• About Me

European Royal History

~ The History of the Emperors, Kings & Queens of Europe

European Royal History

Tag Archives: Frederick II of Prussia

September 25, 1744: Birth of King Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia

25 Saturday Sep 2021

Posted by liamfoley63 in Featured Monarch, Imperial Elector, Kingdom of Europe, Morganatic Marriage, Royal Bastards, Royal Birth, Royal Genealogy, Royal Mistress, Royal Succession, This Day in Royal History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Frederick II of Prussia, Frederick the Great, Frederick William II of Prussia, Frederick William III of Prussia, French Revolution, Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II, Mistresses, Morganatic Marriages

Friedrich Wilhelm II (September 25, 1744 – November 16, 1797) was King of Prussia from 1786 until his death. He was in personal union as the Prince-Elector of Brandenburg and (via the Orange-Nassau inheritance of his grandfather) was the sovereign P rince of the Canton of Neuchâtel. Pleasure-loving and indolent, he is seen as the antithesis to his predecessor, Friedrich the Great. (Friedrich II).

Under the reign of Friedrich WilhelmII, Prussia was weakened internally and externally, as he failed to deal adequately with the challenges to the existing order posed by the French Revolution. His religious policies were directed against the Enlightenment and aimed at restoring a traditional Protestantism. However, he was a patron of the arts and responsible for the construction of some notable buildings, among them the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.

Early life

Friedrich Wilhelm was born in Berlin, the son of Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia (the second son of King Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia) and Duchess Luise of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. His mother’s elder sister, Elisabeth, was the wife of August Wilhelm’s brother, King Friedrich II.

Friedrich Wilhelm became heir-presumptive to the throne of Prussia on his father’s death in 1758, since Friedrich II had no children. The boy was of an easy-going and pleasure-loving disposition, averse to sustained effort of any kind, and sensual by nature.

His marriage with his first cousin Princess Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, daughter of Charles I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg and his wife Philippine Charlotte, (daughter of King Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia) that was contracted on July 14, 1765 in Charlottenburg, was dissolved in 1769.

Friedrich Wilhelm then married Frederica Louisa of Hesse-Darmstadt, daughter of Ludwig IX, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt and Countess Palatine Caroline of Zweibrücken on July 14, 1769 also in Charlottenburg. Although he had seven children by his second wife, he had an ongoing relationship with his mistress, Wilhelmine Enke (created Countess Wilhelmine von Lichtenau in 1796), a woman of strong intellect and much ambition, and had five children by her—the first when she was still in her teens.

Friedrich Wilhelm, before the corpulence of his middle age, was a man of singularly handsome presence, not without mental qualities of a high order; he was devoted to the arts – Boccherini, Mozart and the young Beethoven enjoyed his patronage, and his private orchestra had a Europe-wide reputation. He also was a talented cellist.

However, an artistic temperament was hardly what was required of a king of Prussia on the eve of the French Revolution, and Friedrich II the Great, who had employed him in various services (notably in an abortive confidential mission to the court of Russia in 1780), openly expressed his misgivings as to the character of the prince and his surroundings. For his part, Friedrich Wilhelm, who had never been properly introduced to diplomacy and the business of rulership, resented his uncle for not taking him seriously.

Reign

The misgivings of Friedrich II appear justified in retrospect. Friedrich Wilhelm II’s accession to the throne (August 17, 1786) was, indeed, followed by a series of measures for lightening the burdens of the people, reforming the oppressive French system of tax-collecting introduced by Friedrich II, and encouraging trade by the diminution of customs dues and the making of roads and canals.

This gave the new king much popularity with the masses; the educated classes were pleased by Friedrich Wilhelm II’s reversal of his uncle’s preference for the French language and the promotion of the German language, with the admission of German writers to the Prussian Academy, and by the active encouragement given to schools and universities. Friedrich Wilhelm II also terminated his predecessor’s state monopolies for coffee and tobacco and the sugar monopoly. Under his reign the codification known as Allgemeines Preußisches Landrecht, initiated by Friedrich II, continued and was completed in 1794.

Mysticism and religious policies

In 1781 Friedrich Wilhelm II, then The Prince of Prussia, inclined to mysticism, had joined the Rosicrucians, and had fallen under the influence of Johann Christoph von Wöllner and Johann Rudolf von Bischoffswerder. On August 26, 1786 Wöllner was appointed privy councillor for finance (Geheimer Oberfinanzrath), and on October 2, 1786 was ennobled. Though not in name, he in fact became prime minister; in all internal affairs it was he who decided; and the fiscal and economic reforms of the new reign were the application of his theories.

Bischoffswerder, too, still a simple major, was called into the king’s counsels; by 1789 he was already an adjutant-general. The opposition to Wöllner was, indeed, at the outset strong enough to prevent his being entrusted with the department of religion; but this too in time was overcome, and on July 3, 1788 he was appointed active privy councillor of state and of justice and head of the spiritual department for Lutheran and Catholic affairs. From this position Wöllner pursued long lasting reforms concerning religion in the Prussian state.

The king proved eager to aid Wöllner’s crusade. On July 9, 1788 a religious edict was issued forbidding Evangelical ministers from teaching anything not contained in the letter of their official books, proclaimed the necessity of protecting the Christian religion against the “enlighteners” (Aufklärer), and placed educational establishments under the supervision of the orthodox clergy.

On December 18, 1788 a new censorship law was issued to secure the orthodoxy of all published books. This forced major Berlin journals like Christoph Friedrich Nicolai’s Allgemeine Deutsche Bibliothek and Johann Erich Biester’s Berliner Monatsschrift to publish only outside the Prussian borders. Moreover, people like Immanuel Kant were forbidden to speak in public on the topic of religion.

