Language: • Indonesia • English
Karl May introduced a character named Inn-nu-woh in a story which was published in a magazine named Deutsches Familienblatt in 1875, when he was a young editor in Münchmeyer Publishing, right after he was freed Waldheim prison. The story is about a Native American chief who saved a girl from the attack of a captured tigress which accidentally escaped from it's cage on a boat at Mississipi River.
What makes this Inn-nu-woh unique is that this was the character which would be developed further to become Karl May's most famous character, Winnetou The Apache Chief in a series called Winnetou Trilogy.
The story itself later developed and became the beginning of Der Schatz im Silbersee , which featured two American Indian named Nintropan-hauey (Big Bear) dan Nintropan-homosch (Little Bear) from the Tonkawa tribe. The tigress was changed into a panther.
See also[]
- The origin of Winnetou's name
- Karl May's short stories
Sources[]
- Menjelajah Negeri Karl May, by Pandu Ganesa, published by Pustaka Primatama, 2004 (ISBN 979973763-X).
- Gurun & Prairie I: Kumpulan Cerita, a collection of Karl May's short stories, published by Pustaka Primatama, October 2004 (ISBN 979973765-6).
- Winnetou: About His Name and It's Origin, by Werner Poppe, appendix of Winnetou I: Kepala Suku Apache by Karl May, Indonesian translation published by Pustaka Primatama, June 2003 (ISBN 979973760-5).