Francis and List,

During the fall of the meteorite, Maximilian I was on the way towards France to 
take revenge of a slight that Charles VIII had done by rejecting his daughter 
and by stealing him his 
betrothed. It is on the route that he heard of the fall of the stone to 
Ensisheim and that he decided to stop in this city to study the phenomenon and 
to try to understand what he could 
signify. He arrives at Ensisheim nineteen days after the fall and asks the 
stone to be brought to him. Having examined the stone during of numerous days 
under all its sides, he took a 
piece for him and the other one for his friend Sigismond of Austria then 
ordered that this stone is placed in the church, there, where according to him, 
she had to be, because of her 
divine character. The fact that he won the battle of Salin marshes while he 
faced an enemy army more important and what he succeeded in extorting to his 
opponent of numerous 
concessions expanded the reputation of the stone. People hurried up to come to 
admire it and profite of a fraction of the luck which this one seemed to spread 
around her. It is 
impossible to know if Maximilian believed in the possibility for this stone to 
constitute a lucky charm and if he had or not joined the ideas that Sebastian 
Brant wanted to make him 
accept.

Best wishes,
Philippe


I heard that the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I either witnessed the fall, or 
visited the meteorite soon thereafter. What is the correct story with the Holy 
Roman Emperor?

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