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Friedrich the Great |
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Frederick II of Prussia (German: Friedrich II.; January 24, 1712 – August
17, 1786) was a king of Prussia from the Hohenzollern dynasty, reigning
from 1740 to 1786. He was one of the "enlightened monarchs" (also
referred to as "enlightened despots"). Because of his accomplishments he
became known as Frederick the Great (Friedrich der Große). He was also
nicknamed der alte Fritz ("Old Fritz").
Early years
Frederick was born in Berlin, the son of Sophia Dorothea
of Hanover and King Frederick William I. The so-called "Soldier-King",
Frederick William had created a formidable army and efficient civil
service, but is otherwise recorded in a negative light. Frederick
William was known to strike men in the face with his cane and kick women
in the street, justifying his outbursts as religious righteousness.
In contrast, Sophia was well-mannered and well-educated. Her
grandfather, George, Elector of Hanover, was the heir of Queen Anne of
Great Britain. George succeeded as King George I of Great Britain in
1714.
At the time of Frederick's birth, the Houses of Brandenburg and
Hanover were enjoying great prosperity; the birth of Frederick was
welcomed by his grandfather with more than usual pleasure, as two of his
grandsons had already died at an early age. Frederick William wished his
sons and daughters to be educated not as royalty, but as simple folk. He
had been educated by a Frenchwoman, Madame de Montbail, who later became
Madame de Rocoulle, and he wished that she should educate his children.
Frederick was brought up by Huguenot governesses and tutors and learned
French and German simultaneously.
Youth
Frederick the Great
Frederick found an ally in his sister, Wilhelmine of Bayreuth,
with whom he remained close for life. At age 16, Frederick also formed
an attachment to the king's 17-year old page, Peter Christopher Keith.
Wilhelmine recorded that the two "soon became inseparable. Keith was
intelligent, but without education. He served my brother from feelings
of real devotion, and kept him informed of all the king's actions…
Though I had noticed that he was on more familiar terms with this page
than was proper in his position, I did not know how intimate the
friendship was."[1]
Frederick William exiled the page soon after and assigned a young
soldier, Lieutenant Borcke, to be Frederick's friend. Frederick became
enamored of the Lieutenant, writing, "My wearisome affection breaks from
me and discloses to you the feelings of a heart filled with you, and
which cannot be satisfied save in knowing that you are fully convinced
of the tender friendship with which it adores you."[1] There is no
record of the Lieutenant returning the interest.
Interest was returned the same year, however, by Hans Hermann von
Katte, the 22-year old son of a general major and squire of Wust, and
also a lover of French literature and music. When he was 18, Frederick
plotted to flee to England with Katte and other junior army officers.
His escape was botched, however, and Frederick and Katte were arrested.
An accusation of treason was leveled against both the prince and Katte
since they were officers in the Prussian army and had tried to flee from
Prussia, allegedly even having hatched a plan to ally with Great Britain
against Frederick William.
The prince was threatened with the death penalty, and the king
did not rule out his being executed. In the end, Frederick was forced to
watch the execution of his friend Katte at Küstrin, who was beheaded on
November 6, 1730. When his companion appeared in the courtyard,
Frederick called out from his cell, "My dear Katte, a thousand
apologies," to which Katte replied, "My prince, there is nothing to
apologize for." Frederick fainted before the sword fell.[1]
The king imprisoned Frederick for a year, during which Frederick
began two of his longest relationships, with Lieutenant Count von
Keyserling and Michael Gabriel Fredersdorf. Voltaire wrote of
Fredersdorf, "This soldier, young, handsome, well made, and who played
the flute, served to entertain the prisoner in more than one
fashion."[1] Fredersdorf was the heir of a peasant, but as king,
Frederick would name him royal valet, then director of the royal
theatre, and eventually chancellor of the kingdom.
The only way that Frederick regained his title of crown prince,
however, was by marriage to Elisabeth Christine von Braunschweig-Bevern,
a consort chosen by the king, on June 12, 1733. Frederick wrote to his
sister that, "There can be neither love nor friendship between us."[1]
He considered suicide. After becoming king, Frederick largely ignored
his wife, but she remained devoted to him nonetheless and never became
pregnant by another man.
