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Frederick William II of Prussia

Frederick William II (German: Friedrich Wilhelm II.; 25 September 1744 – 16 November 1797) was King of Prussia from 1786 until his death in 1797. He was in personal union the Prince-elector of Brandenburg and (via the Orange-Nassau inheritance of his grandfather) sovereign prince of the Canton of Neuchâtel. Pleasure-loving and indolent, he is seen as the antithesis to his predecessor, Frederick the Great. (Frederick II). Under his reign, Prussia was weakened internally and externally, and 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.[1]

Frederick William II
Portrait by Anton Graff
King of Prussia
Elector of Brandenburg
Reign17 August 1786 – 16 November 1797
PredecessorFrederick II
SuccessorFrederick William III
Born(1744-09-25)25 September 1744
Stadtschloss, Berlin, Prussia
Died16 November 1797(1797-11-16) (aged 53)
Marmorpalais, Potsdam, Prussia
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1765; div. 1769)


Julie von Voß (morganatic)
(m. 1787; died 1789)

Sophie von Dönhoff (morganatic)
(m. 1790; separated 1792)
IssuePrincess Frederica Charlotte, Duchess of York and Albany
Frederick William III of Prussia
Prince Louis Charles
Wilhelmine, Queen of the Netherlands
Augusta, Electress of Hesse
Prince Henry
Prince Wilhelm
Gustav Adolf Wilhelm von Ingenheim (illegitimate)
Friedrich Wilhelm, Count Brandenburg (illegitimate)
HouseHohenzollern
FatherPrince Augustus William of Prussia
MotherDuchess Luise of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
ReligionCalvinist
Signature

Early life

Frederick William was born in Berlin, the son of Prince Augustus William of Prussia (the second son of King Frederick William I of Prussia) and Duchess Luise of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel. His mother's elder sister, Elisabeth, was the wife of Augustus William's brother King Frederick II ("Frederick the Great"). Frederick William became heir-presumptive to the throne of Prussia on his father's death in 1758, since Frederick 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.[2]

His marriage with Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Crown Princess of Prussia, daughter of Charles I, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, contracted 14 July 1765 in Charlottenburg, was dissolved in 1769. He then married Frederica Louisa of Hesse-Darmstadt, daughter of Ludwig IX, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt on 14 July 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,[2] and had five children by her—the first when she was still in her teens.[citation needed]

 
Wilhelmine von Lichtenau

Frederick William, 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.[3] But an artistic temperament was hardly what was required of a king of Prussia on the eve of the French Revolution, and Frederick 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.[2] For his part, Frederick William, who had never been properly introduced to diplomacy and the business of rulership, resented his uncle for not taking him seriously.[3]

Reign

 
Portrait of Prince Frederick William, c. 1765
 
Homage for King Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia in the courtyard of Königsberg Castle, 1786, portrait by J. C. Saemann the Elder

The misgivings of Frederick II appear justified in retrospect. Frederick William's accession to the throne (17 August 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 Frederick, 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 Frederick Williams'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. Frederick William also terminated his predecessor's state monopolies for coffee and tobacco[4] and the sugar monopoly.[5] Under his reign the codification known as Allgemeines Preußisches Landrecht, initiated by Frederick II, continued and was completed in 1794.[6]

Mysticism and religious policies

In 1781 Frederick William, then prince of Prussia, inclined to mysticism, had joined the Rosicrucians,[which?][citation needed] and had fallen under the influence of Johann Christoph von Wöllner and Johann Rudolf von Bischoffswerder. On 26 August 1786 Wöllner was appointed privy councillor for finance (Geheimer Oberfinanzrath), and on 2 October 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 3 July 1788 he was appointed active privy councillor of state and of justice and head of the spiritual department for Lutheran and Catholic affairs.[2] From this position Wöllner pursued long lasting reforms concerning religion in the Prussian state.[citation needed]

The king proved eager to aid Wöllner's crusade. On 9 July 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 18 December 1788 a new censorship law was issued to secure the orthodoxy of all published books.[2] 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.[5]

Finally, in 1791, a Protestant commission was established at Berlin (Immediate-Examinationscommission) to watch over all ecclesiastical and scholastic appointments.[2] 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.[7] The edict was also a notable step forward regarding the rights of Jews, Mennonites, and Herrnhut brethren, who now received full state protection.[7] 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.[original research?]