Finally, in 1791, a Protestant commission was established at Berlin (Immediate-Examinationscommission) to watch over all ecclesiastical and scholastic appointments. Although Wöllner’s religious edict had many critics, it was an important measure that, in fact, proved an important stabilizing factor for the Prussian state. Aimed at protecting the multi-confessional rights enshrined in the 1648 Peace of Westphalia, the provisions of Wöllner’s edict were intended to safeguard against religious strife by imposing a system of state sponsored limits.

The edict was also a notable step forward regarding the rights of Jews, Mennonites, and Herrnhut brethren, who now received full state protection. Given the confessional divides within Prussian society, primarily between Calvinists and Lutherans but increasingly Catholics as well, such a policy was important for maintaining a stable civil society.
In his zeal for establishing Prussia as a paragon of stable Christian statehood, Friedrich Wilhelm II outstripped his minister; he even blamed Wöllner’s “idleness and vanity” for the inevitable failure of the attempt to regulate opinion from above, and in 1794 deprived him of one of his secular offices in order that he might have more time “to devote himself to the things of God”; in edict after edict the king continued to the end of his reign to make regulations “in order to maintain in his states a true and active Christianity, as the path to genuine fear of God”.

Foreign policies

The attitude of Friedrich Wilhelm II towards the army and foreign policy proved fateful for Prussia. The army was the very foundation of the Prussian state, as both Friedrich Wilhelm II and Friedrich II the Great had fully realised. The army had been their first care, and its efficiency had been maintained by their constant personal supervision.

Friedrich Wilhelm II had no taste for military matters and put his authority as “Warlord” (Kriegsherr) into commission under a supreme college of war (Oberkriegs-Collegium) under the Duke of Brunswick and General Wichard Joachim Heinrich von Möllendorf. It was the beginning of the process that ended in 1806 at the disastrous Battle of Jena. Although the Prussian army reached its highest peacetime level of manpower under Friedrich Wilhelm II (189,000 infantry and 48,000 cavalry), under his reign the Prussian state treasury incurred a substantial debt, and the quality of the troops’ training deteriorated.

Under the circumstances, Friedrich Wilhelm II’s interventions in European affairs were of little benefit to Prussia. The Dutch campaign of 1787, entered into for purely family reasons, was indeed successful, but Prussia received not even the cost of her intervention. An attempt to intervene in the war of Russia and Austria against the Ottoman Empire failed to achieve its objective; Prussia did not succeed in obtaining any concessions of territory, and the dismissal of minister Hertzberg (July 5, 1791) marked the final abandonment of the anti-Austrian tradition of Friedrich II the Great.

Meanwhile, the French Revolution alarmed the ruling monarchs of Europe, and in August 1791 Friedrich Wilhelm II at the meeting at Pillnitz Castle, agreed with Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II to join in supporting the cause of King Louis XVI of France. However the king’s character and the confusion of the Prussian finances could not sustain effective action in this regard. A formal alliance was indeed signed on February 7, 1792, and Friedrich Wilhelm II took part personally in the campaigns of 1792 and 1793, but the king was hampered by want of funds, and his counsels were distracted by the affairs of a deteriorating Poland, which promised a richer booty than was likely to be gained by the anti-revolutionary crusade into France.

A subsidy treaty with the sea powers (Great Britain and the Netherlands, signed at The Hague, April 19, 1794) filled Prussia’s coffers, but at the cost of a promise to supply 64,000 land troops to the coalition. The insurrection in Poland that followed the partition of 1793, and the threat of unilateral intervention by Russia, drove Friedrich Wilhelm II into the separate Treaty of Basel with the French Republic (April 5, 1795), which was regarded by the other great monarchies as a betrayal, and left Prussia morally isolated in the struggle between the monarchical principle and the new republican creed of the Revolution.

Although the land area of the Prussian state reached a new peak under his rule after the third partition of Poland in 1795, the new territories included parts of Poland such as Warsaw that had virtually no German population, severely straining administrative resources due to various pro-Polish revolts; it also removed the last remaining buffer state between Prussia and Russia.

Personal life and patronage of the arts

Friedrich Wilhelm II’s first marriage, to Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick (his first cousin) had ended after four years during which both spouses had been unfaithful. Their uncle, Friedrich II, granted a divorce reluctantly, as he was more fond of Elisabeth than of Friedrich Wilhelm. His second marriage lasted until his death, but he continued his relationship with Wilhelmine Enke. In 1794–1797 he had a castle built for her on the Pfaueninsel.

Moreover, he was involved in two more (bigamist) morganatic marriages: with Elisabeth Amalie, Gräfin von Voß, Gräfin von Ingenheim in 1787 and (after her death in 1789) with Sophie Juliane Gräfin von Dönhoff. He had another seven children with those two women, which explains why his people also called him der Vielgeliebte (“the much loved”) and der dicke Lüderjahn (“the fat scallywag”).

His favourite son—with Wilhelmine Enke—was Graf Alexander von der Mark. His daughter from Sophie Juliane, Countess Julie of Brandenburg (January 14, 1793 – January 29, 1848, Vienna), married to Friedrich Ferdinand, Duke of Anhalt-Köthen.

Other buildings constructed under his reign were the Marmorpalais in Potsdam and the world-famous Brandenburger Tor in Berlin.

On November 16, 1797, Friedrich Wilhelm II died in Potsdam. He was succeeded by his son, Friedrich Wilhelm III, who had resented his father’s lifestyle and acted swiftly to deal with what he considered the immoral state of the court. Friedrich Wilhelm II is buried in the Berliner Dom.