After the crisis in the relationship with the King in the early
1730s, father and son made a chilly peace later in the decade. Frederick
William gave his son the chateau Rheinsberg north of Berlin. In
Rheinsberg, Frederick assembled a small number of musicians, actors and
other artists. He spent his time reading, watching dramatic plays,
making and listening to music, and regarded this time as one of the
happiest of his life.
The works of Niccolò Machiavelli, such as The Prince, were
considered a guideline for the behavior of a king in Frederick's age. In
1739, Frederick finished his Anti-Machiavel — an idealistic writing in
which he opposes Machiavelli. It was published anonymously in 1740 but
apparently disseminated by Voltaire to great popularity. Frederick's
years dedicated to the arts instead of politics ended upon the death of
Frederick William and his inheritance of the Kingdom of Prussia.
Kingship
Before his accession, Frederick was told by D'Alembert,
"The philosophers and the men of letters in every land have long looked
upon you, Sire, as their leader and model." Such devotion, however, had
to be tempered by political realities. When Frederick ascended the
throne as "King in Prussia" in 1740, Prussia consisted of scattered
territories, including Cleves, Mark, and Ravensberg in the west of the
Holy Roman Empire; Brandenburg, Vorpommern, and Hinterpommern in the
east of the Empire; and Ducal Prussia outside of the Empire to the east.
Warfare
Frederick's goal was to modernize and unite his vulnerably
disconnected lands; toward this end, he fought wars mainly against
Austria, whose Habsburg dynasts reigned as Holy Roman Emperors almost
continuously from the 15th century until 1806. Frederick established
Brandenburg-Prussia as the fifth and smallest European great power by
using the resources his father had made available. For 100 years, the
ensuing Austro-Prussian dualism made a unified Germany impossible until
Prussia's defeat of Austria in 1866 under the guidance of Otto von
Bismarck.
Desiring the prosperous Austrian province of Silesia, Frederick
declined to endorse the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713, a legal mechanism to
ensure the inheritance of the Habsburg domains by Maria Theresa of
Austria. He deceitfully invaded Silesia the same year he took power,
using as justification an obscure treaty from 1537 between the
Hohenzollerns and the Piasts of Brieg. The ensuing First Silesian War
(1740–1742), part of the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–1748),
resulted in Frederick conquering most of Silesia. Austria attempted to
recover Silesia in the Second Silesian War (1744–1745), but Frederick
was victorious again and forced Austria to adhere to the previous peace
terms.
As neighboring countries began conspiring against him, Frederick
determined to strike first. On August 29, 1756 his well-prepared army
crossed the frontier and preemptively invaded Saxony, thus beginning the
Seven Years' War (1756–1763). Facing a coalition which included Austria,
France, Russia, Saxony, and Sweden, and having only Great Britain and
Hanover as his allies, Frederick narrowly kept Prussia in the war
despite having his territories frequently invaded. The sudden death of
Empress Elizabeth of Russia, an event dubbed the miracle of the House of
Brandenburg, led to the collapse of the anti-Prussian coalition.
Although Frederick did not gain any territory in the ensuing Treaty of
Hubertusburg, his ability to retain Silesia during the Silesian Wars
made him and Prussia popular throughout many German-speaking
territories.
Late in his life Frederick also involved Prussia in the low-scale
War of the Bavarian Succession in 1778, in which he stifled Austrian
attempts to exchange the Austrian Netherlands for Bavaria. When Emperor
Joseph II tried the scheme again in 1784, Frederick created the
Fürstenbund, allowing himself to be seen as a defender of German
liberties, in contrast to his earlier role of attacking his sovereign,
Maria Theresa.
