Since imperial Germany ignored the democratic inventor Karl Drais, neighbouring
two-wheeler nations produced their own inventors just like that. Thanks to the
results of the International Cycling-History Conferences since 1990 this priority
fibbing collapsed with Karl Drais now being acknowledged as the inventor worldwide.
Baudry's fibbed two-wheelersIn France journalist Louis Baudry, who gave himself the noble addendum "de
Saunier", made a start with his booklet
Histoire de la Vélocipèdie. He scribbled a lion- or
horse-headed velocifer or celerifer on two wheels mounted rigidly and claimed
that a comte de Sivrac had ridden this in 1791. In fact a Jean Sievrac received
an import monopoly on a four-wheeled speed coach in 1817 that was called a
velocifer or celerifer then. At once imperial Germany opposed this by "still
older non-steerable two-wheelers from Nuremberg" and defined Karl Drais
merely as the inventor of the steerable two-wheeler. But non-steerable
two-wheelers cannot be balanced and existed merely as fakes on patient paper!
The distinguishing feature "steerable" isn't necessary any more.
Church window of Stoke PogesIn England jokers made a line drawing of the church window of Stoke Poges more
complete resulting in a rigid two-wheeler that they dated "1642". Yet
the original window shows a one-wheeled way-wiser with a tail-skid as on a wheelbarrow!
Faked scribble in 1974: chain bicycle
Original back side till 1961The most recent fake came from Italy in 1974, the so-called Leonardo bicycle with
a chain to the rear wheel. The scribble definitely isn't Leonardo's style
and was not yet in the Codex Atlanticus in 1961.
Thus Karl Drais has invented the two-wheeler principle alone and without a precursor. There is no model for it in nature - like the maple seed for Leonardo's helicopter.