Because of his early treatment as a figure in legend and literature, it is difficult to establish historical facts about his life with any certainty. In the 17th century, it was even doubted that there ever had been a historical Faust, and the legendary character was identified with a printer of
Mainz called
Johann Fust.
Johann Georg Neumann in 1683 addressed the question in his
Disquisitio historica de Fausto praestigiatore, establishing Faust's historical existence based on contemporary references. In the light of records of an activity spanning more than 30 years, the two suggested birth years (1466 vs. 1480/1), the two recorded first names (Georg vs. Johann) and the two recorded places of origin (
Knittlingen vs.
Heidelberg/Helmstett), it has been suggested that there were two itinerant magicians calling themselves
Faustus, one Georg, active ca. 1505 to 1515, and another Johann, active in the 1530s. Possible places of origin of the historical Johann Faust are Knittlingen (
Manlius 1562),
Helmstadt near Heidelberg, or
Roda. Knittlingen today has an archive and a museum dedicated to Faust. Baron (1978) and
Ruickbie (2009) argue for Helmstadt as his place of birth. Faust's year of birth is given either as 1480/1 or as 1466. Baron (1992) and Ruickbie
Johannes Trithemius in a letter to
Johannes Virdung dated 20 August 1507 warns the latter of a certain
Georgius Sabellicus, a trickster and fraud styling himself
Georgius Sabellicus, Faustus junior, fons necromanticorum, astrologus, magus secundus etc. According to Trithemius, in Gelnhausen and
Würzburg, Sabellicus boasted blasphemously of his powers, even claiming that he could easily reproduce all the
miracles of Christ. Trithemius alleges that Sabellicus received a teaching position in
Sickingen in 1507, which he abused by indulging in
sodomy with his male students, evading punishment by a timely escape. Conrad
Mutianus Rufus in 1513 recounts a meeting with a
chiromanticus called
Georgius Faustus, Helmitheus Heidelbergensis (likely for
hemitheus, "demigod of Heidelberg"), overhearing his vain and foolish boasts in an
Erfurt inn. On 23 February 1520, Faust was in
Bamberg, doing a horoscope for the bishop and the town, for which he received the sum of 10
gulden. In 1548, the theologian Johann Gast in his
sermones conviviales states that Faust had suffered a dreadful death, and would keep turning his face to the earth in spite of the body being turned on its back several times. In his 1548 account, Gast also mentions a personal meeting with Faust in
Basel during which Faust provided the cook with poultry of a strange kind. According to Gast, Faust travelled with a dog and a horse, and there were rumours that the dog would sometimes transform into a servant. Another posthumous account is that of Johannes Manlius, drawing on notes by
Melanchthon, in his
Locorum communium collectanea dating to 1562. According to Manlius,
Johannes Faustus was a personal acquaintance of Melanchthon's and had studied in
Kraków. Manlius' account is already suffused with legendary elements, and cannot be taken at face value as a historical source. Manlius recounts that Faust had boasted that the victories of the
German emperor in Italy were due to his magical intervention. In
Venice, he allegedly attempted to fly, but was thrown to the ground by the devil.
Johannes Wier in
de prestigiis daemonum (1568) recounts that Faustus had been arrested in
Batenburg because he had recommended that the local chaplain called Dorstenius should use
arsenic to get rid of his stubble. Dorstenius smeared his face with the poison, upon which he lost not only his beard but also much of his skin, an anecdote Wier says he heard from the victim himself. in 1602 still claims to have heard tales of Faust directly from people who had met him in person, but from the publication of the 1587
Faustbuch, it becomes impossible to separate historical anecdotes from rumour and legend. The town of
Bad Kreuznach has a "
Faust Haus" restaurant reportedly built in 1492 on the site of "the home of the legendary Magister Johann Georg Sabellicus Faust".
Ascribed works There are several prints of
grimoires or magical texts attributed to Faust. Some of them are artificially dated to his lifetime, either to "1540", or to "1501", "1510", etc., some even to unreasonably early dates, such as "1405" and "1469". The prints in fact date to the late 16th century, from ca. 1580, i.e. the same period of the development of the
Volksbuch tradition. The
Höllenzwang text is also extant in manuscript versions from the late 16th century. A manuscript of c. 1700 under the title
Doctoris Johannis Fausti Morenstern practicirter Höllenzwang genant Der schwarze Mohr. Ann(o) MCCCCVII (i.e. "1407") includes the text which in print is known as
Dr. Faustens sogenannter schwartzer Mohren-Stern, gedruckt zu London 1510. Variants of the
Höllenzwang attributed to Faust continued to be published for the next 200 years, well into the 18th century. • 1501
Doctor Faustens dreyfacher Höllenzwang (Rome 1501, Engel (1885) no. 335) • 1501
Geister-Commando (
Tabellae Rabellinae Geister Commando id est Magiae Albae et Nigrae Citatio Generalis), Rome (reprint Scheible 1849, ARW, "Moonchild-Edition" 3, Munich 1977) • 1501
D.Faustus vierfacher Höllen-Zwang (Rome 1501, Engel (1885) no. 336; reprint Scheible 1849, ARW "Moonchild-Edition" 4, Munich 1976, 1977) • 1505
Doctoris Johannis Fausti Cabalae Nigrae (Passau 1505, Engel (1885) no. 337; reprint Scheible 1849, ARW "Moonchild-Edition" 2, Munich 1976, 1977) • 1510
The black stair of Doctor John Faust London, Engel (1885) no. 343. • 1520
Fausts dreifacher Höllenzwang (
D.Faustus Magus Maximus Kundlingensis Original Dreyfacher Höllenzwang id est Die Ägyptische Schwarzkunst), "Egyptian Nigromancy, magical seals for the invocation of seven spirits. (reprint ARW "Moonchild-Edition" 3, Munich 1976, 1977) • 1524
Johannis Fausti Manual Höllenzwang (Wittenberg 1524 reprint Scheible 1849, ARW "Moonchild-Edition" 6, Munich 1976, 1977) • 1527
Praxis Magia Faustiana, (Passau, reprint Scheible 1849, ARW "Moonchild-Edition" 4, Munich 1976, 1977) • 1540,
Fausti Höllenzwang oder Mirakul-Kunst und Wunder-Buch (Wittenberg 1540, reprint Scheible 1849, ARW "Moonchild-Edition" 4, Munich 1976, 1977) •
Doctor Fausts großer und gewaltiger Höllenzwang (Prague, reprint ARW "Moonchild-Edition" 7, Munich 1977) • 1669? Dr. Johann Faustens Miracul-Kunst- und Wunder-Buch oder der schwarze Rabe auch der Dreifache Höllenzwang genannt (Lyon M.C.D.XXXXXXIX, reprint ARW "Moonchild-Edition" 7, Munich 1977) •
D. I. Fausti Schwartzer Rabe (undated, 16th century, reprint Scheible 1849, ARW, "Moonchild-Edition" 3, Munich 1976, 1977) • 1692 ''Doctor Faust's großer und gewaltiger Meergeist, worinn Lucifer und drey Meergeister um Schätze aus den Gewässern zu holen, beschworen werden'' (Amsterdam, reprint ARW "Moonchild-Edition" 1, Munich 1977) These works were collected and edited in
Das Kloster by J. Scheible (1849), and based on Scheible in 1976 and 1977 by the
Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Religions- und Weltanschauungsfragen, in the "Moonchild-Edition", and again as facsimile by
Poseidon Press and Fourier Verlag. ==Faust in legend and literature==