Jerusalem, Karl Wilhelm (Wolfenbüttel, 1747-72, Wetzlar), son of Lessing's friend J. F. J. Jerusalem (1709-89), was at Wetzlar in the diplomatic service of the Duchy of Brunswick. His relations with his principal, Graf Bassenheim, developed unfavourably, and his personal situation was aggravated by a hopeless love for a married woman. Lapsing into a state of depression, Jerusalem shot himself on the night of 29/30 October 1772. Goethe, who had known him in Wetzlar, was much affected by this tragedy, which was to influence Die Leiden des jungen Werthers, Bk. II. The house in which Jerusalem committed suicide still stands, facing the Schillerplatz. A selection of Jerusalem's writings was published in 1776 by Lessing under the title Philosophische Aufsätze.