In his zeal for establishing Prussia as a paragon of stable Christian statehood, Frederick William 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".[2]

Foreign policies

 
Portrait of Frederick William II, by Johann Christoph Frisch, c. 1794

The attitude of Frederick William II towards the army and foreign policy proved fateful for Prussia. The army was the very foundation of the Prussian state, as both Frederick William I and Frederick the Great had fully realised. The army had been their first care, and its efficiency had been maintained by their constant personal supervision. Frederick William 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.[2] Although the Prussian army reached its highest peacetime level of manpower under Frederick William 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.[6]

Under the circumstances, Frederick William'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 (5 July 1791) marked the final abandonment of the anti-Austrian tradition of Frederick the Great.[2]

 
Prussian thaler minted during the reign of Frederick William II, c. 1793

Meanwhile, the French Revolution alarmed the ruling monarchs of Europe, and in August 1791 Frederick William, at the meeting at Pillnitz Castle, agreed with 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 7 February 1792, and Frederick William 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, 19 April 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 Frederick William into the separate Treaty of Basel with the French Republic (5 April 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.[2] 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.[4]

Personal life and patronage of the arts

 
Frederick William with his family by Anna Dorothea Lisiewska, ca. 1777, National Museum in Warsaw.

Frederick William'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, Frederick II, granted a divorce reluctantly, as he was more fond of Elisabeth than of Frederick William.[8] 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").[3] His favourite son—with Wilhelmine Enke—was Graf Alexander von der Mark.[4] His daughter from Sophie Juliane, Countess Julie of Brandenburg (4 January 1793, Neuchâtel – 29 January 1848, Vienna), married to Frederick Ferdinand, Duke of Anhalt-Köthen.[citation needed]

Other buildings constructed under his reign were the Marmorpalais in Potsdam and the world-famous Brandenburger Tor in Berlin.[3]

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

Ancestry

Children

Frederick William II had the following children:

 
Tomb of Frederick William II in Hohenzollern crypt in the Berliner Dom

References

  1. ^ "Friedens- statt Triumph-Symbol: Das Brandenburger Tor und sein Geheimnis". Der Tagesspiegel Online (in German). ISSN 1865-2263. Retrieved 19 January 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Frederick William II. of Prussia". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 64–65.
  3. ^ a b c d Feldhahn, Ulrich (2011). Die preußischen Könige und Kaiser (German). Kunstverlag Josef Fink, Lindenberg. pp. 15–16. ISBN 978-3-89870-615-5.
  4. ^ a b c Komander, Gerhild H. M. "Friedrich Wilhelm II. König von Preußen (German)". Verein für die geschichte Berlins e.V. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
  5. ^ a b "Preussenchronik: Der neue König macht wenig besser und vieles schlimmer (German)". Rundfunk Berlin Brandenburg. 21 May 2008. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
  6. ^ a b "Preussenchronik: Friedrich Wilhelm II. Preußen (German)". Rundfunk Berlin Brandenburg. 21 May 2008. Retrieved 29 April 2013.
  7. ^ a b Clark, Christopher (2006). Iron Kingdom: The Rise and Downfall of Prussia, 1600 to 1947. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. pp. 270. ISBN 9780674023857.
  8. ^ Nancy Mitford, "Frederick the Great" (1970) pp. 206-207.
  9. ^ Genealogie ascendante jusqu'au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l'Europe actuellement vivans [Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living] (in French). Bourdeaux: Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel. 1768. p. 17.
Frederick William II of Prussia
Born: 25 September 1744 Died: 16 November 1797
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Prussia
Elector of Brandenburg
Prince of Neuchâtel