Frederick frequently led his military forces personally. In fact,
he had six horses shot from under him during battle. He was quite
successful on the battlefield; Frederick is often admired as one of the
greatest tactical geniuses of all time, especially for his usage of the
oblique order of battle. Even more important were his operational
successes, especially preventing the unification of numerically superior
opposing armies and being at the right place at the right time to keep
enemy armies out of Prussian core territory. In a letter to his mother
Maria Theresa, the Austrian co-ruler Emperor Joseph II wrote,
When the King of Prussia speaks on problems connected with the
art of war, which he has studied intensively and on which he has read
every conceivable book, then everything is taut, solid and uncommonly
instructive. There are no circumlocutions, he gives factual and
historical proof of the assertions he makes, for he is well versed in
history… A genius and a man who talks admirably. But everything he says
betrays the knave."[2]
According to Voltaire, Frederick's success was also partially due
to the personal closeness he enjoyed with his lieutenants: "…when His
Majesty was dressed and booted, the Stoic gave some moments to the sect
of Epicurus; he had two or three favorites come, either lieutenants of
his regiment, or pages, or haidouks, or young cadets. They took coffee.
He to whom the handkerchief was thrown stayed another quarter of an hour
in privacy."[1]
An example of the place that Frederick holds in history as a
ruler is seen in Napoleon Bonaparte, who saw the Prussian king as the
greatest tactical genius of all time; after Napoleon's defeat of the
Fourth Coalition in 1807, he visited Frederick's tomb in Potsdam and
remarked to his officers, "Gentlemen, if this man were still alive I
would not be here".[3]
Frederick the Great's most notable and decisive military
victories on the battlefield were the Battles of Hohenfriedberg,
Rossbach, and Leuthen.
Partition of Poland
The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth after the First Partition
(1772)Empress Catherine II took the Imperial Russian throne in 1762
after the murder of Elisabeth's successor, Peter III. Catherine was
staunchly opposed to Prussia, while Frederick disapproved of Russia,
whose troops had been allowed to freely cross the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth during the Seven Years' War. Despite the two monarchs'
dislike of each other, Frederick and Catherine signed a defensive
alliance on April 11, 1764 which guaranteed Prussian control of Silesia
in return for Prussian support for Russia against Austria or the Ottoman
Empire. Catherine's candidate for the Polish throne, Stanislaw August
Poniatowski, was then elected King of Poland in September of that year.
Frederick became concerned, however, after Russia gained
significant influence over Poland in the Repnin Sejm of 1767, an act
which also threatened Austria and the Ottoman Turks. In the ensuing
Russo-Turkish War (1768–1774), Frederick reluctantly supported Catherine
with a subsidy of 300,000 roubles, as he did not want Russia to become
even stronger through the acquisitions of Ottoman territory. The
Prussian king successfully achieved a rapprochement with Emperor Joseph
and the Austrian chancellor Wenzel Anton Graf Kaunitz. As early as 1731
Frederick had suggested in a letter to Field Marshal Dubislav Gneomar
von Natzmer that the country would be well-served by annexing Polish
Prussia in order to unite the eastern territories of the Kingdom of
Prussia.[4]
Frederick's brother Henry spent the winter of 1770–1771 as a
representative of the Prussian court at St. Petersburg. As Austria had
annexed 13 towns in the Spiš region in 1769, Catherine and her advisor
Czernichev suggested to Henry that Prussia claim some Polish land, such
as Warmia. After Henry informed him of the proposal, Frederick suggested
a partition of the Polish borderlands by Austria, Prussia, and Russia,
to which Kaunitz counter-proposed that Prussia take lands from Poland in
return for relinquishing Silesia to Austria, but this plan was rejected
by Frederick.
