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- Q3364515 subject Q6596106.
- Q3364515 subject Q7035269.
- Q3364515 subject Q7464486.
- Q3364515 subject Q8106778.
- Q3364515 abstract "Fet-Mats ("Fat Mats") (real name: Mats Israelsson) (died 1677) was a "petrified man" found in 1719.In 1719, miners in the Falun copper mine found an intact dead body in a long-unused tunnel. When they brought the body to the surface, it was identified as Fet-Mats Israelsson, who had disappeared 42 years earlier, by his former fiancée, Margaret Olsdotter.In the open air the body dried up and turned hard as a rock. People gave it a nickname "petrified miner". Fet-Mats Israelsson was put on display on Stora Kopparberget.When the naturalist Carl Linnaeus visited, he noticed that Fet-Mats was not petrified but just covered with vitriol. He stated that as soon as the vitriol evaporated, the body would begin to decay.That proved to be correct. Fet-Mats Israelsson was buried in The Stora Kopparbergs Church December 21, 1749. During the change of the floor in early 1860, the remnants of Fet-Mats was found again and exhibited in a display case, until he was finally buried 1930 in the cemetery nearby the church.Fet-Mats became an inspiration for the German romanticists. The philosopher and naturalist Gotthilf Heinrich von Schubert wrote about him in Ansichten von der Nachtseite der Naturwissenschaft, Achim von Arnim wrote a ballad about Fet-Mats, Johann Peter Hebel wrote a short story about him called Unverhofftes Wiedersehen (Unexpected Reunion). Friedrich Rückert also wrote about Fet-Mats but most of all E.T.A. Hoffmann wrote the short story Die Bergwerke zu Falun published in his collection Die Serapionsbrüder in 1819. In 1842 Richard Wagner wrote a libretto based on Hoffmann's short story called Die Bergwerke zu Falun, but it was refused and instead he wrote Tannhäuser. In 1901 Hugo von Hofmannsthal's Das Bergwerk zu Falun had a premiere in Vienna.".
- Q3364515 thumbnail Fet_Mats_grav.jpg?width=300.
- Q3364515 wikiPageExternalLink wagner2.html.
- Q3364515 wikiPageExternalLink fetmatsstory.htm.
- Q3364515 wikiPageExternalLink www.fet-mats.se.
- Q3364515 wikiPageExternalLink en.
- Q3364515 wikiPageWikiLink Q1043.
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- Q3364515 wikiPageWikiLink Q636194.
- Q3364515 wikiPageWikiLink Q6596106.
- Q3364515 wikiPageWikiLink Q66704.
- Q3364515 wikiPageWikiLink Q7035269.
- Q3364515 wikiPageWikiLink Q70988.
- Q3364515 wikiPageWikiLink Q7464486.
- Q3364515 wikiPageWikiLink Q8106778.
- Q3364515 comment "Fet-Mats ("Fat Mats") (real name: Mats Israelsson) (died 1677) was a "petrified man" found in 1719.In 1719, miners in the Falun copper mine found an intact dead body in a long-unused tunnel. When they brought the body to the surface, it was identified as Fet-Mats Israelsson, who had disappeared 42 years earlier, by his former fiancée, Margaret Olsdotter.In the open air the body dried up and turned hard as a rock. People gave it a nickname "petrified miner".".
- Q3364515 label "Fet-Mats".
- Q3364515 depiction Fet_Mats_grav.jpg.