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Charles II, Duke of Brunswick

Charles II, Duke of Brunswick (German: Karl II.; 30 October 1804 – 18 August 1873), ruled the Duchy of Brunswick from 1815 until 1830.

Charles II
Duke of Brunswick
Reign16 June 1815 – 9 September 1830
PredecessorFrederick William
SuccessorWilliam
Born(1804-10-30)30 October 1804
Brunswick, Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
Died19 August 1873(1873-08-19) (aged 68)
Geneva, Switzerland
Names
Charles Frederick Augustus William
German: Karl Friedrich August Wilhelm
HouseHouse of Brunswick-Bevern
FatherFrederick William, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
MotherPrincess Marie of Baden

Biography

Charles was born in Brunswick, the eldest son of Frederick William, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg. In April 1808, his mother, Princess Marie of Baden (1782–1808), died shortly after giving birth to a stillborn daughter when Charles was only three years old. Charles and his younger brother William, went to live with their maternal grandmother, Princess Amalie of Hesse-Darmstadt, in Glückstadt, while his father raised a volunteer corps, the Black Brunswickers, to fight with the Austrians against Napoleon. In the Autumn of 1809, to avoid capture the duke had conducted a remarkable fighting march across Germany and escaped to Britain with his troops; on his arrival in London he sent for his sons who then lived with their paternal grandmother, Princess Augusta of Great Britain at Blackheath and later at Vauxhall.[1] The young princes were treated as celebrities in London, with William being given the honour of laying a foundation stone for Vauxhall Bridge in 1814.[2]

After the death of his father in 1815, Charles inherited the Duchy, but since he was still underage, he was put under the guardianship of George, the prince regent of the United Kingdom and Hanover. When Charles neared his 18th birthday, a dispute over the date of his majority erupted; Charles claimed majority at the age of 18, while George considered the age of majority to be 21 years. A compromise was made, and Charles reached his majority at the age of 19, and took over government on 30 October 1823.

During his 18th year, Hanover speedily rushed in a new constitution which limited his powers, redefined his duchy, hereditary lands, and his due income as head of the house of Este-Guelph. As from 1546 forwards Hanover also paid the Dynastic fidei commis payments to the Wolfenbuettel princes, as heads of house. Until this new redefinition, all of Hanover was considered sub-principalities that conditionally governed in the name of the Wolfenbuettel ruling prince. These sub-principalities included Hanover-Calenberg and Luneburg, the new council of Vienna creation of Kingdom of Hanover in 1814 notwithstanding.

On May 10, 1827, Charles declared in an edict that the new constitution of redefining his sovereignty was invalid. Passing a new constitution during a Regency was also protested for him by Austria. These had gone against all the norms of international law. In the edict Hanover was called a "usurper", and this caused outrage in Hanover and England. The German Confederation that same year attempted to intervene in this matter and ordered Charles to accept the new constitution from his minority. Charles disregarded it, and continued governing as his father had. He did not have his decrees cosigned, but continued as an absolute monarch, as the Guelphs had been for more than 1,000 years.

The ownership of the printing presses ultimately won the battle as the popular opinion was turned against their monarch. Charles's administration was maligned as being corrupt and misguided.[3] When in 1830 the July Revolution broke out, Charles happened to be in Paris. He hurriedly returned to Brunswick, where he announced his intention to suppress all revolutionary tendencies by force. But on 6 September, he was attacked by stone throwers while riding home from the theatre; on the next day, a large mob tried to break into the palace. Charles fled and [4] the palace was completely destroyed by fire. When Charles's brother, William, arrived in Brunswick on 10 September, he was received joyfully by the people. William originally considered himself only his brother's regent, but after a year declared himself ruling duke. Charles made several desperate attempts to depose his brother by diplomacy and by force, but they were unsuccessful. Charles reportedly had agreements from the French King to send a mercenary army to retake the duchy.

Charles continued to be active in his office as ruling prince in exile. He filed many protests against Hanover, against his brother, and against Prussia's annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover after the 1866 Austro-Prussian War. In his later letters he predicted communism would take the lands from the Prussians.[citation needed]

Charles spent the rest of his life outside of Germany, mostly in Paris and London. While he lived in London he engaged in a high-profile feud with the publisher Barnard Gregory due to articles published about the Duke in The Satirist.[5] After the war between France and Germany broke out, he moved to Geneva, where he died in the Beau-Rivage Hotel in 1873, aged 68.