After Russia occupied the Danubian Principalities, Henry
convinced Frederick and Maria Theresa that the balance of power would be
maintained by a tripartite division of the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth instead of Russia taking land from the Ottomans. In the
First Partition of Poland in 1772, Frederick claimed most of the Polish
province of Royal Prussia. Although out of the partitioning powers
Prussia annexed the smallest portion of the land (20,000 square miles)
and received the fewest new inhabitants (600,000), the new West Prussia
united East Prussia with Brandenburg and Hinterpommern and allowed him
to control the mouth of the Vistula River.[2]
Frederick quickly began improving the infrastructure of the new
territory. The Polish administrative and legal code was replaced by the
Prussian system, and education improved. Both Protestant and Roman
Catholic teachers taught in West Prussia, and teachers and
administrators were encouraged to be able to speak both German and
Polish. He also advised his successors to learn Polish, a policy
followed by the Hohenzollern dynasty until Frederick III decided not to
let William II learn the language.[3]
However, Frederick looked upon many of his new citizens with
scorn. He had nothing but contempt for the szlachta, the numerous Polish
nobility, having told Voltaire in 1771 that the downfall of the Polish
state would result from the "stupidity of the Potockis, Krasinskis,
Oginskis and that whole imbecile crowd whose names end in -ki".[4] He
considered West Prussia as uncivilized as Colonial Canada[5] and
compared the Poles to the Iroquois.[6] In a letter to Henry, Frederick
wrote about the province that "it is a very good and advantageous
acquisition, both from a financial and a political point of view. In
order to excite less jealousy I tell everyone that on my travels I have
seen just sand, pine trees, heath land and Jews. Despite that there is a
lot of work to be done; there is no order, and no planning and the towns
are in a lamentable condition."[4] Frederick invited German
immigrants[3] to redevelop the province, also hoping they would displace
the Poles.[7] Many German officials also regarded the Poles with
contempt.[5] Frederick did befriend some Poles, such as Ignacy Krasicki,
whom he asked to consecrate St. Hedwig's Cathedral in 1773.
Modernization
Frederick the Great during the Seven Years' War, painting by
Richard Knötel.Frederick managed to transform Prussia from a European
backwater to an economically strong and politically reformed state. His
acquisition of Silesia was orchestrated so as to provide Prussia's
fledgling industries with raw materials, and he protected these
industries with high tariffs and minimal restrictions on internal trade.
Canals were built, including between the Vistula and the Oder, swamps
were drained for agricultural cultivation, and new crops, such as the
potato and the turnip, were introduced. Frederick regarded his
reclamation of land in the Oderbruch as a province conquered in
peace.[5] With the help of French experts, he reorganized the system of
indirect taxes, which provided the state with more revenue than direct
taxes.
During the reign of Frederick, the effects of the Seven Years
War' and the gaining of Silesia greatly changed the economy. The
circulation of depreciated money kept prices high. To revalue the Thaler,
the Mint Edict of May 1763 was proposed. This stabilized the rates of
depreciated coins that would be accepted and provided for the payments
of taxes in currency of prewar value. This was replaced in northern
Germany by the Reichsthaler, worth one-fourth of a Conventionsthaler.
Prussia used a Thaler containing one-fourteenth of a Cologne mark of
silver. Many other rulers soon followed the steps of Frederick in
reforming their own currencies — this resulted in a shortage of ready
money.[8]
He gave his state a modern bureaucracy whose mainstay until 1760
was the able War and Finance Minister Adam Ludwig von Blumenthal,
succeeded in 1764 by his nephew Joachim who ran the ministry to the end
of the reign and beyond. Prussia's education system was seen as one the
best in Europe. Frederick abolished torture and corporal punishment and
generally supported religious toleration, including the retention of
Jesuits as teachers in Silesia, Warmia, and the Netze District after
their suppression by Pope Clement XIV. Influenced by anti-Semitism then
existent in much of Europe, however, Frederick tried to limit the number
of Jews in the country, writing in his Testament politique,
We have too many Jews in the towns. They are needed on the Polish
border because in these areas Hebrews alone perform trade. As soon as
you get away from the frontier, the Jews become a disadvantage, they
form cliques, they deal in contraband and get up to all manner of
rascally tricks which are detrimental to Christian burghers and
merchants. I have never persecuted anyone from this or any other sect
[sic]; I think, however, it would be prudent to pay attention, so that
their numbers do not increase.[4]
Frederick began titling himself "King of Prussia" in 1772; the
phrasing "King in Prussia" had been used since the coronation of
Frederick I in Königsberg in 1701.
