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Vintage GERMAN MAJOLICA Katzenjammer Kids Mugs (2) Girl Crying &Kids W/Shovel

$ 31.67

Availability: 71 in stock
  • Object Type: Mug
  • Brand: Unknown
  • Country/Region: Germany
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Condition: Both mugs in "like New" condition.

    Description

    From Wikipedia:
    The Katzenjammer Kids
    was inspired by
    Max and Moritz
    , a children's story of the 1860s by German author
    Wilhelm Busch
    .
    [3]
    Katzenjammer
    translates literally as
    the wailing of cats
    - i.e. "caterwaul". However, it is also used to mean
    contrition after a failed endeavor
    or
    hangover
    in German (and, in the latter sense, in English too). Whereas Max & Moritz were grotesquely but comically put to death after seven destructive pranks, the Katzenjammer Kids and the other characters still thrive.
    Dirks and Knerr
    The Katzenjammer Kids
    was inspired by
    Max and Moritz
    , a children's story of the 1860s by German author
    Wilhelm Busch
    .
    [3]
    Katzenjammer
    translates literally as
    the wailing of cats
    - i.e. "caterwaul". However, it is also used to mean
    contrition after a failed endeavor
    or
    hangover
    in German (and, in the latter sense, in English too). Whereas Max & Moritz were grotesquely but comically put to death after seven destructive pranks, the Katzenjammer Kids and the other characters still thrive.
    The Katzenjammer Kids
    was so popular that it became two competing comic strips and the subject of a lawsuit. This happened because Dirks, in 1912, wanted to take a break after drawing the strip for 15 years, but the Hearst newspaper syndicate would not allow it. Dirks left anyway, and the strip was taken over by Harold Knerr. Dirks' last strip appeared March 16, 1913.
    [4]
    Various
    ghost artists
    then apparently did the strip for a few months. Dirks sued, and after a long legal battle, the Hearst papers were allowed to continue
    The Katzenjammer Kids
    , with Knerr as writer and artist. He took over permanently in the summer of 1914, but Dirks was allowed to create an almost identical strip of his own for the rival
    Pulitzer
    newspapers,
    [1]
    although he had to use a different name for the strip.
    Mugs have dark green ground with cartoon-like picture in vivid colors. Measures 3 1/2" high and 2 5/8" diameter.
    Any questions, please email.