On the sixth day of February, 1721, a sickly boy was born to a prominent painter in
Lubeck, a small town in modern-day
Germany. The boy was called Christian Heinrich Heinecken. At a very early age, Christian demonstrated astounding intelligence and psychic sophistication. According to the most whimsical reports, he was speaking within hours of his birth; according to others, the accomplishment took him a few months. It is, however, agreed upon that by the age of ten months Christian was asking
informed questions, and that by the end of his first year, he was familiar with the
Pentateuch. By his thirtieth month Christian had read all of the
Catholic canon, and was an authority in the field of sacred history. By the end of his third year, he had not only managed to master both the ancient and modern histories available to him, but had also learned old-world geography, as well as to read in
Latin and
French. It was also in this year that the feeble boy stopped
feeding at the breast.
By his fourth year, Christian was renowned regionally for his
prodigious talent. He began to study the history of the
Catholic Church, and to acquaint himself with its rituals. It was in this year that the
King of
Denmark requested his presence in
Copenhagen, probably, most historians agree, to confirm the reports of the boy's marvelous
precocity. Christian was sent off to
Copenhagen and returned after a few weeks without incident, but that he became sickly on his journey. Soon after his return to
Lubeck, Christian predicted his own death, which seemed to come in reaction to the
prophecy. He died on the twenty-second of June, 1725, only four months into his fifth year.
In 1726, Christian's mentor and tutor, a man know today only as Schoneich, published a book on the life of his student, called "The Life, Deeds, Travels and Death of the Child of Lubeck." It was, of course, originally titled in
German.
Modern experts now hypothesize by the nature of Christian's study that what allowed him to accrue the knowledge he did was his incredible ability to
assimilate complex
information into his working knowledge base. They believe that his "
intelligence" -- his ability to learn -- was in fact quite normal, but that his associative capacities were extraordinary, and allowed him to express what he learned and to make referential connections in ways unprecedented in his time. Nonetheless, comparable modern-day examples of Christian's sort are estimated to have
intelligence quotients well above 200 by standard testing.