Friedrich Staps (also, StapÃÂ; 14 March 1792 – 17 October 1809) was an attempted assassin of Napoleon during the negotiations at Schönbrunn.
He was a son of a pastor and became a merchant, working at Erfurt and Leipzig. As a strictly religious young man, he saw Napoleon's occupation as the sole reason for the misery of the German people, and thus became his opponent.
He set out to assassinate Napoleon, going first to Vienna, and, from there, on 13 October, to Schönbrunn, where Napoleon was to observe a military parade. Staps approached Napoleon on the pretense of presenting him with a petition, but was refused. One of Napoleon's aides, General Rapp, became suspicious of the young man, whose right hand was thrust into a pocket under his coat. Staps was arrested and found to be carrying a large carving knife. When Rapp asked whether he had planned to assassinate Napoleon, Staps answered in the affirmative.
Napoleon wanted to speak to Staps directly, so the prisoner was brought to the Emperor's office with his hands tied behind his back. Using Rapp as an interpreter, Napoleon asked Staps a series of questions.<blockquote>âÂÂWhere were you born?â â âÂÂIn Naumburg.âÂÂ</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂWhat is your father?â â âÂÂA Protestant minister.âÂÂ</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂHow old are you?â â âÂÂI am eighteen years of age.âÂÂ</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂWhat did you intend to do with the knife?â â âÂÂTo kill you.âÂÂ</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂYou are mad, young man; you are an illuminato.â â âÂÂI am not mad; and I know not what is meant by an illuminato.âÂÂ</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂYou are sick, then.â â âÂÂI am not sick; on the contrary, I am in good health.âÂÂ</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂWhy did you wish to assassinate me?â â âÂÂBecause you have caused the misfortunes of my country.âÂÂ</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂHave I done you any harm?â â âÂÂYou have done harm to me as well as to all Germans.âÂÂ</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂBy whom were you sent? Who instigated you to this crime?â â âÂÂNobody. I determined to take your life from the conviction that I should thereby render the highest service to my country and to Europe.â â¦</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂI tell you, you are either mad or sick.â â âÂÂNeither the one nor the other.âÂÂ</blockquote>After a doctor examined Staps and pronounced him in good health, Napoleon offered the young man a chance for clemency.<blockquote>âÂÂYou are a wild enthusiast, you will ruin your family. I am willing to grant your life, if you ask pardon for the crime which you intended to commit, and for which you ought to be sorry.â â âÂÂI want no pardon. I feel the deepest regret for not having executed my design.âÂÂ</blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂYou seem to think very lightly of the commission of a crime!â â âÂÂTo kill you would not have been a crime but a duty.â â¦ </blockquote><blockquote>âÂÂWould you not be grateful were I to pardon you?â â âÂÂI would notwithstanding seize the first opportunity of taking your life.âÂÂ</blockquote>Staps was executed by a firing squad on October 17, 1809. His last words were: âÂÂLiberty forever! Germany forever! Death to the tyrant!âÂÂ