Brunswick Monument

 
The Brunswick Monument on the Quai du Mont-Blanc, Geneva.

In his will drawn up on 5 March 1871, Charles left his entire estate to the city of Geneva with a single stipulation: that a mausoleum be built for him in Geneva "in a prominent position and worthy", that it should feature statues of his father, Frederick William, and his grandfather, Charles William Ferdinand, and that it should imitate the style of the 14th century Scaliger Tombs in Verona. Accordingly, a design was chosen by the Swiss architect Jean Franel. Sited on the Quai du Mont-Blanc, it is built in three storeys of white marble with a hexagonal canopy over a sarcophagus bearing a recumbent figure of the duke. At the projecting corners are marble statues of six notable ancestors of the House of Guelph by various sculptors, and a bronze equestrian statue of Duke William by the French sculptor Auguste Cain was originally mounted at the top of the spire. The monument stands on a platform 65 meters long and 25 meters wide and is guarded by marble chimeras and lions, also by Cain.

The monument was unveiled on 14 October 1879; however, earthquake damage resulted in the removal of the equestrian statue to an adjacent plinth in 1883 and the top of the spire was rebuilt with a crown in 1890. The duke's estate amounted to 24 million Swiss Francs, two million of which were expended on the monument, the remainder was spent on a number of new public buildings, for example the Grand Théâtre.[6]

Legacy

A contemporary obituarist referred to the Duke as "that painted, bewigged Lothario, whose follies, eccentricities, and diamonds made him the talk of Europe."[7] During his lifetime he sued several newspaper publishers for libel when they alleged that, among other things, he solicited homosexual encounters.[8] However, in 1849 he won a defamation case for the publication of an article by a newspaper, The Weekly Dispatch, in 1830, after sending a manservant to procure archive copies of the edition from the publishers and the British Museum. No copies now survive, although given the Duke's other legal cases, the nature of the libel may be assumed. However this case (Brunswick v Harmer) established a precedent in English defamation law, as the ruling was interpreted by courts to allow defamation plaintiffs to sue if there was a “new publication” of the original libel. It was used, for example, in 2009 to decree that internet company Google, who made historical libels available on their web pages, could be liable for damages. The multiple publication rule was finally curtailed in the UK by The Defamation Act 2013.[9]

Ancestors

See also

Charles was on the losing side of the Opera game, a famous chess game against Paul Morphy.

References

  1. ^ Fraser, Flora (1996). The Unruly Queen: The Life of Queen Caroline. Anchor Books. ISBN 978-0307456366. (Chapter 10)
  2. ^ Duncombe, Thomas H., ed. (1868). The Life and Correspondence of Thomas Slingsby Duncombe: Late M.P. for Finsbury, Volume II. London: Hurst and Blackett. p. 45.
  3. ^ O. Hohnstein: Geschichte des Herzogtums Braunschweig, Braunschweig 1908, pp. 465–474.
  4. ^ Gerhard Schildt: Von der Restauration zur Reichsgründungszeit, in Horst-Rüdiger Jarck / Gerhard Schildt (eds.), Die Braunschweigische Landesgeschichte. Jahrtausendrückblick einer Region, Braunschweig 2000, pp. 753–766.
  5. ^ Boase, G. C. (1885–1900). "Gregory, Barnard" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  6. ^ Van der Krogt, René; Van der Krogt, Peter. "The Brunswick Monument". statues.vanderkrogt.net.
  7. ^ "Duke of Brunswick". Appleton's Journal. 20 November 1875.
  8. ^ Norton, Rictor. "Homosexuality in 19th-cent. England: Libels against the Duke of Brunwick, 1840s". rictornorton.co.uk. Retrieved 16 August 2016.
  9. ^ Agate, Jennifer (September 2013). "The Defamation Act 2013 – key changes for online" (PDF). Farrer.
Charles II, Duke of Brunswick
Cadet branch of the House of Welf
Born: 30 October 1804 Died: 18 August 1873
Regnal titles
Preceded by Duke of Brunswick
1815–1830
Succeeded by

