date: circa 1898
Rarity: uncommon on market
Collector notes
- Record both sides at 600 dpi and save a crop of the imprint and the word Ahasver.
- Use a filename like
ahasver-deutscher-krug-emil-krug-chemnitz.jpg
.
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