Architecture
Frederick had famous buildings constructed in his chief
residence, Berlin, most of which still exist today, such as the Berlin
State Opera, the Royal Library (today the Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin),
St. Hedwig's Cathedral, the French and German Cathedrals on the
Gendarmenmarkt, and Prince Henry's Palace (now the site of Humboldt
University). However, the king preferred spending his time in his summer
residence Potsdam, where he built the palace of Sanssouci, the most
important work of Northern German rococo. Sanssouci, which translates
from French as "Without Cares", was a refuge for Frederick. When he
moved in, he wrote the following poem to his longtime companion, Count
von Keyersling:
In this new palace of noble architecture
the two of us will enjoy complete liberty
in the intoxication of friendship!
Personal ambition and enmity
will be accounted the only sins against nature.[1]
The South or Garden facade and corps de logis of Sanssouci[edit]
Music, arts, and learning
"The Flute Concert of Sanssouci" by von Menzel, 1852, depicts
Frederick the Great playing the flute in his music room at
Sanssouci.Frederick was a gifted musician. He played the cross-flute and
composed 100 sonatas for the flute as well as four symphonies. The "Hohenfriedberger
Marsch", a military march, was supposedly written by Frederick to
commemorate his victory in the Battle of Hohenfriedberg during the
Second Silesian War. His court musicians included C. P. E. Bach, Johann
Joachim Quantz, and Franz Benda. A meeting with Johann Sebastian Bach in
1747 in Potsdam led to Bach writing The Musical Offering.
Frederick also aspired to be a philosopher-king like the Roman
emperor Marcus Aurelius. The king joined the Freemasons in 1738. He
stood close to the French Enlightenment and admired above all its
greatest thinker, Voltaire, with whom he corresponded frequently.
Voltaire referred to Frederick as, "great king, charming tease" and said
For four years you have been my mistress…
Yes I go to the knees of an adored object,
But I leave behind what I love,"
when he returned to his companion, Madame du Châtelet, in
1740.[1] The personal friendship of Frederick and Voltaire came to an
unpleasant end after Voltaire's visit to Berlin and Potsdam in
1750–1753, although they reconciled from afar in later years. Voltaire
described their falling out as, "a lovers' quarrel: the harassments of
courts pass away, but the nature of a beautiful ruling passion is
long-lasting."[1]
Frederick invited Joseph-Louis Lagrange to succeed Leonhard Euler
at the Berlin Academy. Other writers attracted to the philosopher's
kingdom were Francesco Algarotti, d'Argens, Julien Offray de La Mettrie,
and Pierre Louis Maupertuis. Immanuel Kant published religious writings
in Berlin which would have been censored anywhere else in Europe.
In addition to his native language, German, Frederick spoke
French, English, Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian; he also understood
Latin, ancient and modern Greek, and Hebrew. Preferring instead French
culture, Frederick disliked the German language, literature, and
culture, explaining that German authors "pile parenthesis upon
parenthesis, and often you find only at the end of an entire page the
verb on which depends the meaning of the whole sentence".[4] His
criticism led many German writers to attempt to impress Frederick with
their writings in the German language and thus prove its worthiness.
Many statesmen, including Stein, were also inspired by Frederick's
statesmanship. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe gave his opinion of Frederick
during a visit to Strasbourg by writing:
Well we had not much to say in favour of the constitution of the
Reich; we admitted that it consisted entirely of lawful misuses, but it
rose therefore the higher over the present French constitution which is
operating in a maze of lawful misuses, whose government displays its
energies in the wrong places and therefore has to face the challenge
that a thorough change in the state of affairs is widely prophesied. In
contrast when we looked towards the north, from there shone Frederick,
the Pole Star, around whom Germany, Europe, even the world seemed to
turn…[3]
Later years
Near the end of his life Frederick grew increasingly
solitary. When his longtime companion Fredersdorf sought marriage,
Frederick cynically replied, "Have your marriage ceremony today rather
than tomorrow if that will contribute to your care and comfort; and if
you want to keep a little page and a little scout with you as well, do
so."[1] Frederick's circle of friends at Sanssouci gradually died off
without replacements, and Frederick became increasingly critical and
arbitrary, to the frustration of the civil service and officer corps.