charles, duke, brunswick, german, karl, october, 1804, august, 1873, ruled, duchy, brunswick, from, 1815, until, 1830, charles, iiduke, brunswickreign16, june, 1815, september, 1830predecessorfrederick, williamsuccessorwilliamborn, 1804, october, 1804brunswick. Charles II Duke of Brunswick German Karl II 30 October 1804 18 August 1873 ruled the Duchy of Brunswick from 1815 until 1830 Charles IIDuke of BrunswickReign16 June 1815 9 September 1830PredecessorFrederick WilliamSuccessorWilliamBorn 1804 10 30 30 October 1804Brunswick Brunswick WolfenbuttelDied19 August 1873 1873 08 19 aged 68 Geneva SwitzerlandNamesCharles Frederick Augustus WilliamGerman Karl Friedrich August WilhelmHouseHouse of Brunswick BevernFatherFrederick William Duke of Brunswick WolfenbuttelMotherPrincess Marie of Baden Contents 1 Biography 2 Brunswick Monument 3 Legacy 4 Ancestors 5 See also 6 ReferencesBiography EditCharles was born in Brunswick the eldest son of Frederick William Duke of Brunswick Luneburg In April 1808 his mother Princess Marie of Baden 1782 1808 died shortly after giving birth to a stillborn daughter when Charles was only three years old Charles and his younger brother William went to live with their maternal grandmother Princess Amalie of Hesse Darmstadt in Gluckstadt while his father raised a volunteer corps the Black Brunswickers to fight with the Austrians against Napoleon In the Autumn of 1809 to avoid capture the duke had conducted a remarkable fighting march across Germany and escaped to Britain with his troops on his arrival in London he sent for his sons who then lived with their paternal grandmother Princess Augusta of Great Britain at Blackheath and later at Vauxhall 1 The young princes were treated as celebrities in London with William being given the honour of laying a foundation stone for Vauxhall Bridge in 1814 2 After the death of his father in 1815 Charles inherited the Duchy but since he was still underage he was put under the guardianship of George the prince regent of the United Kingdom and Hanover When Charles neared his 18th birthday a dispute over the date of his majority erupted Charles claimed majority at the age of 18 while George considered the age of majority to be 21 years A compromise was made and Charles reached his majority at the age of 19 and took over government on 30 October 1823 During his 18th year Hanover speedily rushed in a new constitution which limited his powers redefined his duchy hereditary lands and his due income as head of the house of Este Guelph As from 1546 forwards Hanover also paid the Dynastic fidei commis payments to the Wolfenbuettel princes as heads of house Until this new redefinition all of Hanover was considered sub principalities that conditionally governed in the name of the Wolfenbuettel ruling prince These sub principalities included Hanover Calenberg and Luneburg the new council of Vienna creation of Kingdom of Hanover in 1814 notwithstanding On May 10 1827 Charles declared in an edict that the new constitution of redefining his sovereignty was invalid Passing a new constitution during a Regency was also protested for him by Austria These had gone against all the norms of international law In the edict Hanover was called a usurper and this caused outrage in Hanover and England The German Confederation that same year attempted to intervene in this matter and ordered Charles to accept the new constitution from his minority Charles disregarded it and continued governing as his father had He did not have his decrees cosigned but continued as an absolute monarch as the Guelphs had been for more than 1 000 years The ownership of the printing presses ultimately won the battle as the popular opinion was turned against their monarch Charles s administration was maligned as being corrupt and misguided 3 When in 1830 the July Revolution broke out Charles happened to be in Paris He hurriedly returned to Brunswick where he announced his intention to suppress all revolutionary tendencies by force But on 6 September he was attacked by stone throwers while riding home from the theatre on the next day a large mob tried to break into the palace Charles fled and 4 the palace was completely destroyed by fire When Charles s brother William arrived in Brunswick on 10 September he was received joyfully by the people William originally considered himself only his brother s regent but after a year declared himself ruling duke Charles made several desperate attempts to depose his brother by diplomacy and by force but they were unsuccessful Charles reportedly had agreements from the French King to send a mercenary army to retake the duchy Charles continued to be active in his office as ruling prince in exile He filed many protests against Hanover against his brother and against Prussia s annexation of the Kingdom of Hanover after the 1866 Austro Prussian War In his later letters he predicted communism would take the lands from the Prussians citation needed Charles spent the rest of his life outside of Germany mostly in Paris and London While he lived in London he engaged in a high profile feud with the publisher Barnard Gregory due to articles