June 28, 1757: Death of Sophia Dorothea of Hanover, Queen Consort in Prussia. Part V Conclusion.

02 Thursday Jul 2020

Posted by liamfoley63 in Featured Monarch, Kingdom of Europe, Royal Death, Royal Succession, Royal Titles, This Day in Royal History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Augustus II of Poland, Augustus III of Poland, Elisabeth-Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, Frederick II of Prussia, Frederick the Great, Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia, Sophia Dorothea of Hanover, War of the Polish Succession

Part V

Sophia-Dorothea favored the French side in the War of the Polish Succession of 1733-36. The War of the Polish Succession was a major European conflict sparked by a Polish civil war over the succession to Augustus II of Poland, which the other European powers widened in pursuit of their own national interests. France and Spain, the two Bourbon powers, attempted to test the power of the Austrian Habsburgs in western Europe, as did the Kingdom of Prussia, whilst Saxony and Russia mobilized to support the eventual Polish victor. The fighting in Poland resulted in the accession of Augustus III, who in addition to Russia and Saxony, was politically supported by the Habsburgs.

666822DD-8734-455E-A42B-52ACE213948F
Sophia-Dorothea, Queen in Prussia.

Sophia-Dorothea disliked the king’s participation in the war on the Austrian side. She openly declared her view when the king swore loyalty to Austria: “I shall live to make you, who are so incredulous, believe, and prove to you how you are deceived.”

During the last years of the king’s life, he was afflicted with fits of illnesses which often forced him to use a wheelchair, and Sophia-Dorothea was ordered to attend to him continuously. On the day of his death, Friedrich-Wilhelm ordered himself to be taken to the queen’s apartment and told her:

“Rise, I have but a few hours to live, and I would at least have the satisfaction of dying in your arms.”

Queen Dowager

On May 31, 1740, Friedrich-Wilhelm I died and was succeeded by her son, Friedrich II (the Great).

Sophia-Dorothea had a very good relationship with her son the king. When she addressed him as “Your Majesty” after the funeral of his father, he interrupted her and told her: “Always call me your son, that title is dearer to me than the royal dignity.” Friedrich was known for his devotion to her, expressed his gratitude for her having raised him and never blamed her for his traumatic childhood, which he instead blamed on his father, and never allowed anyone to criticize her.

8E9DB90E-1DAB-4C57-A507-CF76A51C2850
Friedrich II, King of Prussia

Sophia-Dorothea lost no importance as a queen dowager: wary of the great respect the king afforded his mother and his neglect of his wife, the foreign envoys and other supplicants considered attending the audience chamber and receptions as of the queen dowager as even more important than that of the queen. Until her death, he honored her as the first lady of his court and placed her before that of his wife, the queen. It was to his mother’s chamber the king paid the first visit on his return from campaigns, summoning the queen to meet him there; he regularly invited his mother to his personal residence at Potsdam, where his wife was never invited, and while he seldom visited his wife, he regularly attended his mother at Monbijou, where he took off his hat and remained standing until she gave him permission to sit.

Sophia-Dorothea presided at the wedding of her son Prince August-Wilhelm in 1742, when he married Luise of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (1722-1780) was daughter of Ferdinand-Albrecht II, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and his wife Duchess Antoinette of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. Sophia-Dorothea also presided over the wedding of her daughter Princess Louisa-Ulrika to King Adolf-Frederik of Sweden in 1744.

9F5219C4-B127-440D-84DA-F5DFF5B65902
Elisabeth-Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, Queen Consort of Prussia

The relationship between Sophia-Dorothea and her daughter-in-law queen Elisabeth-Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern was not good during the first years of her son’s reign, as she resented her daughter-in-law’s precedence in rank, though her son assured it to be merely formal, but their relationship improved during the last years of her life. Sophia-Dorothea saw her son for the last time after his first campaign in January 1757 during the Seven Years’ War. At that point she was well, but soon after his departure, her health rapidly declined, and she died on June 28, 1757, aged 70.

June 12, 1758: Death of Prince August-Wilhelm of Prussia

12 Friday Jun 2020

Posted by liamfoley63 in Featured Noble, Kingdom of Europe, Royal Death, Royal Genealogy, Royal Succession, Royal Titles, This Day in Royal History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

August Wilhelm of Prussia, Battle of Kolin, Frederick II of Prussia, Frederick the Great, Frederick William I of Prussia, George I of Great Britain, King Adolphus-Frederick of Sweden, Kingdom of Prussia, Luise of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Seven Years War

August-Wilhelm of Prussia (August 9, 1722 – June 12, 1758) was Prince of Prussia and a younger brother and general of Friedrich II.

August-Wilhelm was the second surviving son of Friedrich-Wilhelm I and Sophia-Dorothea of Hanover, only daughter of Elector Georg-Ludwig of Hanover, later King George I of Great Britain, and his wife, Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick-Celle. She was detested by her elder brother, King George II of Great Britain.

99D0E605-7A51-4BA7-9C99-3FB13526458E
August-Wilhelm of Prussia

August-Wilhelm’s older siblings included Wilhelmina, married Frederick, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Friedrich II (King of Prussia), Friedrike-Louise, married her Hohenzollern kinsman Charles-Wilhelm-Friedrich, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach and Louisa-Ulrika, married King Adolf-Fredrik of Sweden.

August-Wilhelm was favored by his father over Friedrich and popular at the Prussian court. When his brother Friedrich became king in 1740, August-Wilhelm became heir presumptive and moved into the Friedrich’s former residence, the Crown Prince’s Palace in Berlin. When his older sister Louisa Ulrika married the King Adolf-Fredrik of Sweden in 1744, she founded the Ordre de l’Harmonie, of which August-Wilhelm was one of the first recipients.