1786–1797
Succeeded by

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This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is tendentious bias towards militaristic evaluation of Frederick William Please help improve this article if you can May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Frederick William II German Friedrich Wilhelm II 25 September 1744 16 November 1797 was King of Prussia from 1786 until his death in 1797 He was in personal union the Prince elector of Brandenburg and via the Orange Nassau inheritance of his grandfather sovereign prince of the Canton of Neuchatel Pleasure loving and indolent he is seen as the antithesis to his predecessor Frederick the Great Frederick II Under his reign Prussia was weakened internally and externally and 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 1 Frederick William IIPortrait by Anton GraffKing of Prussia Elector of BrandenburgReign17 August 1786 16 November 1797PredecessorFrederick IISuccessorFrederick William IIIBorn 1744 09 25 25 September 1744Stadtschloss Berlin PrussiaDied16 November 1797 1797 11 16 aged 53 Marmorpalais Potsdam PrussiaBurialBerliner DomSpouseElisabeth Christine of Brunswick Luneburg m 1765 div 1769 wbr Frederica Louisa of Hesse Darmstadt m 1769 wbr Julie von Voss morganatic m 1787 died 1789 wbr Sophie von Donhoff morganatic m 1790 separated 1792 wbr IssuePrincess Frederica Charlotte Duchess of York and AlbanyFrederick William III of PrussiaPrince Louis CharlesWilhelmine Queen of the NetherlandsAugusta Electress of HessePrince HenryPrince WilhelmGustav Adolf Wilhelm von Ingenheim illegitimate Friedrich Wilhelm Count Brandenburg illegitimate HouseHohenzollernFatherPrince Augustus William of PrussiaMotherDuchess Luise of Brunswick WolfenbuttelReligionCalvinistSignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Reign 2 1 Mysticism and religious policies 2 2 Foreign policies 2 3 Personal life and patronage of the arts 3 Ancestry 4 Children 5 ReferencesEarly life EditFrederick William was born in Berlin the son of Prince Augustus William of Prussia the second son of King Frederick William I of Prussia and Duchess Luise of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel His mother s elder sister Elisabeth was the wife of Augustus William s brother King Frederick II Frederick the Great Frederick William became heir presumptive to the throne of Prussia on his father s death in 1758 since Frederick 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 2 His marriage with Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Crown Princess of Prussia daughter of Charles I Duke of Brunswick Luneburg contracted 14 July 1765 in Charlottenburg was dissolved in 1769 He then married Frederica Louisa of Hesse Darmstadt daughter of Ludwig IX Landgrave of Hesse Darmstadt on 14 July 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 2 and had five children by her the first when she was still in her teens citation needed Wilhelmine von Lichtenau Frederick William 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 3 But an artistic temperament was hardly what was required of a king of Prussia on the eve of the French Revolution and Frederick 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 2 For his part Frederick William who had never been properly introduced to diplomacy and the business of rulership resented his uncle for not taking him seriously 3 Reign Edit Portrait of Prince Frederick William c 1765 Homage for King Friedrich Wilhelm II of Prussia in the courtyard of Konigsberg Castle 1786 portrait by J C Saemann the Elder The misgivings of Frederick II appear justified in retrospect Frederick William s accession to the throne 17 August 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 Frederick 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 Frederick Williams 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 Frederick William also terminated his predecessor s state monopolies for coffee and tobacco 4 and the sugar monopoly 5 Under his reign the codification known as Allgemeines Preussisches Landrecht initiated by Frederick II continued and was completed in 1794 6 Mysticism and religious policies Edit In 1781 Frederick William then prince of Prussia inclined to mysticism had joined the Rosicrucians which citation needed and had fallen under the influence of Johann Christoph von Wollner and Johann Rudolf von Bischoffswerder On 26 August 1786 Wollner was appointed privy councillor for finance Geheimer Oberfinanzrath and on 2 October 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 Wollner 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 3 July 1788 he was appointed active privy councillor of state and of justice and head of the spiritual department for Lutheran and Catholic affairs 2 From this position Wollner pursued long lasting reforms concerning religion in the Prussian state citation needed The king proved eager to aid Wollner s crusade On 9 July 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 Aufklarer and placed educational establishments under the supervision of the orthodox clergy On 18 December 1788 a new censorship law was issued to secure the orthodoxy of all published books 2 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 5 Finally in 1791 a Protestant commission was established at Berlin Immediate Examinationscommission to watch over all ecclesiastical and scholastic appointments 2 Although Wollner 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 Wollner s edict were intended to safeguard against religious strife by imposing a system of state sponsored limits 7 The edict was also a notable step forward regarding the rights of Jews Mennonites and Herrnhut brethren who now received full state protection 7 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 original research In his zeal for establishing Prussia as a paragon of stable Christian statehood Frederick William outstripped his minister he even blamed Wollner 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 2 Foreign policies Edit Portrait of Frederick William II by Johann Christoph Frisch c 1794 The attitude of Frederick William II towards the army and foreign policy proved fateful for Prussia The army was the very