Die Mumie von Rotterdam. Erster Theil by Georg Döring

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By Margaret Ricci Posted on Jan 25, 2026
In Category - Teaching
Döring, Georg, 1789-1833 Döring, Georg, 1789-1833
German
Hey, I just finished this wild 19th-century German thriller called 'The Mummy of Rotterdam' and you have to hear about it. Picture this: a mummy, supposedly cursed, gets shipped from Egypt to the damp, foggy port of Rotterdam. But this isn't your standard 'curse of the pharaohs' story. The real horror starts when the mummy arrives in Europe. A respected doctor, Dr. van Hoven, gets involved, and soon people around him start dying in strange ways. Is it a supernatural curse following the artifact across the sea, or is there a very human, very deadly secret wrapped up in those ancient bandages? The book throws you right into the middle of that paranoia. It's less about pyramids and more about the chilling idea of an ancient evil unpacking its bags in your hometown. The atmosphere is thick with dread, and you're constantly guessing: curse, or crime? If you like mysteries with a gothic, historical twist, this first part is a seriously gripping setup.
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Georg Döring's Die Mumie von Rotterdam. Erster Theil (The Mummy of Rotterdam, Part One) is a fascinating time capsule of early 19th-century suspense. Forget the Hollywood version of mummies; this one is all about creeping dread and societal panic.

The Story

The plot kicks off with the arrival of a mysterious Egyptian mummy in the Dutch port city. It's a scientific curiosity, but it brings with it whispers of a terrible curse. Dr. van Hoven, a rational and upstanding citizen, takes an interest in the artifact. Almost immediately, tragedy strikes his circle. Deaths occur—sudden, unexplained, and deeply unsettling. The city of Rotterdam, with its canals and fog, becomes a character itself, a place where ancient superstition clashes with modern reason. As fear spreads, everyone starts looking at the mummy with suspicion. Is it somehow causing these deaths from inside its crate? Or is someone using the legend of the curse as a cover for murder?

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was how Döring builds tension. He's not just trying to scare you with a monster; he's exploring how fear infects a community. The real 'villain' might be the paranoia itself. Dr. van Hoven is a great anchor—you feel his struggle as a man of science faced with events that defy logic. The 1820s setting is perfect for this story. It was an age obsessed with Egyptology but still deeply superstitious. Reading it, you get this unique blend of a detective story and a gothic horror, all wrapped in the manners and concerns of its time. It's a slow-burn mystery that gets under your skin.

Final Verdict

This book is a hidden gem for readers who love historical fiction with a dark edge. It's perfect for fans of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (it deals with similar themes of science and the unknown) or anyone who enjoys a good, atmospheric mystery where the setting is as important as the plot. Be prepared for the language and pacing of its era—it's a journey, not a sprint. If you're curious about the roots of the thriller genre and don't mind a story that leaves you hanging (it is just 'Part One,' after all!), Die Mumie von Rotterdam offers a uniquely chilling trip into the past.



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