The populace of Berlin always cheered the king when he returned to the
city from provincial tours or military reviews, but Frederick took no
pleasure from his popularity with the common folk, preferring instead
the company of his pet greyhounds,[6] whom he referred to as his
'marquises de Pompadour' as a jibe at Madame de Pompadour.[4] He died on
17th August 1786 in an armchair in his study in the palace of Sanssouci.
Upon Frederick's death, his doctor, Johann Georg Zimmermann,
published a book denying Frederick's reputation as a lover of men.
Zimmermann conceded that, "Voltaire, la Beaumelle, the Duke de Choiseul,
innumerable Frenchmen and Germans, almost all the friends and enemies of
Frederick, almost all the princes and great men of Europe, even his
servants — even the confidants and friends of his later years, were of
opinion that he had loved, as it is pretended, Socrates loved
Alcibiades."[1] Zimmermann presented the theory that Frederick started
this rumor to draw attention away from an accidental castration which
happened during a gonorrhea treatment, but court physicians specifically
noted that Frederick was in no way emasculated when they examined his
body.
Frederick had wished to be buried next to his greyhounds on the
vineyard terrace on the side of the corps de logis of Sansscouci. „Im
übrigen will ich, was meine Person anbetrifft, in Sanssouci beigesetzt
werden, ohne Prunk, ohne Pomp und bei Nacht..."(1757) (transl. "Apart
from that, as far as my person is concerned, I wish to be buried in
Sanssouci, without splendour, without pomp and at night." )
His successor instead ordered the body to be buried next to the
grave of Frederick's father in the church of the Potsdam garrison.
During the Second World War, the catafalcs of both kings were
transferred first to an underground bunker, later to a mineshaft close
to the town of Bernrode to protect them from destruction. In 1945 the US
Army transported both Frederick and his father first to the University
Chapel of Marburg and then on to the Burg Hohenzollern close to the town
of Hechingen. After the German reunification, the body of Frederick
William was entombed in the in the Kaiser Friedrich Mausoleum in the
Church of Peace (Sanssouci). There was a highly emotional debate whether
the funeral of a former king of Prussia, who was responsible for many
wars during his time, and who had been exploited as a symbol both by the
Third Reich and the German Democratic Republic, should be regarded as
public matter or not. Despite numerous protests, on the 205th
anniversary of his death, on 17th August 1992, Frederick's catafalc lay
in state in the court of honor of Sanssouci, covered by a prussian flag
and escorted by a Bundeswehr guard of honour. After nightfall,
Frederick's body was finally laid to rest on the terrace of the vineyard
of Sanssouci, according to his last will without pomp and at night.
Legacy
Frederick remains a controversial figure in Germany and
Central Europe. With the rise of German romantic nationalism in the 19th
century, he was admired by German nationalists. In the 20th century,
Frederick was often cited as a precursor for the Prussian and German
militarism that would inspire Otto von Bismarck and Adolf Hitler.
Unlike many of his contemporaries, Frederick did not believe in
the Divine Right of Kings and, disregarding the exaggerated French style
of the time, often wore old military uniforms; he merely believed the
crown was "a hat that let the rain in". He called himself the "first
servant of the state", but the Austrian empress Maria Theresa called him
"the evil man in Sanssouci." His wars against Austria weakened the Holy
Roman Empire, yet gave to Prussia land and prestige that would prove
vital for the 19th century unification of Germany. He was both an
enlightened ruler and a ruthless despot. Through reform, war, and the
First Partition of Poland in 1772, he turned the Kingdom of Prussia into
a European great power.
Popular culture
King of Prussia, Pennsylvania is named after the King of
Prussia Inn, itself named in honor of Frederick.[9]
Frederick II of Prussia is one of the leaders of the German
civilization in the Civilization video game series. The German
civilization was actually added to replace the Turks in the original
version of the game.
Frederick the Great is also one of the eight AI players in the
game Age of Empires III.
Frederick the Great is one of the leaders in the board game
Friedrich, which loosely simulates the events of the Seven Years' War.
[1]
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