published about the Duke in The Satirist 5 After the war between France and Germany broke out he moved to Geneva where he died in the Beau Rivage Hotel in 1873 aged 68 Brunswick Monument EditSee also Brunswick Monument The Brunswick Monument on the Quai du Mont Blanc Geneva In his will drawn up on 5 March 1871 Charles left his entire estate to the city of Geneva with a single stipulation that a mausoleum be built for him in Geneva in a prominent position and worthy that it should feature statues of his father Frederick William and his grandfather Charles William Ferdinand and that it should imitate the style of the 14th century Scaliger Tombs in Verona Accordingly a design was chosen by the Swiss architect Jean Franel Sited on the Quai du Mont Blanc it is built in three storeys of white marble with a hexagonal canopy over a sarcophagus bearing a recumbent figure of the duke At the projecting corners are marble statues of six notable ancestors of the House of Guelph by various sculptors and a bronze equestrian statue of Duke William by the French sculptor Auguste Cain was originally mounted at the top of the spire The monument stands on a platform 65 meters long and 25 meters wide and is guarded by marble chimeras and lions also by Cain The monument was unveiled on 14 October 1879 however earthquake damage resulted in the removal of the equestrian statue to an adjacent plinth in 1883 and the top of the spire was rebuilt with a crown in 1890 The duke s estate amounted to 24 million Swiss Francs two million of which were expended on the monument the remainder was spent on a number of new public buildings for example the Grand Theatre 6 Legacy EditA contemporary obituarist referred to the Duke as that painted bewigged Lothario whose follies eccentricities and diamonds made him the talk of Europe 7 During his lifetime he sued several newspaper publishers for libel when they alleged that among other things he solicited homosexual encounters 8 However in 1849 he won a defamation case for the publication of an article by a newspaper The Weekly Dispatch in 1830 after sending a manservant to procure archive copies of the edition from the publishers and the British Museum No copies now survive although given the Duke s other legal cases the nature of the libel may be assumed However this case Brunswick v Harmer established a precedent in English defamation law as the ruling was interpreted by courts to allow defamation plaintiffs to sue if there was a new publication of the original libel It was used for example in 2009 to decree that internet company Google who made historical libels available on their web pages could be liable for damages The multiple publication rule was finally curtailed in the UK by The Defamation Act 2013 9 Ancestors EditAncestors of Charles II Duke of Brunswick8 Charles I Duke of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel4 Charles William Ferdinand Duke of Brunswick9 Princess Philippine Charlotte of Prussia2 Frederick William Duke of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel10 Frederick Prince of Wales5 Princess Augusta of Great Britain11 Princess Augusta of Saxe Gotha1 Charles II Duke of Brunswick12 Charles Frederick Grand Duke of Baden6 Charles Louis Hereditary Prince of Baden13 Landgravine Karoline Luise of Hesse Darmstadt3 Princess Marie of Baden14 Louis IX Landgrave of Hesse Darmstadt7 Landgravine Amalie of Hesse Darmstadt15 Countess Palatine Caroline of ZweibruckenSee also EditCharles was on the losing side of the Opera game a famous chess game against Paul Morphy References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles II Duke of Brunswick Fraser Flora 1996 The Unruly Queen The Life of Queen Caroline Anchor Books ISBN 978 0307456366 Chapter 10 Duncombe Thomas H ed 1868 The Life and Correspondence of Thomas Slingsby Duncombe Late M P for Finsbury Volume II London Hurst and Blackett p 45 O Hohnstein Geschichte des Herzogtums Braunschweig Braunschweig 1908 pp 465 474 Gerhard Schildt Von der Restauration zur Reichsgrundungszeit in Horst Rudiger Jarck Gerhard Schildt eds Die Braunschweigische Landesgeschichte Jahrtausendruckblick einer Region Braunschweig 2000 pp 753 766 Boase G C 1885 1900 Gregory Barnard Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co Van der Krogt Rene Van der Krogt Peter The Brunswick Monument statues vanderkrogt net Duke of Brunswick Appleton s Journal 20 November 1875 Norton Rictor Homosexuality in 19th cent England Libels against the Duke of Brunwick 1840s rictornorton co uk Retrieved 16 August 2016 Agate Jennifer September 2013 The Defamation Act 2013 key changes for online PDF Farrer Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie vol 15 p 281 285 permanent dead link Charles II Duke of BrunswickHouse of Brunswick BevernCadet branch of the House of WelfBorn 30 October 1804 Died 18 August 1873Regnal titlesPreceded byFrederick William Duke of Brunswick1815 1830 Succeeded byWilliam VIII Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles II Duke of Brunswick amp oldid 1127306532, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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