August-Wilhelm served his brother as a general in the War of the Austrian Succession, and distinguished himself in the Battle of Hohenfriedberg. But in the Seven Years’ War, owing to the fatal retreat of Zittau during the Battle of Kolin in 1757, he incurred the wrath of his brother the King, and withdrew from the army.

This conflict between the two brothers led to a correspondence, which was published in 1769. August-Wilhelm died suddenly in 1758 at Oranienburg, according to some of “a broken heart”, in reference to his brother Friedrich II’s harsh treatment of him for his incompetent military leadership in the Battle of Kolin. In reality, he died from a brain tumor.

B623B0D5-C4C2-4EBF-A5E0-0BBF7D3FE457
August-Wilhelm of Prussia

August-Wilhelm married Luise of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel,(January 29, 1722 – January 13, 1780) was daughter of Ferdinand-Albrecht II, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and his wife Duchess Antoinette of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.

Luise of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel’s older sister was Elisabeth-Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, wife of August-Wilhelm’s brother, Friedrich II the Great. She was also the sibling of the Queen of Denmark and Norway and the Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.

Because his older brother had no children, August-Wilhelm’s oldest son inherited the throne as King Friedrich-Wilhelm II of Prussia on Friedrich II’s death.

Issue: Children of August-Wilhelm and Luise of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.

* Friedrich-Wilhelm II of Prussia (1744–1797)
* married (1) Elisabeth-Christine of Brunswick-Lüneburg. They had one child Princess Frederica-Charlotte of Prussia (1767–1820), who married Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany, the second son of George III of the United Kingdom.
* married (2) Frederika-Louisa of Hesse-Darmstadt and had issue.
* Prince Heinrich of Prussia (1747–1767) died unmarried.
* Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia (1751–1820) married Willem V, Prince of Orange and had issue.
* Prince Emil of Prussia (1758–1759) died in infancy.

June 4, 1738: Birth of King George III of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

04 Thursday Jun 2020

Posted by liamfoley63 in Featured Monarch, Happy Birthday, Kingdom of Europe, Royal Genealogy, Royal House, Royal Succession, Royal Titles, royal wedding, This Day in Royal History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Act of Settlement 1701, Charlotte Sophia of Mecklenburg- Strelitz, Electress Sophia of Hanover, Frederick II of Prussia, Frederick Louis Prince of Wales, Frederick the Great, George I of Great Britain, King George II of Great Britain, King George III of the United Kingdom, King George IV of the United Kingdom, King of Great Britain, King of Hanover, Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, Sophia of the Rhine (Electress Sophia)

George III (George William Frederick; June 4, 1738 – January 29, 1820) was King of Great Britain and King of Ireland from his accession on October 25, 1760 until the union of the two countries on January 1, 1801, after which he was King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland until his death in 1820. He was concurrently Duke and Prince-Elector of Brunswick-Lüneburg (“Hanover”) in the Holy Roman Empire before becoming King of Hanover on October 12, 1814. He was a monarch of the House of Hanover, but unlike his two predecessors, he was born in Great Britain, spoke English as his first language, and never visited Hanover.

25461EC0-8E8E-4A67-A20C-EE554770EE96
George III, King of the United King of Great Britain and Ireland. King of Hanover

Family

George was born in London at Norfolk House in St James’s Square. As he was born two months prematurely and thought unlikely to survive, he was baptised the same day by Thomas Secker, who was both Rector of St James’s and Bishop of Oxford. One month later, he was publicly baptised at Norfolk House, again by Secker. His godparents were King Friedrich I of Sweden (for whom Lord Baltimore stood proxy), his uncle Friedrich III, Duke of Saxe-Gotha (for whom Lord Carnarvon stood proxy), and his great-aunt Sophia-Dorothea, Queen in Prussia (for whom Lady Charlotte Edwin stood proxy).

74EC408B-ADEA-4321-9E32-86ABF3D6C2DF
George II, King of Great Britain and Ireland.

George III was the grandson of King George II, and the eldest son of Frederick-Louis, Prince of Wales, and Augusta of Saxe-Gotha.

George III’s father was Frederick-Louis, Prince of Wales, (1707-1751), was heir apparent to the British throne from 1727 until his death from a lung injury at the age of 44. He was the eldest but estranged son of King George II and Caroline of Ansbach.

Under the Act of Settlement passed by the English Parliament in 1701, Frederick-Louis was fourth in the line of succession to the British throne at birth, after his great-grandmother (Electress Sophia of Hanover) paternal grandfather (George I) and father (George II). He moved to Great Britain following the accession of his father, and was created Prince of Wales. He predeceased his father, however, and upon the latter’s death on October 25, 1760, the throne passed to Prince Frederick’s eldest son, George III.

4D6EE761-936A-4BFA-9569-13E33E8D2DC7
Frederick-Louis, Prince of Wales (Father)

George III’s mother, Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg was born in Gotha to Friedrich II, Duke of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg (1676–1732) and Magdalena Augusta of Anhalt-Zerbst (1679–1740). Her paternal grandparents were Friedrich I, Duke of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg and Magdalena-Sibylla of Saxe-Weissenfels, a daughter of August, Duke of Saxe-Weissenfels, and his wife Anna-Maria of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Magdalena-Sibylla’snpaternal grandparents were Johann-Georg I, Elector of Saxony, and Magdalene Sibylle of Prussia.

03A3C4CE-9FA3-4784-AB98-5B27B99B90AF
Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg (Mother)

Friedrich I, Duke of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, was the eldest surviving son of Ernst I, Duke of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg and his cousin Elisabeth-Sophie of Saxe-Altenburg.

