A fresh, green, slightly spicy fragrance
for men. Notes of crushed green grass, electrically charged ozone, sweet
musk, German Tea and spice make for an eye opening and summertime fresh scent.
After Mary Shelly’s 1818 version
of Frankenstein became a literary classic, many people felt that she had captured
something raw and brilliant in the famed tome. What has come to light in
the past few years, is that perhaps Mary Shelly actually got the idea from
a living man; one who called himself a scientist, but whom others considered
the devil himself.
The Frankenstein family sold their
Rhine castle sometime near 1670, the actual reasons why and to whom it was
transferred are unclear. Some mentioned that the family Frankenstein was cursed,
and anyone who lived in the castle was cursed as well.
Konrad Dipple was born in the castle,
located in Darmstadt, Germany on August 10th, 1673, the only son of a Lutheran
minister. Dipple was rumored to have fought often with his Father over religion,
politics, and science.
He studied theology, philosophy
and alchemy at the University of Giessen, where he angered Professors with
his extreme behavior and a paper entitled On Nothing, inferring that
he had learned nothing, or that what they had taught him was worth nothing
in his eyes. He finally obtained a masters degree in theology in 1693. He
published many theological works under the name Christianus Democritus. Dipple
loved to claim royal ancestry, often signing papers with Frankensteinensis,
and Konrad Frankenstein.
Upon returning to Frankenstein
Castle he dealt in alchemy. Villagers lived in fear of the madman that dug
up bodies, and stole pets and livestock for his experiments. Dipple used electricity
in work involving reanimation of the flesh and ground up bodies for a gruesome
concoction he called "Dipple’s Oil." Dipple drank the oil daily, convinced
that it was a true elixir of life. It did, in fact, contain ingredients that
contributed to its use as a muscle stimulant, and helped relieve the symptoms
of multiple sclerosis and other diseases that affect the skeletal system.
Rumors swelled around the village, and in hysteria, Dipple was chased from
the castle, the villagers convinced that they had driven the devil out. In
1704 in Berlin, he and the manufacturer Heinrich Diesbach used this oil instead
of potassium carbonate in an attempt to create a new red dye. To their surprise
they created a blue dye known as "Berliner Blau", or "Prussian Blue". Dipple
gained his doctorate in 1711 and lectured on alchemy, the occult, and theology
extensively.
After being chased out of numerous
colleges, he quietly returned to Castle Frankenstein where his strange experiments
continued. Working with nitroglycerin, he destroyed part of the castle and
eventually discovered and refined its medicinal usage. Dipple was hunted
and feared by members of the church, and many historians now believe that
some of the tales of Dipple stem from the church’s smear campaign.
Konrad Dipple died in 1734. Some
stories claim that we was found in the churchyard, surrounded by open graves
and the bodies of those we was planning to experiment on. Other accounts claim
that he was found in his lab, frothing at the mouth on his experiment table.
In 1814, Mary Shelley and her soon
to be husband Percy Shelley were traveling through Germany. It is believed
that the Shelleys visited the Burgstasse region during a riverboat trip. In
the early 1800s, the castle was visible from the Rhine and possibly provoked
an excursion into the surrounding villages. Later, letters from Jacob Grimm
to Shelley were found that told Mary to investigate the life of the madman
in the Frankenstein tower.
The Curious Experiments of Konrad
Dipple is a fresh men’s fragrance, flashes of ozone, green grass, German Tea,
animal musk, woods, and spice - the perfect recipe for any experiment.