foundation of the Prussian state as both Frederick William I and Frederick the Great had fully realised The army had been their first care and its efficiency had been maintained by their constant personal supervision Frederick William 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 Mollendorf It was the beginning of the process that ended in 1806 at the disastrous Battle of Jena 2 Although the Prussian army reached its highest peacetime level of manpower under Frederick William 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 6 Under the circumstances Frederick William 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 5 July 1791 marked the final abandonment of the anti Austrian tradition of Frederick the Great 2 Prussian thaler minted during the reign of Frederick William II c 1793 Meanwhile the French Revolution alarmed the ruling monarchs of Europe and in August 1791 Frederick William at the meeting at Pillnitz Castle agreed with 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 7 February 1792 and Frederick William 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 19 April 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 Frederick William into the separate Treaty of Basel with the French Republic 5 April 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 2 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 4 Personal life and patronage of the arts Edit Frederick William with his family by Anna Dorothea Lisiewska ca 1777 National Museum in Warsaw Frederick William 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 Frederick II granted a divorce reluctantly as he was more fond of Elisabeth than of Frederick William 8 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 Grafin von Voss Grafin von Ingenheim in 1787 and after her death in 1789 with Sophie Juliane Grafin von Donhoff 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 Luderjahn the fat scallywag 3 His favourite son with Wilhelmine Enke was Graf Alexander von der Mark 4 His daughter from Sophie Juliane Countess Julie of Brandenburg 4 January 1793 Neuchatel 29 January 1848 Vienna married to Frederick Ferdinand Duke of Anhalt Kothen citation needed Other buildings constructed under his reign were the Marmorpalais in Potsdam and the world famous Brandenburger Tor in Berlin 3 On 16 November 1797 Frederick William II died in Potsdam He was succeeded by his son Frederick William III who had resented his father s lifestyle and acted swiftly to deal with what he considered the immoral state of the court Frederick William II is buried in the Berliner Dom citation needed Ancestry EditAncestors of Frederick William II of Prussia 9 8 Frederick I of Prussia4 Frederick William I of Prussia9 Princess Sophia Charlotte of Hanover2 Prince Augustus William of Prussia10 George I of Great Britain5 Princess Sophia Dorothea of Hanover11 Princess Sophia Dorothea of Celle1 Frederick William II of Prussia12 Ferdinand Albert I Duke of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Bevern6 Ferdinand Albert II Duke of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel13 Princess Christine of Hesse Eschwege3 Duchess Luise of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel14 Louis Rudolph Duke of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel7 Duchess Antoinette of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel15 Princess Christine Louise of Oettingen OettingenChildren EditFrederick William II had the following children By his first cousin Duchess Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel Princess Frederica Charlotte 1767 1820 who became Duchess of York and Albany by her marriage to Prince Frederick Duke of York and Albany no issue By Princess Frederica Louisa of Hesse Darmstadt Frederick William III 1770 1840 married Duchess Louise of Mecklenburg Strelitz had issue Princess Christine 1772 1773 Prince Louis Charles 1773 96 married Duchess Frederica of Mecklenburg Strelitz had issue Princess Wilhelmine 1774 1837 who became Queen of the Netherlands by her marriage to King William I of the Netherlands had issue Princess Augusta 1780 1841 who became Electress of Hesse by her marriage to William II Elector of Hesse had issue Prince Henry 1781 1846 Prince William 1783 1851 married Princess Maria Anna of Hesse Homburg had issue Tomb of Frederick William II in Hohenzollern crypt in the Berliner DomReferences Edit Friedens statt Triumph Symbol Das Brandenburger Tor und sein Geheimnis Der Tagesspiegel Online in German ISSN 1865 2263 Retrieved 19 January 2023 a b c d e f g h i j One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Frederick William II of Prussia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 64 65 a b c d Feldhahn Ulrich 2011 Die preussischen Konige und Kaiser German Kunstverlag Josef Fink Lindenberg pp 15 16 ISBN 978 3 89870 615 5 a b c Komander Gerhild H M Friedrich Wilhelm II Konig von Preussen German Verein fur die geschichte Berlins e V Retrieved 29 April 2013 a b Preussenchronik Der neue Konig macht wenig besser und vieles schlimmer German Rundfunk Berlin Brandenburg 21 May 2008 Retrieved 29 April 2013 a b Preussenchronik Friedrich Wilhelm II Preussen German Rundfunk Berlin Brandenburg 21 May 2008 Retrieved 29 April 2013 a b Clark Christopher 2006 Iron Kingdom The Rise and Downfall of Prussia 1600 to 1947 Cambridge MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press pp 270 ISBN 9780674023857 Nancy Mitford Frederick the Great 1970 pp 206 207 Genealogie ascendante jusqu au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l Europe actuellement vivans Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living in French Bourdeaux Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel 1768 p 17 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Friedrich Wilhelm II Frederick William II of PrussiaHouse of HohenzollernBorn 25 September 1744 Died 16 November 1797Regnal titlesPreceded byFrederick II King of PrussiaElector of BrandenburgPrince of Neuchatel1786 1797 Succeeded byFrederick William III Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frederick William II of Prussia amp oldid 1139980332, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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