Princess Augusta did not speak French or English, and it was suggested that she be given lessons before the wedding, but her mother did not consider it necessary as the British royal family were from Germany (Holy Roman Empire). She arrived in Britain, speaking virtually no English, for a wedding ceremony with Frederick-Louis, Prince of Wales, which took place almost immediately, on May 8,1736, at the Chapel Royal in St James’s Palace, London.

Although he was the first British King of the House of Hanover born in England with English his native language, the ancestry of George III was thoroughly German.

Marriage

In 1759, George was smitten with Lady Sarah Lennox, sister of Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond, but Lord Bute advised against the match and George abandoned his thoughts of marriage. “I am born for the happiness or misery of a great nation,” he wrote, “and consequently must often act contrary to my passions.” The prominent Lennox Family of Richmond were illegitimate descendants of King Charles II of England.

10CEE043-73D3-4F50-A822-AE20285D50DF
Lady Sarah Lennox

In 1753 attempts were made by King George II to marry his grandson George, Prince of Wales to Princess Sophie-Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, eldest daughter of Charles I, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, and his wife, Philippine-Charlotte of Prussia, sister of Friedrich II the Great of Prussia.

This was an attempt to improve relations with Prussia, as Sophie-Caroline was a niece of Friedrich II of Prussia and George II needed Prussian troops to help offset the alliance between France and Austria that had occurred as a result of the Diplomatic Revolution. Prince George’s mother, Augusta, Dowager Princess of Wales, thwarted George II’s plans, however, which increased tensions within the British royal family. Sophie-Caroline married Friedrich, Margrave of Bayreuth, instead.

065547D7-673E-45EE-8508-6DCA1575A43A
Princess Sophie-Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel

Though this match was not to be, Sophie-Caroline’s brother Charles II, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, married George’s sister Princess Augusta in 1764, and George III’s son George IV married their daughter Caroline of Brunswick, thus continuing the close ties between the two houses.

The following year, at the age of 22, George succeeded to the throne when his grandfather, George II, died suddenly on 25 October 25, 1760, two weeks before his 77th birthday. The search for a suitable wife intensified. On September 8, 1761 in the Chapel Royal, St James’s Palace, the King married Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, whom he met on their wedding day.

32C89692-6A2B-4FA5-8587-D0BB81D58901
Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz

Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz was the youngest daughter of Duke Charles-Ludwig-Friedrich of Mecklenburg (1708–1752; known as “Prince of Mirow”) and of his wife Princess Elisabeth-Albertine of Saxe-Hildburghausen (1713–1761). Mecklenburg-Strelitz was a small north-German duchy in the Holy Roman Empire.

217E40C2-DB5E-43AD-9121-24B130E40F3F
Young George III

A fortnight after the wedding on September22, both were crowned at Westminster Abbey. George remarkably never took a mistress (in contrast with his grandfather and his sons), and the couple enjoyed a genuinely happy marriage until his mental illness struck.

They had 15 children—nine sons and six daughters. In 1762, George purchased Buckingham House (on the site now occupied by Buckingham Palace) for use as a family retreat. His other residences were Kew Palace and Windsor Castle. St James’s Palace was retained for official use. He did not travel extensively and spent his entire life in southern England. In the 1790s, the King and his family took holidays at Weymouth, Dorset, which he thus popularised as one of the first seaside resorts in England.

George III’s life and reign, at 59 years, which was longer than those of any of his predecessors at the time, were marked by a series of military conflicts involving his kingdoms, much of the rest of Europe, and places farther afield in Africa, the Americas, and Asia. Early in his reign, Great Britain defeated France in the Seven Years’ War, becoming the dominant European power in North America and India. However, many of Britain’s American colonies were soon lost in the American War of Independence. Further wars against revolutionary and Napoleonic France from 1793 concluded in the defeat of Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.

D836B3E9-6CDC-4097-9152-40E87E09BA47
George III, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, King of Hanover

In the later part of his life, George had recurrent, and eventually permanent, mental illness. Although it has since been suggested that he had bipolar disorder or the blood disease porphyria, the cause of his illness remains unknown. After a final relapse in 1810, a regency was established. His eldest son, George, Prince of Wales, ruled as Prince Regent until his father’s death, when he succeeded as George IV. Historical analysis of George III’s life has gone through a “kaleidoscope of changing views” that have depended heavily on the prejudices of his biographers and the sources available to them.

Changing Titles.

The nation went through many changes through his reign and his titles reflected these changes.

In Great Britain, George III used the official style “George the Third, by the Grace of God, King of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, Defender of the Faith, and so forth”. In 1801, when Great Britain united with Ireland, he dropped the title of King of France, which had been used for every English monarch since Edward III’s claim to the French throne in the medieval period. His style became “George the Third, by the Grace of God, King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, Defender of the Faith.”

In Germany, he was “Duke of Brunswick and Lüneburg, Arch-Treasurer and Prince-Elector of Hanover of the Holy Roman Empire” (Herzog von Braunschweig und Lüneburg, Erzschatzmeister und Kurfürst des Heiligen Römischen Reiches) until the end of the empire in 1806. He then continued as Duke until the Congress of Vienna declared him “King of Hanover” in 1814.

May 23, 1730: Birth of Prince August-Ferdinand of Prussia

23 Saturday May 2020

Posted by liamfoley63 in Featured Royal, Kingdom of Europe, Royal Genealogy, Royal House, Royal Succession, This Day in Royal History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Augustus William of Prussia, Battle of Breslau, Frederick II of Prussia, Frederick the Great, Frederick William I of Prussia, Knights of the Bailiwick of Brandenburg of the Order of Saint John, Prince Augustus Ferdinand of Prussia, Princess Friederike-Luise of Prussia, Princess Sophia-Dorothea of Prussia

Prince August-Ferdinand of Prussia (May 23, 1730, Berlin – May 2, 1813, Berlin) was a Prussian prince and general, as well as Master of the Knights of the Bailiwick of Brandenburg of the Order of Saint John. He belonged to the House of Hohenzollern, and was the youngest son of King Friedrich-Wilhelm I of Prussia by his wife, Queen Sophia Dorothea.

506C9618-2D38-4A9E-8B04-A1F936CE4A7B
Prince August-Ferdinand of Prussia

Prince August-Ferdinand of Prussia was also a younger brother of King Friedrich II the Great of Prussia. As the youngest son King Friedrich-Wilhelm I of Prussia these were some of his other older siblings:

Princess Wilhelmine (1709-1758), married in 1731 to her Hohenzollern kinsman, Friedrich, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth.

Princess Friederike-Luise (1714-1784) married her Hohenzollern kinsman Karl-Wilhelm-Friedrich, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach.

Princess Philippine-Charlotte (1716-1801) was a Duchess consort of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel by marriage to Charles I of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel.

Princess Sophia-Dorothea (1719-1765) Margravine of Brandenburg-Schwedt. Sophia Dorothea married her Hohenzollern kinsman Prince Friedrich-Wilhelm, Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt, son of Philipp-Wilhelm, Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt, and Princess Johanna-Charlotte of Anhalt-Dessau, daughter of Johann-George II, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau. They are the parents of Prince August-Ferdinand’s wife, Margravine Elisabeth-Louise of Brandenburg-Schwedt.

FAF0D4DB-04D8-4C6E-8E23-6EA30C21AF52
Princess Sophia-Dorothea and Prince Friedrich-Wilhelm, Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt.

Princess Louisa-Ulrica (1720-1782), the consort of King Adolph-Friedrich of Sweden.

August-Wilhelm of Prussia (1722-1758) married Luise of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. Because his older brother had no children, August-Wilhelm’s oldest son inherited the throne as Friedrich-Wilhelm II of Prussia on the death of Friedrich II.

Princess Anna Amalia, Abbess of Quedlinburg (1723-1787) never married.

Prince Heinrich of Prussia (1726–1802). Prince Friedrich-Heinrich-Ludwig; (1726-1802), commonly known as Heinrich was a Prince of Prussia and the younger brother of Friedrich II the Great. In 1786, he was suggested as a candidate for a monarch for the United States.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Already at the age of 5, Prince August-Ferdinand joined the Infantry regiment „Kronprinz“. In 1740, his brother named him commander of Infantry regiment Nr 34. In 1756, he became Major General and accompanied his brother the King on his campaigns in Saxony, Bohemia and Silesia. He fought in the Battle of Breslau and the Battle of Leuthen. But in 1758, bad health forced him to leave the army.

812C7EDD-4448-48E7-9A18-A853225CC0F5
Apotheosis of Prince August-Ferdinand (1779) by Anna Dorothea Therbusch.

On September 12, 1763, August-Ferdinand was elected as Master of the Knights of the Bailiwick of Brandenburg of the Order of Saint John, a post he held until 1812. August-Ferdinand is also remembered for having the Schloss Bellevue in the Berliner Tiergarten built.

Marriage and children

He married his niece, Margravine Elisabeth-Louise of Brandenburg-Schwedt (1738-1820) on September 27, 1755. She was a daughter of his older sister Sophia-Dorothea and her husband Margrave Friedrich-Wilhelm of Brandenburg-Schwedt. Despite this family tie, she was only eight years younger than he, due to the significant age difference between him and his sister.

4BD29F1D-74BC-46D0-92AF-5CCEA018C0DC
Margravine Elisabeth-Louise of Brandenburg-Schwedt

They had seven children:

* Princess Friederike Elisabeth Dorothea Henriette Amalie (1761–1773)
* Prince Friedrich Heinrich Emil Karl (1769–1773)
* Princess Friederike Luise (1770–1836), married to Prince Antoni Radziwiłł. Had issue.
* Prince Friedrich Christian Heinrich Ludwig (1771–1790)
* Prince Louis Ferdinand (1772–1806), killed in the Battle of Saalfeld. No legitimate issue.
* Prince Friedrich Paul Heinrich August (1776)
* Prince Augustus (1779–1843), morganatic marriage (1832-1843) to Polish aristocrat Emilie von Ostrowska.

The biological father of his daughter Princess Friederike-Luise, who was born in 1770, may not have been the daughter of Prince August-Ferdinand, but May have been the daughter of his wife through her affair with Count Friedrich Wilhelm Carl von Schmettau. Princess Friederike-Luise was described as nice, witty and kind.

C91CF937-98C2-44D3-8F82-1988E4C46E7C
Prince August-Ferdinand of Prussia

Augustus died in Berlin on May 2, 1813, as the last surviving grandchild of King George I of Great Britain. Princess Elisabeth-Louise would die seven years later, on February 10, 1820.

May 13,1779: Treaty of Teschen, ending the War of the Bavarian Succession

13 Wednesday May 2020

Posted by liamfoley63 in Royal Genealogy, Royal House, Royal Succession, Royal Titles, This Day in Royal History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Bavaria, Charles IV Theodore of Bavaria, Count Palatine of the Rhine and Prince-Elector of Bavaria, Duke Charles II August of Zweibrücken, Frederick II of Prussia, Frederick the Great of Prussia, Holy Roman Emperor, Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II, Maria Theresa of Austria, Treaty of Teschen, War of the Bavarian Succession

The Treaty of Teschen, i.e., “Peace of Teschen”; was signed on May 13, 1779 in Teschen, Austrian Silesia, between the Austrian Habsburg Monarchy and the Kingdom of Prussia, which officially ended the War of the Bavarian Succession.

Background

When the childless Wittelsbach Elector Maximilian III Joseph of Bavaria died in 1777, the Habsburg Holy Roman Joseph II sought to acquire most of the Electorate of Bavaria and the Upper Palatinate, and incorporating into his hereditary Austrian lands. The basis for the claims on these lands was his marriage with the late elector’s sister, Maria Josepha, who had died in 1767.

39537C99-D930-49B4-B94C-78D865673BDE

Maximilian III’s direct heir was his distant cousin Charles IV Theodore, Count Palatine of the Rhine and Prince-Elector of Bavaria (1724–1799). Charles IV Theodore united both electorates through prior succession agreements between the Bavarian and Palatinate branches of the Wittelsbach dynasty.

Charles IV Theodore was amenable to an agreement with Emperor Joseph II that would allow him to acquire parts of the Austrian Netherlands in exchange for parts of his Bavarian inheritance. From January 16, 1778 Austrian troops moved into the Lower Bavarian lands of Straubing. Ultimately, both parties envisioned a wholesale exchange of the Bavarian lands for the Austrian Netherlands, but the final details were never concluded by treaty due to outside intervention.

Charles IV Theodore too had no legitimate heir despite two marriages. On January 17, 1742 he married Elisabeth-Auguste, daughter of Count Palatine Joseph-Charles of Sulzbach and his consort Countess Palatine Elizabeth-Augusta of Neuburg. There was one child of this marriage who died in infancy, Franz-Ludwig (June 28 – June 29, 1761).

0741B9C1-8746-4B86-BF5B-35409499ACE0
Charles IV Theodore, Count Palatine of the Rhine and Prince-Elector of Bavaria

On February 15, 1795, in Innsbruck, he married Archduchess Maria-Leopoldine of Austria-Este, the fourth child and third (but second surviving) daughter of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria-Este and of his wife, Princess Maria Beatrice Ricciarda d’Este. Her father was the second youngest son of Empress Maria Theresa, and therefore brother of Emperor Joseph II. She and her mother were the founders of the House of Habsburg-Este. There were no children of this marriage.

Charles IV Theodore’s his prospective successor was his Palatine cousin, Duke Charles II August of Zweibrücken (1746–1795), the oldest of five children of Friedrich-Michael, Count Palatine of Birkenfeld-Bishwiller-Rappoltstein and Countess Palatine Maria Franziska of Sulzbach. He inherited the duchy of Zweibrücken from his paternal uncle, Duke Christian IV, in 1775.

Duke Charles II August objected to the agreement between Charles-Theodore and Emperor Joseph II because the arrangement would deprive him of the Bavarian inheritance. In an effort circumvent the arrangement Duke Charles II August appealed to the Imperial Diet in Regensburg. His cause was taken up by the Prussian king, Friedrich II the Great, who refused any increase in Austrian territory, and by Saxony, whose Wettin electoral house had married into the Wittelsbach family and therefore had allodial claims to parts of the inheritance.

4971947E-58AA-4677-906B-D049EBD984A7
Duke Charles II August of Zweibrücken

The War of the Bavarian Succession broke out with the invasion of the Prussian Army into Bohemia on July 5, 1778, after Austria and Prussia could not negotiate a solution to their differences. Due to difficulties in supplying the troops, the war became a stalemate: the Prussians were not able to advance far into the Bohemian lands, but the Austrians were unwilling to invade Saxony or Prussia.

This was due in part because Empress Maria-Theresa (the mother of Joseph II and his co-ruler as Queen of Bohemia and Archduchess of Austria) firmly opposed the war after it became clear that a stalemate prevailed. She dispatched peace initiatives to King Friedrich II of Prussia and forced her son to accept mediation by France and Russia. The peace came at the initiative of the Russian Empress Catherine II the Great and was guaranteed by both Russia and France.

6BB84E4C-2A26-49FB-ACC6-C204A4EBD2FA
Maria-Theresa, Holy Roman Empress, Queen of Hungary and Bohemia, Archduchess of Austria

The accord dictated that the Habsburg Archduchy of Austria would receive the Bavarian lands east of the Inn river in compensation, a region then called “Innviertel”, stretching from the Prince-Bishopric of Passau to the northern border of the Archbishopric of Salzburg.

However, one of the requirements was that Austria would recognize the Prussian claims to the Franconian margraviates of Ansbach and Bayreuth, ruled in personal union by Margrave Christian-Alexander a member of the House of Hohenzollern. Prussia finally purchased both margraviates in 1791. The Electorate of Saxony received a sum of six million guilders (florins) from Bavaria in exchange of its inheritance claims.

9E1E8CC4-11B2-40D4-953D-0F8E2591015D
King Friedrich II of Prussia

With the accession of Elector Charles IV Theodore, the electorates of Bavaria and the County Palatine of the Rhine (i.e. the territories in the Rhenish Palatinate and the Upper Palatinate) were under the united rule of the House of Wittelsbach. Their electoral votes were combined into one per a provision in the earlier Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, thereby reducing the number of electorates in the Holy Roman Empire to eight. The Innviertel, except for a short time during the Napoleonic Wars, has remained with Upper Austria up to today.

Aftermath

In 1785 Maria-Theresa’s son and successor Emperor Joseph II made another try at attaching the Bavarian lands to his Habsburg possessions, and even contracted with Elector Charles IV Theodore to swap it for the Austrian Netherlands. However, Joseph II again did not agree to a full exchange of all provinces within the Austrian Netherlands and the agreement collapsed amidst tacit French opposition and overt Prussian hostility.

B967ECA0-0151-4FE1-AAD9-EDEF26F8CCC2
Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor

These plans were however once again frustrated by King Friedrich II of Prussia, who raised the opposition by the Fürstenbund, an association of several Imperial princes. The War of the Bavarian Succession, along with the War of the Austrian Succession, placed Austria and Prussia in anlong-standing rivalry for supremacy of German lands in Central Europe until 1866 when the outbreak of the Austro-Prussian War which resulted in Prussian dominance over the German states.

November 18, 1730: Crown Prince Friedrich of Prussia is released from Prison.

18 Monday Nov 2019

Posted by liamfoley63 in Featured Monarch, Featured Royal, Royal Genealogy, This Day in Royal History

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Frederick II of Prussia, Frederick the Great, Frederick William I of Prussia, George I of Great Britain, Hans Hermann von Katte, House of Hohenzollern

King Friedrich Wilhelm I in Prussia, popularly dubbed the Soldier King, had created a large and powerful army led by his famous “Potsdam Giants”, carefully managed his treasury, and developed a strong centralized government. He was prey to a violent temper (in part due to porphyritic illness) and ruled Brandenburg-Prussia with absolute authority.

IMG_1478
King Friedrich Wilhelm I in Prussia

As his eldest son and heir Crown Prince Friedrich (future King Friedrich II The Great of Prussia) grew, his preference for music, literature and French culture clashed with his father’s militarism, resulting in Friedrich Wilhelm frequently beating and humiliating him. In contrast, Friedrich’s mother Sophia of Hanover was polite, charismatic and learned. Her father, Elector George Louis of Brunswick-Lüneburg, succeeded to the British throne as King George I in 1714.

Crown Prince Friedrich became close friends with Hans Hermann von Katte, a Prussian officer several years older than him and served as one of his tutors. When he was 18, Friedrich plotted to flee to England with Katte and other junior army officers. While the royal retinue was near Mannheim in the Electorate of the Palatinate, Robert Keith, Peter Keith’s brother, had an attack of conscience when the conspirators were preparing to escape and begged King Friedrich Wilhelm for forgiveness on August 5, 1730.

IMG_1477
Friedrich as Crown Prince (1739)

Crown Prince Friedrich and Katte were subsequently arrested and imprisoned in Küstrin. Because they were army officers who had tried to flee Prussia for Great Britain, Friedrich Wilhelm leveled an accusation of treason against the pair. The king briefly threatened the crown prince with execution, then considered forcing Friedrich to renounce the succession in favour of his brother, August Wilhelm, although either option would have been difficult to justify to the Imperial Diet of the Holy Roman Empire.

The king forced Friedrich to watch the beheading of his confidant Katte at Küstrin on November 6, leading the crown prince to faint just before the fatal blow. Friedrich was granted a royal pardon and released from his cell on November 18, although he remained stripped of his military rank. Instead of returning to Berlin, however, he was forced to remain in Küstrin and began rigorous schooling in statecraft and administration for the War and Estates Departments on November 20.

Tensions eased slightly when Friedrich Wilhelm visited Küstrin a year later, and Friedrich was allowed to visit Berlin on the occasion of his sister Wilhelmine’s marriage to Margrave Friedrich of Bayreuth on November 20, 1731. The crown prince returned to Berlin after finally being released from his tutelage at Küstrin on February 26, 1732.

Recent Posts

  • March 24, 1720: Prince Frederick of Hesse-Cassel is Elected King of Sweden
  • Marriages of Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor
  • March 24, 1603: The Union of the Crowns
  • March 23, 1732: Birth of Princess Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon of France
  • History of the Kingdom of Greece: Part X. First Reign of King George II

Archives

  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • April 2022
  • March 2022
  • February 2022
  • January 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • September 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • March 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • December 2019
  • November 2019
  • October 2019
  • September 2019
  • August 2019
  • July 2019
  • June 2019
  • May 2019
  • April 2019
  • March 2019
  • February 2019
  • January 2019
  • December 2018
  • November 2018
  • October 2018
  • September 2018
  • August 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • November 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • June 2017
  • April 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • May 2015
  • April 2015
  • March 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013
  • September 2013
  • August 2013
  • July 2013
  • June 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012

From the E

  • Abdication
  • Art Work
  • Assassination
  • Bishop of Rome and the Catholic Church
  • Charlotte of Great Britain
  • coronation
  • Count/Countess of Europe
  • Crowns and Regalia
  • Deposed
  • Duchy/Dukedom of Europe
  • Elected Monarch
  • Empire of Europe
  • Execution
  • Famous Battles
  • Featured Monarch
  • Featured Noble
  • Featured Royal
  • From the Emperor's Desk
  • Grand Duke/Grand Duchy of Europe
  • Happy Birthday
  • Imperial Elector
  • In the News today…
  • Kingdom of Europe
  • Morganatic Marriage
  • Principality of Europe
  • Queen/Empress Consort
  • Regent
  • Royal Annulment
  • Royal Bastards
  • Royal Birth
  • Royal Castles & Palaces
  • Royal Death
  • Royal Divorce
  • Royal Genealogy
  • Royal House
  • Royal Mistress
  • Royal Palace
  • Royal Succession
  • Royal Titles
  • royal wedding
  • This Day in Royal History
  • Treaty of Europe
  • Uncategorized
  • Usurping the Throne

Like

Like

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 420 other subscribers

Blog Stats

  • 1,043,470 hits

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • European Royal History
    • Join 420 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • European Royal History
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...