Friends of Verne
Again, I am seeking help from the forum, but I also want to offer something in return and maybe a unique opportunity. For forty years, I have published 23 books and over 100 articles on the history of engineering and business, as well as Verne’s technology during an active career. I've been working and researching full-time for the last five years on Jules Verne’s technical sources for his ideas on futuristic engineering, his thoughts on manufacturing and capitalism, and specific industries such as steel, iron, shipbuilding, and armaments. In the last four years, seven papers and four newsletter articles on my research of Jules Verne. I attribute this success to the help of the forum. Most of these were published in the United States and the United Kingdom. Now I seem to be facing a type of barrier to getting my research published in European journals. While I will continue to ask the forum for help, I am also looking for co-authors for my research, particularly those from Europe or the forum, to help balance my efforts. I am seeking non-technical individuals or those with different expertise, such as translation, literary, etc., who could augment my research. I would welcome technical people as well. I have completed both a short and a long research effort on Begum’s Fortune – the abstract follows if you are interested, I can provide the full article to anyone.
I also have several pieces nearing my completion on Steel and Verne Futurism, Verne’s Circular and integrated manufacturing in several of his novels, the engineering of the Albatross, Verne’s view of paternal capitalism, and if anyone would like to co-author with me let me know. Again, I have extensive research material that I can supply and incorporate to align with your interests and research.
Quent Skrabec qrsk...@gmail.com
Anything I should be sure to use or check on the following effort, Begum’s Fortune, a favorite of mine?????
Verne’s Fictional Quest for the Secrets of Krupp Steel
( based on European and French Espionage in the 1800s)
Abstract
Most scholars would agree that Herr Schultze in Jules Verne’s 1879 novel Begum’s Millions (Begum’s Fortune)[i] was modeled after Alfred Krupp (1812-1887), and his steel city, Stahlstadt, was representative of Essen, Germany. Verne’s unique circular labyrinth of his steelmaking city is representative of Krupp’s factory integration and design. Few, however, realize how deeply Verne intertwined Krupp’s personal and company history into the story and plot. For example, Verne’s characters, Herr Schultze and a thirteen-year-old boy, die of carbon dioxide asphyxiation. While Alfred Krupp did not die of asphyxiation, it was one of his greatest fears. A major subplot involved an industrial spy's search of Herr Schultze’s steelworks, which was based on international espionage to uncover the 19th century's greatest industrial secret: the Krupp cast crucible steel cannon process. Verne details this secretive Krupp process and layout with remarkable accuracy, knowledge, and understanding through his industrial spy character, Marcel Bruckmann, before the first process details were widely published in 1888. Another subplot is a competition between the two fictional cities that embodies the real struggle between German social democrats and Krupp loyalists to control Krupp’s city of Essen and its future. Begum’s Millions replicates the struggle of Krupp’s industrial paternalism versus the industrial social democracy movement in Europe of the 1870s, in which Krupp was a prominent political and financial player.
[i] The most common title used is Begum’s Fortune, however it was first published as 500 Millions of the Begum. I have chosen the title Begum’s Millions to use because the Luce’s translation is what I used as a base for comparison.
Dear Quentin, you may wish to add Verne's fascination with telegraphic cable technology to your list. Many of the advances in the study of electricity (linking too to your more recent thread) from 1850 to 1880 were spurred on by the desire to lay trans oceanic cables. Flemming Jenkins's research into gutta percha in tandem with George Thompson (later known as Lord Kelvin) and devising the unit of electrical resistance known as the ohm, spring to mind, as well as Kelvin's development of the mirror galvanometer to amplify the signal. Then there is the personality sphere of those who were at the forefront of promoting cable technology such as Cyrus Field and Gordon Bennett and how they fed not only into Verne's content but also his characters (think Cyrus Smith and Gideon Spillet in Mysterious Island). Lord Kelvin cooperated with Robert Louis Stevenson in writing Jenkins's biography ...a rare provable example of a literature / scientific interface which I believe answers many of the questions re Verne that you pose. Verne ends up predicting the decline of high St shopping due to shopping via cable in The Floating Island which I find incredible. I find there is almost a 'heartbeat' or pulse in Verne's works that mention specific technological advances and repeat them at regular intervals throughout the Voyages Extraordinaires. Whether placing all these in one table book by book, and looking for patterns, interrelationships would help, I do not know, but it might establish a 'hierarchy' of Verne's interests and how they interrelate. Best John
On Jul 25, 2025, at 10:58 PM, quentin skrabec <qrsk...@gmail.com> wrote: