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Frederick William IV of Prussia

Frederick William IV (German: Friedrich Wilhelm IV.; 15 October 1795[3] – 2 January 1861), the eldest son and successor of Frederick William III of Prussia, was king of Prussia from 7 June 1840 until his death on 2 January 1861. Also referred to as the "romanticist on the throne", he was deeply religious and believed that he ruled by divine right. He feared revolutions, and his ideal state was one governed by the Christian estates of the realm rather than a constitutional monarchy.

Frederick William IV
Frederick William IV in 1847
King of Prussia
Reign7 June 1840 – 2 January 1861
PredecessorFrederick William III
SuccessorWilliam I
RegentPrince William (1858–1861)
President of the Erfurt Union
Reign26 May 1849 – 29 November 1850
Emperor-elect of Germans
Reign18 May 1848 – 30 May 1849
Born15 October 1795
Kronprinzenpalais, Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia
Died2 January 1861 (aged 65)
Sanssouci, Potsdam, Kingdom of Prussia
Burial
Crypt of the Friedenskirche, Sanssouci Park, Potsdam[1] (Heart in the Mausoleum at Charlottenburg Palace, Berlin)[2]
SpouseElisabeth Ludovika of Bavaria
HouseHohenzollern
FatherFrederick William III of Prussia
MotherLouise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
ReligionCalvinist (Prussian United)
Signature

In spite of his conservative political philosophy, he initially pursued a moderate policy of easing press censorship, releasing political prisoners and reconciling with the Catholic population of the kingdom. During the German revolutions of 1848–1849, he was initially forced to accommodate the people's revolutionary sentiments, although he rejected the title of Emperor of the Germans offered by the Frankfurt Parliament in 1849, believing that it did not have the right to make such an offer. In December 1848 he dissolved the Prussian National Assembly when he found its constitutional proposals too radical. At the urging of his ministry, which wanted to prevent a renewal of unrest, he imposed a constitution with a parliament and a strong monarch. He then used the Prussian military to help put down revolutionary forces throughout the German Confederation.

Frederick William IV had an artistic nature and an interest in architecture. He extended the building ensembles of the Berlin-Potsdam Residence Landscape, Museum Island, and the cultural landscape of the Upper Middle Rhine Valley, and he supported the completion of the Cologne Cathedral. All are now UNESCO World Heritage Sites.

From 1857 to 1861, he suffered several strokes and was left incapacitated until his death. His brother and heir-presumptive William served as regent after 1858 and then succeeded him as king.

Crown Prince edit

Born to Frederick William III and his wife Queen Louise, Frederick William was his mother's favourite son.[4] He was educated by private tutors, including the historian and statesman Friedrich Ancillon.[4] When Queen Louise died in 1810 when Frederick William was 14, he saw it as a punishment from God and linked it directly to his outlook on life. He believed that only by leading a life more pleasing to God would he be able to absolve himself of the guilt he felt for her death.[5]

Frederick William's early childhood fell during a period in which the European monarchies were confronted with the revolutionary challenge of the French Revolution. By calling the dynastic tradition into question, the execution of Louis XVI in 1793 helped create the conditions for Frederick William's later political orientation towards historical continuity and tradition.[6] Since there was a danger that he and his younger brother William might be captured by the French after the Prussians lost the Battle of Jena–Auerstedt on 14 October 1806, they were taken to Königsberg in East Prussia on 17 October 1806. After their parents arrived on 9 December 1806,[7] they fled together from the advancing troops to Memel.[8]

 
Portrait of Crown Prince Frederick William, c. 1810

After Prussia's defeat and the family's return to Berlin, Frederick William's education was adapted more to prepare him for governing. He was generally dismissive of the Prussian reforms that were then underway with the aim of modernising the state from within. His tutor Friedrich Delbrück had instilled in him a disgust of revolutionaries, so that he had no sympathy for Karl August von Hardenberg's insistence that Prussia be reorganised through a "revolution from above".[9] For Friedrich Wilhelm, the "bureaucratic absolutism of a Hardenberg" meant moving away from the "principle of the estates" that he advocated.[10]

The high point of Frederick William's youth was his participation in the campaigns against Napoleon in the Wars of Liberation of 1813/1814 that pushed the French out of Germany. In his experience with war, which showed him to be an indifferent soldier, the boundaries between patriotism and religious fervour became blurred. He saw the conflict as a crusade against the ideas of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution.[11] In many pieces of correspondence from the period, the Crown Prince wrote about religious experiences using elements of the Pietist revivalist movement, including the subjective experience of God, the power of personal prayer and individual striving for salvation and redemption.[12]

Frederick William was a Romanticist, and his devotion to the movement, which in the German states featured nostalgia for the Middle Ages, played a part in his developing a conservative worldview at an early age. In 1815, when he was twenty, the Crown Prince exerted his influence to structure the proposed new constitution of 1815, which was never enacted, in such a way that the landed aristocracy would hold the greatest power.[13] He was against the liberalisation of Germany and aspired to unify its many states within what he viewed as a historically legitimate framework, inspired by the ancient laws and customs of the Holy Roman Empire, which had been dissolved under Napoleon in 1806.

 
Queen Elisabeth Ludovica of Prussia at an unspecified date

He was a draftsman interested in both architecture and landscape gardening and was a patron of several great German artists, including architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel and composer Felix Mendelssohn. In 1823 he married Elisabeth Ludovika of Bavaria. Since she was a Roman Catholic, the preparations for the marriage included difficult negotiations which ended with her conversion to Lutheranism. There were two wedding ceremonies – one in Munich by proxy according to the Catholic rite, and the other in person in Berlin. The couple had a harmonious marriage, but after Louise had a miscarriage in 1828,[14] it remained childless.[15]

Early reign edit

Frederick William became king of Prussia on the death of his father in 1840. Through a personal union, he was also the sovereign prince of the Principality of Neuchâtel (1840–1857), which at the same time was a canton in the Swiss Confederation and the only one that was a principality. In 1842, he gave his father's menagerie at Pfaueninsel to the new Berlin Zoo, which opened its gates in 1844 as the first of its kind in Germany. Other projects during his reign – often involving his close collaboration with the architects – included the Alte Nationalgalerie (Old National Gallery) and the Neues Museum in Berlin, the Orangery Palace at Potsdam as well as the reconstruction of Stolzenfels Castle on the Rhine and Hohenzollern Castle, in the ancestral homelands of the dynasty which became part of Prussia in 1850.[15] He also enlarged and redecorated his father's Erdmannsdorf manor house.

In 1842, on the advice of Alexander von Humboldt, he founded the separate civil class of the Pour le Merite, the Order Pour le Mérite for Sciences and Arts (Orden Pour le Mérite für Wissenschaften und Künste). The civil order is still being awarded today.

Frederick William IV's accession to the throne came with great expectations among liberals and nationalists. By beginning his reign with a policy of reconciliation, the new king fulfilled their hopes during his first six months on the throne.[16][17] Through an amnesty enacted on 10 August 1840, all "political criminals" were released, politically motivated investigations and court proceedings were discontinued, and press censorship was eased.[18]

As a result of the concessions, liberals initially overlooked the fact that Frederick William IV was not of one mind with them.[19] The King intended his policy of reconciliation to restore trust in a medieval-feudal relationship of loyalty between the Prussian people and the monarch, making the liberal reform of the state along the lines of the French constitutional-parliamentary model superfluous.[20] He believed that he derived his close ties to his people from the divine right of grace, which gave him a "sacred insight into the needs of his subjects".[21] Any restriction of his de facto absolutist power seemed to him to be an irresponsible obstruction of his divinely ordained mission.[22]

Religious policy edit

Frederick William IV was deeply religious. Influenced by Romanticism and the Pietist revivalist movement, he envisioned a Christian state and believed that only Christianity could protect his subjects from revolutionary utopias and reverse the secularisation, growing materialism and other processes of modernisation that he considered harmful. For Friedrich Wilhelm, religion and politics were inextricably linked.[23][24]

 
The Cologne Cathedral in 1856. King Frederick William IV provided the impetus to complete it over 600 years after construction began.

In contrast to his father, Frederick William was sympathetic to Catholicism.[25] Under Frederick William III in 1825, the Archbishop of Cologne was arrested in a conflict over the law on mixed marriages. In order to reconcile with the Catholic population, Frederick William IV authorised the founding of the Cologne Cathedral Building Association in 1840 to promote and finance the completion of the Cologne Cathedral. Half of the funding for it came from the Prussian state treasury. For negotiations with the Roman Curia, the King announced in June 1840 that within the Ministry of Culture he would set up a department for Catholic affairs which was to consist exclusively of Catholic councillors.[26]

With the founding of the Protestant Church in Prussia in 1817, in which Calvinists and Lutherans were united, Friedrich Wilhelm's father had created an institution for all Protestants in his kingdom that was directly dependent on the sovereign as the summus episcopus (high bishop). In response, the Old Lutherans formed their own church in 1830,[27] claiming to represent the "true" Lutheran Church, and were consequently subjected to state persecution. In 1845 Frederick William lifted the ban on the formation of Old Lutheran churches and released imprisoned pastors.

The constitutional question edit

As part of his policy of reconciliation, Frederick William IV was interested in finding a solution to the question of a constitution for Prussia.[28] At the core of his political philosophy was the doctrine of the organic nation of the estates of the realm, which was based on philosophers such as Friedrich Schlegel, who wrote in 1805: "The only lasting constitution is the monarchy of the estates, tempered by priests and nobility, and it is also the oldest and best."[29] In the view of the "political romantics", the structure of the estates took the natural inequality of man into account. Individuals should fulfil the tasks and duties that serve the good of society as a whole in the place assigned to them by God.[29] In the Prussian constitutional question, Frederick William IV was not striving for the realisation of a constitutional monarchy but rather a state governed by the Christian estates. He made this clear to the governor of the province of Prussia not long after his coronation:

I feel myself [to be king] entirely by the grace of God and will feel that way with His help until the end. Without envy I leave splendour and artifice to so-called constitutional princes, who have become a fiction, an abstract concept to the people through a piece of paper [a constitution].[30]

 
Portrait of Frederick William IV, by George Hayter, circa 1843

As his alternative to parliamentary-style popular legislatures, Frederick William IV focussed his attention on the Provincial Estates, the representative bodies of the eight Prussian provinces, which had been founded in 1823.[31] In 1847 he summoned all representatives of the Prussian provincial parliaments to Berlin. He was prepared to give the United Parliament the right to discuss the financing of railways, canals and roads – specifically a request for a 25 million thaler bond for building the Berlin to Königsberg railway. He did not want to levy new taxes or take out loans without the United Parliament's consent, envisioning that their approval would not restrict his power but strengthen it by eliminating future constitutional demands.[32]

In his opening speech, Frederick William reiterated that he did not want a "piece of paper" to come between himself and the people and replace the "old, sacred loyalty with it".[33] He told the deputies of the limits he saw on their duties: "... it is not your job to represent opinions, to want to bring the opinions of the times to the fore. ... That is completely un-German and, beyond that, completely impractical."[34]

The majority of the deputies nevertheless did not see themselves as representatives of the estates but of the Prussian people.[35] On 20 April 1847, the parliament sent an address to the King calling for a regular convocation. Laws, they wrote, should only come into force with the consent of the United Parliament. Discrimination based on the estates should be abolished and the citizenry guaranteed legal protection against arbitrary measures by the state. If their demands were not fulfilled, they concluded, the parliament would be forced to reject the King's spending plans.[33] Frederick William stopped attending parliamentary sessions and on 26 June 1847 dissolved the United Parliament.[36]

With the failure of the First United Parliament, the government not only lost its ability to act on fiscal policy – the Prussian National Debt Act of January 1820 stipulating that the government could only take on new debt if it was co-guaranteed by the "imperial estates"[37] remained in force – but also faced increased doubts within Prussia about the legitimacy of the existing state order.[38]

The Industrial Revolution edit

During the reign of Frederick William IV, the Ruhr region, Silesia and Berlin slowly developed into centres of industrialisation.[39] In spite of his politically backward-looking attitude, Frederick William supported the technological progress brought about by the Industrial Revolution, notably by using government bonds to promote the expansion of the railway network.[40] The rapid industrial growth was accompanied by social tensions to which the King did not respond with any significant policies beyond donations to private social associations. In 1844, for example, he provided the Association for the Welfare of the Working Class with 15,000 thalers. The next year he issued a General Prussian Industrial Code that included a ban on strikes and prison sentences of up to a year for conspiring to encourage one.[41]

The Revolution of 1848/1849 edit

Outbreak edit

The overthrow of the French July Monarchy on 24 February 1848 triggered a revolutionary movement throughout Europe. Frederick William IV called for a congress of German states that was to meet in Dresden on 25 March. By discussing reform of the German Confederation, the King hoped to appease the people's revolutionary sentiments, but before he could implement his plans, they were overtaken by the events of the revolution in Berlin.[42]

 
Painting of a barricade battle in Berlin's Alexanderplatz in 1848, with the rebellion's black, red and gold flag prominent in the background

The sound of the fighting could be heard in the Berlin Palace. Although the Berlin barricade battle was one of the most costly incidents of the March Revolution, with 300 deaths among the demonstrators at the hands of Prussian troops, the King rejected any responsibility and instead spread the false report of a foreign conspiracy in his manifesto 'To my dear Berliners':[43] "A gang of villains, mostly consisting of foreigners, ... has become the ghastly author of bloodshed."[44]

On 21 March 1848, the King, or rather his camarilla, initiated an apparent change of course by placing Frederick William IV at the head of the revolution, whereas the truth was that he lacked the means to pursue a policy independent of the citizens' movement. The King announced that he would support the formation of an all-German parliament, one of the revolution's key demands. On 21 March 1848, he rode through the city wearing a black, red and gold armband[45] – the colours of the revolution – and had an officer dressed in civilian clothes carry a similarly coloured flag in front of him. The King repeatedly stopped to make improvised speeches to affirm his alleged support for German unity.

 
Frederick William IV riding through the streets of Berlin on 21 March 1848. The caption reads "His Majesty Frederick William IV of Prussia in the streets of his capital proclaims the unity of the German nation".

The next day he secretly wrote to his brother William: "I had to voluntarily raise the Reich colours yesterday in order to save everything. If the gamble is successful ... I will take them down again!"[46]

On 29 March 1848, Frederick William appointed a liberal government led by Minister President Ludolf Camphausen and Finance Minister David Hansemann. The following day, the King founded a secret secondary cabinet, the ministre occulte, as a counter to Camphausen's government. The courtly interest group, which included General Leopold von Gerlach, his brother Ernst Ludwig von Gerlach and Count Anton of Stolberg-Wernigerode, talked the King out of his short-term plans to abdicate.[47] Otto von Bismarck, the future chancellor of a united Germany, joined the group towards the end of 1848.

Prussian National Assembly and the Frankfurt Parliament edit

 
With the imperial crown offered to him by the parliamentarians of the Frankfurt National Assembly in hand, Prussian king Frederick William IV decides whether or not to accept it by counting off the buttons on his jacket: "Should I take it? Should I not? Should I?! Buttons, you want me to! Well, that's exactly why I won't!!", c. 1849

The second United Parliament called by Frederick William on 2 April 1848 announced elections to form a Prussian National Assembly, which convened in Berlin on 22 May. Frederick William IV submitted a draft constitution in which the balance of power continued to favour the king's dominant position in the state.[48] It stipulated that the army and bureaucracy were answerable to the king and not the National Assembly. It also enshrined his view that he was "King by the grace of God" and that the constitution was merely an "agreement between the crown and the people".

At the beginning of April, a national pre-parliament sitting at Frankfurt-am-Main decided to work with the Federal Convention of the German Confederation to form a national constitutional assembly which would write a new constitution for the Confederation. Elections were held for it on 1 May 1848. Of the 379 members who attended the Frankfurt Parliament's first session on 18 May, 132 were from Prussia.

Counter-revolution edit

End of the National Assembly and imposed constitution edit

The Prussian National Assembly rejected the Camphausen government's draft constitution on 20 June 1848. Left-wing forces then began to assert themselves more and more clearly.[49] The words "by the grace of God" were removed from the draft on 12 October, openly calling into question the divine right of kings.[50] The break with the crown culminated on 31 October when the Assembly abolished nobility, titles and privileges.[51] Frederick William IV then launched a political counterattack. On 1 November he appointed his uncle Frederick William of Brandenburg, who came from the conservative military camp, as minister president of Prussia.[52] Unlike previous minister presidents during the revolutionary period, Brandenburg was closer to the King than to the National Assembly. The National Assembly sent 25 deputies to the King on 2 November to protest against Brandenburg's appointment. He cancelled the audience after the deputies had read out their request.

 
Caricature of Frederick William IV, helped by General von Wrangel, resisting the demands of the National Assembly for a constitution: "No sheet of paper shall come between me and my people." From Satyrische Zeitbilder #28, 1848

Under the pretext of removing the National Assembly from the pressure of the Berlin streets, the King told the deputies that they would be moved to Brandenburg an der Havel on 9 November and adjourned until 27 November.[53] After the majority refused to comply, the King ordered General Friedrich von Wrangel to march through the Brandenburg Gate at the head of 13,000 soldiers and sixty guns. That Wrangel met with no resistance was due in part to the disillusionment of the craftsmen and industrial workers with the revolution. It had done nothing to change their economic hardship, which had led to isolated riots. Although the middle and upper classes sympathised with the workers, they did not want a violent social upheaval and sided with the King.[54]

On 5 December the King dissolved the Prussian National Assembly and imposed the Constitution of 1848. Although Frederick William IV personally opposed the idea of introducing a constitution, the majority of his ministry urged him to take the step in order to prevent protests from flaring up again.[55] The first Parliament of Prussia then modified the constitution with the King's cooperation, and on 31 January 1850, the Constitution of 1850 was promulgated.[56] The Parliament had two chambers – an aristocratic upper house and a lower house elected by all male Prussians over 25 years of age using a three-class franchise that weighted votes based on the amount of taxes paid,[57] with the result that the wealthy had far more influence than the poor. The constitution reserved to the king the power of appointing all ministers, re-established the conservative district assemblies and provincial diets and guaranteed that the civil service and the military remained firmly under control of the king. It also contained a number of liberal elements such as jury courts and a catalogue of fundamental rights that included freedom of religion, speech and the press.[58] It was a more liberal system than had existed in Prussia before 1848, but it was still a conservative form of government in which the monarch, the aristocracy, and the military retained most of the power. The constitution of 1850 remained in effect, with numerous amendments, until the dissolution of the Prussian kingdom in 1918.

Refusal of the imperial title edit

Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria had made it clear in November 1848 that he would not accept the title of "Emperor of the Germans" from the Frankfurt National Assembly because the Frankfurt Constitution would have required German-speaking Austria to have a separate constitution, government and administration from the rest of the Empire.[59] On 28 March 1849, the Assembly elected Frederick William IV as Emperor of the Germans, but he refused the crown. In a letter to a confidant, he wrote: "I can call God to witness that I do not want it, for the simple reason that Austria will then be separated from Germany."[60]

The exclusion of Austria would have ruined Frederick William IV's vision of the renewal of a Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation, of which Austria had been part for centuries. Accepting the imperial dignity would also have meant an open foreign policy snub of Austria and probably have provoked a war.[61] Even more important was the fact that, in the King's opinion, the imperial dignity could only be conferred by the princes or a college of electors, as had been the case until 1806. As a representative of the principle of monarchical legitimacy, he detested the idea of a unilateral taking of power that would have violated the historical rights of other German monarchs.[62] The crown offered by representatives of the people was furthermore unacceptable to Frederick William, whose monarchical self-image was based on the traditional idea of divine right and who rejected the idea of popular sovereignty. In a letter dated 13 December 1848, Frederick William stated to the Prussian ambassador to England, Christian Charles Josias von Bunsen:

Such an imaginary hoop [the crown] baked from dirt and weeds – should a legitimate king of Prussia be pleased with it? [...] I tell you bluntly: If the thousand-year-old crown of the German nation, which has been dormant for 42 years, is to be awarded once again, it is I and those like me who will award it.[63]

The Erfurt Union edit

 
March/April 1850: states that had delegates elected to the Erfurt Parliament (yellow), states part of the Four Kings Alliance (dark red)

King Frederick Augustus II of Saxony provoked an uprising in Dresden in May 1849 by refusing to accept the Frankfurt Constitution. He wrote a letter to the Prussian king urging him to put down the uprising by force. On 5 May 1849, Frederick William sent Prussian troops to Dresden under Colonel Friedrich von Waldersee, who took control of the city on 9 May. Seven hundred revolutionaries were taken prisoner and 250 killed in the fighting.[64] The suppression of the uprising in Saxony strengthened Prussia's negotiating position in its attempt to establish a united German federal state of princes under Prussian leadership.

The basis for the union was the Three Kings' Alliance of 26 May 1849 between Prussia, the Kingdom of Saxony and the Kingdom of Hanover. The three monarchs committed themselves for a period of one year to work together to realise a conservative imperial constitution based on the Prussian three-class electoral system.[65] Ernst August I of Hanover and Friedrich August II of Saxony, however, only heeded the KIng's request while absolutist Austria was tied up with uprisings in Hungary.

Since eight individual German states, including the Kingdom of Bavaria and the Kingdom of Württemberg, did not participate in the Erfurt Union from the outset, Frederick William IV began to lose interest in the project.[66] By the winter of 1849, the Kingdoms of Hanover and Saxony had withdrawn their consent as well.

In contrast to Prussia, Austria wanted to restore the German Confederation and opposed Prussia's Erfurt Union plans. Saxony, Hanover, Bavaria and Württemberg sided with Austria in the Four Kings' Alliance. With the backing of the conservative opponents of the Erfurt Union in the Prussian government, Austria was able to revive the German Confederation, which had been inactive since the 1848 revolutions. In the Punctation of Olmütz, Prussia declared its willingness to return to the German Confederation without Austria having assured it of legal equality in the leadership of the Confederation.[67]

Other political events edit

In addition to the 1848 revolution and the constitutional question that dominated Frederick William IV's reign, there were a number of other notable political events during his time on the throne:

  • The Rhine Crisis of 1840 arose when French Prime Minister Adolphe Thiers demanded that the Rhine be reinstated as France's eastern border. The ensuing diplomatic crisis stoked German nationalism and led the German Confederation to improve its defences in the west. The tension ended when Thiers resigned.
     
    The Hohenzollern Castle in the Province of Hohenzollern. Its construction between 1846 and 1867 was begun by Friedrich Wilhelm IV on the site of the family's two earlier castles.
  • The First Schleswig War in 1848 was a conflict between German forces and Denmark over control of Schleswig and Holstein. Prussia led troops into Denmark but had to back down under pressure from the European great powers.
  • The Province of Hohenzollern in southern Germany, the ancestral home of the Hohenzollerns, was created and annexed to Prussia in 1850.
  • In the Jade Treaty of 1853, Prussia, which until then had had access to the sea only on the Baltic, purchased land on the North Sea, where the city of Wilhelmshaven was built.
  • The Neuchâtel Crisis (1856–1857) was dispute over control of the Principality of Neuchâtel in the Swiss Confederation that led to Prussia cede its historic claim.

Later years edit

In his final years, the King was affected by a serious illness, the symptoms of which, from the perspective of the medical knowledge of the era, appeared to be a "mental illness".[68] According to current medical knowledge, Friedrich Wilhelm suffered from a "cerebral vascular disease", a "cerebral arteriosclerosis", which "could not be described as a mental illness".[69] It is likely that psychopathological abnormalities occurred before the strokes he suffered, making him barely able to perform his government offices.[70]

The strokes, which began on 14 July 1857, affected his speech centre. After Prince William's term acting as deputy for the King had been extended three times, the ailing Frederick William signed a regency charter for him on 7 October 1858, based on an expert opinion from the royal personal physicians.[71] The charter included the formal possibility of a resumption of official duties.

The signing of the Regency Charter heralded the New Era in Prussia, marking the end of Frederick William IV's idea of government. Prince Regent William dismissed the reactionary minister president Otto von Manteuffel and recruited Karl Anton von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen from the liberal-nationalist camp.[72] He also dismissed the courtiers who had belonged to Frederick William IV's camarilla.

Death and burial edit

 
The crypt containing the sarcophagi of Frederick William IV and his wife Elisabeth in the Church of Peace, Sanssouci Park in Potsdam

On 24 November 1859, the king suffered a stroke that paralysed his left side.[73] Since he was no longer able to be transported, the court remained at Sanssouci. On 4 November 1860, he lost consciousness after another stroke, and on 2 January 1861 he died. In accordance with his testamentary instructions from 1854, the King was buried in the Friedenskirche in Potsdam after his heart had been removed and buried separately alongside his parents in the mausoleum in Charlottenburg Palace Park.

Honours edit

German decorations[74]
Foreign decorations[74]

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dorgerloh, Hartmut, ed. (18 August 2011). Palaces and Gardens. Prussian Palaces and Gardens Foundation Berlin-Brandenburg. p. 4.
  2. ^ Stiftung Preußische Schlösser und Gärten Berlin-Brandenburg (1992–2012). Hartmut Dorgerloh (ed.). "König Friedrich Wilhelm IV". Potsdam, Brandenburg, Germany: Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kultur des Landes Brandenburg. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
  3. ^ Koch, H.W. (2014). A History of Prussia. Milton Park, UK: Taylor & Francis. p. 227. ISBN 978-1317873082.
  4. ^ a b Koch 2014, p. 227.
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  6. ^ Herre, Franz (2007). Friedrich Wilhelm IV. Der andere Preußenkönig [Frederick William IV. The Other Prussian King] (in German). Gernsbach: Katz. p. 4. ISBN 978-3-938047-22-4.
  7. ^ Schönpflug, Daniel (2010). Luise von Preußen: Königin der Herzen [Louise of Prussia: Queen of Hearts] (in German) (3rd ed.). Munich: C. H. Beck. p. 222. ISBN 978-3-406-59813-5.
  8. ^ Herre 2007, p. 15.
  9. ^ Herre 2007, p. 19.
  10. ^ Giersberg, Hans-Joachim, ed. (1995). Friedrich Wilhelm IV., Künstler und König [Frederick William IV, Artist and King] (in German). Frankfurt am Main: H.W. Fichter Edition. p. 24.
  11. ^ Galle, Maja (2002). Der Erzengel Michael in der deutschen Kunst des 19. Jahrhunderts [The Archangel Michael in the German Art of the 19th Century] (in German). Munich: Utz. p. 45. ISBN 978-3831601851.
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  13. ^ "Punctation of Olmütz". Encyclopedia Britannica. 22 November 2023. Retrieved 6 January 2024.
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External links edit

Frederick William IV of Prussia
Born: 15 October 1795 Died: 2 January 1861
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Prussia
7 June 1840 – 2 January 1861
Succeeded by
Grand Duke of Posen
7 June 1840 – 5 December 1848
Annexed to Prussia
Prince of Neuchâtel
7 June 1840 – 1857
Neuchâtel Crisis

frederick, william, prussia, frederick, william, german, friedrich, wilhelm, october, 1795, january, 1861, eldest, successor, frederick, william, prussia, king, prussia, from, june, 1840, until, death, january, 1861, also, referred, romanticist, throne, deeply. Frederick William IV German Friedrich Wilhelm IV 15 October 1795 3 2 January 1861 the eldest son and successor of Frederick William III of Prussia was king of Prussia from 7 June 1840 until his death on 2 January 1861 Also referred to as the romanticist on the throne he was deeply religious and believed that he ruled by divine right He feared revolutions and his ideal state was one governed by the Christian estates of the realm rather than a constitutional monarchy Frederick William IVFrederick William IV in 1847King of PrussiaReign7 June 1840 2 January 1861PredecessorFrederick William IIISuccessorWilliam IRegentPrince William 1858 1861 President of the Erfurt UnionReign26 May 1849 29 November 1850Emperor elect of GermansReign18 May 1848 30 May 1849Born15 October 1795Kronprinzenpalais Berlin Kingdom of PrussiaDied2 January 1861 aged 65 Sanssouci Potsdam Kingdom of PrussiaBurialCrypt of the Friedenskirche Sanssouci Park Potsdam 1 Heart in the Mausoleum at Charlottenburg Palace Berlin 2 SpouseElisabeth Ludovika of BavariaHouseHohenzollernFatherFrederick William III of PrussiaMotherLouise of Mecklenburg StrelitzReligionCalvinist Prussian United SignatureIn spite of his conservative political philosophy he initially pursued a moderate policy of easing press censorship releasing political prisoners and reconciling with the Catholic population of the kingdom During the German revolutions of 1848 1849 he was initially forced to accommodate the people s revolutionary sentiments although he rejected the title of Emperor of the Germans offered by the Frankfurt Parliament in 1849 believing that it did not have the right to make such an offer In December 1848 he dissolved the Prussian National Assembly when he found its constitutional proposals too radical At the urging of his ministry which wanted to prevent a renewal of unrest he imposed a constitution with a parliament and a strong monarch He then used the Prussian military to help put down revolutionary forces throughout the German Confederation Frederick William IV had an artistic nature and an interest in architecture He extended the building ensembles of the Berlin Potsdam Residence Landscape Museum Island and the cultural landscape of the Upper Middle Rhine Valley and he supported the completion of the Cologne Cathedral All are now UNESCO World Heritage Sites From 1857 to 1861 he suffered several strokes and was left incapacitated until his death His brother and heir presumptive William served as regent after 1858 and then succeeded him as king Contents 1 Crown Prince 2 Early reign 2 1 Religious policy 2 2 The constitutional question 2 3 The Industrial Revolution 3 The Revolution of 1848 1849 3 1 Outbreak 3 2 Prussian National Assembly and the Frankfurt Parliament 4 Counter revolution 4 1 End of the National Assembly and imposed constitution 4 2 Refusal of the imperial title 4 3 The Erfurt Union 5 Other political events 6 Later years 6 1 Death and burial 7 Honours 8 Ancestry 9 References 10 External linksCrown Prince editBorn to Frederick William III and his wife Queen Louise Frederick William was his mother s favourite son 4 He was educated by private tutors including the historian and statesman Friedrich Ancillon 4 When Queen Louise died in 1810 when Frederick William was 14 he saw it as a punishment from God and linked it directly to his outlook on life He believed that only by leading a life more pleasing to God would he be able to absolve himself of the guilt he felt for her death 5 Frederick William s early childhood fell during a period in which the European monarchies were confronted with the revolutionary challenge of the French Revolution By calling the dynastic tradition into question the execution of Louis XVI in 1793 helped create the conditions for Frederick William s later political orientation towards historical continuity and tradition 6 Since there was a danger that he and his younger brother William might be captured by the French after the Prussians lost the Battle of Jena Auerstedt on 14 October 1806 they were taken to Konigsberg in East Prussia on 17 October 1806 After their parents arrived on 9 December 1806 7 they fled together from the advancing troops to Memel 8 nbsp Portrait of Crown Prince Frederick William c 1810After Prussia s defeat and the family s return to Berlin Frederick William s education was adapted more to prepare him for governing He was generally dismissive of the Prussian reforms that were then underway with the aim of modernising the state from within His tutor Friedrich Delbruck had instilled in him a disgust of revolutionaries so that he had no sympathy for Karl August von Hardenberg s insistence that Prussia be reorganised through a revolution from above 9 For Friedrich Wilhelm the bureaucratic absolutism of a Hardenberg meant moving away from the principle of the estates that he advocated 10 The high point of Frederick William s youth was his participation in the campaigns against Napoleon in the Wars of Liberation of 1813 1814 that pushed the French out of Germany In his experience with war which showed him to be an indifferent soldier the boundaries between patriotism and religious fervour became blurred He saw the conflict as a crusade against the ideas of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution 11 In many pieces of correspondence from the period the Crown Prince wrote about religious experiences using elements of the Pietist revivalist movement including the subjective experience of God the power of personal prayer and individual striving for salvation and redemption 12 Frederick William was a Romanticist and his devotion to the movement which in the German states featured nostalgia for the Middle Ages played a part in his developing a conservative worldview at an early age In 1815 when he was twenty the Crown Prince exerted his influence to structure the proposed new constitution of 1815 which was never enacted in such a way that the landed aristocracy would hold the greatest power 13 He was against the liberalisation of Germany and aspired to unify its many states within what he viewed as a historically legitimate framework inspired by the ancient laws and customs of the Holy Roman Empire which had been dissolved under Napoleon in 1806 nbsp Queen Elisabeth Ludovica of Prussia at an unspecified dateHe was a draftsman interested in both architecture and landscape gardening and was a patron of several great German artists including architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel and composer Felix Mendelssohn In 1823 he married Elisabeth Ludovika of Bavaria Since she was a Roman Catholic the preparations for the marriage included difficult negotiations which ended with her conversion to Lutheranism There were two wedding ceremonies one in Munich by proxy according to the Catholic rite and the other in person in Berlin The couple had a harmonious marriage but after Louise had a miscarriage in 1828 14 it remained childless 15 Early reign editFrederick William became king of Prussia on the death of his father in 1840 Through a personal union he was also the sovereign prince of the Principality of Neuchatel 1840 1857 which at the same time was a canton in the Swiss Confederation and the only one that was a principality In 1842 he gave his father s menagerie at Pfaueninsel to the new Berlin Zoo which opened its gates in 1844 as the first of its kind in Germany Other projects during his reign often involving his close collaboration with the architects included the Alte Nationalgalerie Old National Gallery and the Neues Museum in Berlin the Orangery Palace at Potsdam as well as the reconstruction of Stolzenfels Castle on the Rhine and Hohenzollern Castle in the ancestral homelands of the dynasty which became part of Prussia in 1850 15 He also enlarged and redecorated his father s Erdmannsdorf manor house In 1842 on the advice of Alexander von Humboldt he founded the separate civil class of the Pour le Merite the Order Pour le Merite for Sciences and Arts Orden Pour le Merite fur Wissenschaften und Kunste The civil order is still being awarded today Frederick William IV s accession to the throne came with great expectations among liberals and nationalists By beginning his reign with a policy of reconciliation the new king fulfilled their hopes during his first six months on the throne 16 17 Through an amnesty enacted on 10 August 1840 all political criminals were released politically motivated investigations and court proceedings were discontinued and press censorship was eased 18 As a result of the concessions liberals initially overlooked the fact that Frederick William IV was not of one mind with them 19 The King intended his policy of reconciliation to restore trust in a medieval feudal relationship of loyalty between the Prussian people and the monarch making the liberal reform of the state along the lines of the French constitutional parliamentary model superfluous 20 He believed that he derived his close ties to his people from the divine right of grace which gave him a sacred insight into the needs of his subjects 21 Any restriction of his de facto absolutist power seemed to him to be an irresponsible obstruction of his divinely ordained mission 22 Religious policy edit Frederick William IV was deeply religious Influenced by Romanticism and the Pietist revivalist movement he envisioned a Christian state and believed that only Christianity could protect his subjects from revolutionary utopias and reverse the secularisation growing materialism and other processes of modernisation that he considered harmful For Friedrich Wilhelm religion and politics were inextricably linked 23 24 nbsp The Cologne Cathedral in 1856 King Frederick William IV provided the impetus to complete it over 600 years after construction began In contrast to his father Frederick William was sympathetic to Catholicism 25 Under Frederick William III in 1825 the Archbishop of Cologne was arrested in a conflict over the law on mixed marriages In order to reconcile with the Catholic population Frederick William IV authorised the founding of the Cologne Cathedral Building Association in 1840 to promote and finance the completion of the Cologne Cathedral Half of the funding for it came from the Prussian state treasury For negotiations with the Roman Curia the King announced in June 1840 that within the Ministry of Culture he would set up a department for Catholic affairs which was to consist exclusively of Catholic councillors 26 With the founding of the Protestant Church in Prussia in 1817 in which Calvinists and Lutherans were united Friedrich Wilhelm s father had created an institution for all Protestants in his kingdom that was directly dependent on the sovereign as the summus episcopus high bishop In response the Old Lutherans formed their own church in 1830 27 claiming to represent the true Lutheran Church and were consequently subjected to state persecution In 1845 Frederick William lifted the ban on the formation of Old Lutheran churches and released imprisoned pastors The constitutional question editAs part of his policy of reconciliation Frederick William IV was interested in finding a solution to the question of a constitution for Prussia 28 At the core of his political philosophy was the doctrine of the organic nation of the estates of the realm which was based on philosophers such as Friedrich Schlegel who wrote in 1805 The only lasting constitution is the monarchy of the estates tempered by priests and nobility and it is also the oldest and best 29 In the view of the political romantics the structure of the estates took the natural inequality of man into account Individuals should fulfil the tasks and duties that serve the good of society as a whole in the place assigned to them by God 29 In the Prussian constitutional question Frederick William IV was not striving for the realisation of a constitutional monarchy but rather a state governed by the Christian estates He made this clear to the governor of the province of Prussia not long after his coronation I feel myself to be king entirely by the grace of God and will feel that way with His help until the end Without envy I leave splendour and artifice to so called constitutional princes who have become a fiction an abstract concept to the people through a piece of paper a constitution 30 nbsp Portrait of Frederick William IV by George Hayter circa 1843As his alternative to parliamentary style popular legislatures Frederick William IV focussed his attention on the Provincial Estates the representative bodies of the eight Prussian provinces which had been founded in 1823 31 In 1847 he summoned all representatives of the Prussian provincial parliaments to Berlin He was prepared to give the United Parliament the right to discuss the financing of railways canals and roads specifically a request for a 25 million thaler bond for building the Berlin to Konigsberg railway He did not want to levy new taxes or take out loans without the United Parliament s consent envisioning that their approval would not restrict his power but strengthen it by eliminating future constitutional demands 32 In his opening speech Frederick William reiterated that he did not want a piece of paper to come between himself and the people and replace the old sacred loyalty with it 33 He told the deputies of the limits he saw on their duties it is not your job to represent opinions to want to bring the opinions of the times to the fore That is completely un German and beyond that completely impractical 34 The majority of the deputies nevertheless did not see themselves as representatives of the estates but of the Prussian people 35 On 20 April 1847 the parliament sent an address to the King calling for a regular convocation Laws they wrote should only come into force with the consent of the United Parliament Discrimination based on the estates should be abolished and the citizenry guaranteed legal protection against arbitrary measures by the state If their demands were not fulfilled they concluded the parliament would be forced to reject the King s spending plans 33 Frederick William stopped attending parliamentary sessions and on 26 June 1847 dissolved the United Parliament 36 With the failure of the First United Parliament the government not only lost its ability to act on fiscal policy the Prussian National Debt Act of January 1820 stipulating that the government could only take on new debt if it was co guaranteed by the imperial estates 37 remained in force but also faced increased doubts within Prussia about the legitimacy of the existing state order 38 The Industrial Revolution edit During the reign of Frederick William IV the Ruhr region Silesia and Berlin slowly developed into centres of industrialisation 39 In spite of his politically backward looking attitude Frederick William supported the technological progress brought about by the Industrial Revolution notably by using government bonds to promote the expansion of the railway network 40 The rapid industrial growth was accompanied by social tensions to which the King did not respond with any significant policies beyond donations to private social associations In 1844 for example he provided the Association for the Welfare of the Working Class with 15 000 thalers The next year he issued a General Prussian Industrial Code that included a ban on strikes and prison sentences of up to a year for conspiring to encourage one 41 The Revolution of 1848 1849 editMain articles German revolutions of 1848 1849 and Revolutions of 1848 Outbreak editThe overthrow of the French July Monarchy on 24 February 1848 triggered a revolutionary movement throughout Europe Frederick William IV called for a congress of German states that was to meet in Dresden on 25 March By discussing reform of the German Confederation the King hoped to appease the people s revolutionary sentiments but before he could implement his plans they were overtaken by the events of the revolution in Berlin 42 nbsp Painting of a barricade battle in Berlin s Alexanderplatz in 1848 with the rebellion s black red and gold flag prominent in the backgroundThe sound of the fighting could be heard in the Berlin Palace Although the Berlin barricade battle was one of the most costly incidents of the March Revolution with 300 deaths among the demonstrators at the hands of Prussian troops the King rejected any responsibility and instead spread the false report of a foreign conspiracy in his manifesto To my dear Berliners 43 A gang of villains mostly consisting of foreigners has become the ghastly author of bloodshed 44 On 21 March 1848 the King or rather his camarilla initiated an apparent change of course by placing Frederick William IV at the head of the revolution whereas the truth was that he lacked the means to pursue a policy independent of the citizens movement The King announced that he would support the formation of an all German parliament one of the revolution s key demands On 21 March 1848 he rode through the city wearing a black red and gold armband 45 the colours of the revolution and had an officer dressed in civilian clothes carry a similarly coloured flag in front of him The King repeatedly stopped to make improvised speeches to affirm his alleged support for German unity nbsp Frederick William IV riding through the streets of Berlin on 21 March 1848 The caption reads His Majesty Frederick William IV of Prussia in the streets of his capital proclaims the unity of the German nation The next day he secretly wrote to his brother William I had to voluntarily raise the Reich colours yesterday in order to save everything If the gamble is successful I will take them down again 46 On 29 March 1848 Frederick William appointed a liberal government led by Minister President Ludolf Camphausen and Finance Minister David Hansemann The following day the King founded a secret secondary cabinet the ministre occulte as a counter to Camphausen s government The courtly interest group which included General Leopold von Gerlach his brother Ernst Ludwig von Gerlach and Count Anton of Stolberg Wernigerode talked the King out of his short term plans to abdicate 47 Otto von Bismarck the future chancellor of a united Germany joined the group towards the end of 1848 Prussian National Assembly and the Frankfurt Parliament edit nbsp With the imperial crown offered to him by the parliamentarians of the Frankfurt National Assembly in hand Prussian king Frederick William IV decides whether or not to accept it by counting off the buttons on his jacket Should I take it Should I not Should I Buttons you want me to Well that s exactly why I won t c 1849The second United Parliament called by Frederick William on 2 April 1848 announced elections to form a Prussian National Assembly which convened in Berlin on 22 May Frederick William IV submitted a draft constitution in which the balance of power continued to favour the king s dominant position in the state 48 It stipulated that the army and bureaucracy were answerable to the king and not the National Assembly It also enshrined his view that he was King by the grace of God and that the constitution was merely an agreement between the crown and the people At the beginning of April a national pre parliament sitting at Frankfurt am Main decided to work with the Federal Convention of the German Confederation to form a national constitutional assembly which would write a new constitution for the Confederation Elections were held for it on 1 May 1848 Of the 379 members who attended the Frankfurt Parliament s first session on 18 May 132 were from Prussia Counter revolution editEnd of the National Assembly and imposed constitution edit Main articles Constitution of Prussia 1848 and Constitution of Prussia 1850 The Prussian National Assembly rejected the Camphausen government s draft constitution on 20 June 1848 Left wing forces then began to assert themselves more and more clearly 49 The words by the grace of God were removed from the draft on 12 October openly calling into question the divine right of kings 50 The break with the crown culminated on 31 October when the Assembly abolished nobility titles and privileges 51 Frederick William IV then launched a political counterattack On 1 November he appointed his uncle Frederick William of Brandenburg who came from the conservative military camp as minister president of Prussia 52 Unlike previous minister presidents during the revolutionary period Brandenburg was closer to the King than to the National Assembly The National Assembly sent 25 deputies to the King on 2 November to protest against Brandenburg s appointment He cancelled the audience after the deputies had read out their request nbsp Caricature of Frederick William IV helped by General von Wrangel resisting the demands of the National Assembly for a constitution No sheet of paper shall come between me and my people From Satyrische Zeitbilder 28 1848Under the pretext of removing the National Assembly from the pressure of the Berlin streets the King told the deputies that they would be moved to Brandenburg an der Havel on 9 November and adjourned until 27 November 53 After the majority refused to comply the King ordered General Friedrich von Wrangel to march through the Brandenburg Gate at the head of 13 000 soldiers and sixty guns That Wrangel met with no resistance was due in part to the disillusionment of the craftsmen and industrial workers with the revolution It had done nothing to change their economic hardship which had led to isolated riots Although the middle and upper classes sympathised with the workers they did not want a violent social upheaval and sided with the King 54 On 5 December the King dissolved the Prussian National Assembly and imposed the Constitution of 1848 Although Frederick William IV personally opposed the idea of introducing a constitution the majority of his ministry urged him to take the step in order to prevent protests from flaring up again 55 The first Parliament of Prussia then modified the constitution with the King s cooperation and on 31 January 1850 the Constitution of 1850 was promulgated 56 The Parliament had two chambers an aristocratic upper house and a lower house elected by all male Prussians over 25 years of age using a three class franchise that weighted votes based on the amount of taxes paid 57 with the result that the wealthy had far more influence than the poor The constitution reserved to the king the power of appointing all ministers re established the conservative district assemblies and provincial diets and guaranteed that the civil service and the military remained firmly under control of the king It also contained a number of liberal elements such as jury courts and a catalogue of fundamental rights that included freedom of religion speech and the press 58 It was a more liberal system than had existed in Prussia before 1848 but it was still a conservative form of government in which the monarch the aristocracy and the military retained most of the power The constitution of 1850 remained in effect with numerous amendments until the dissolution of the Prussian kingdom in 1918 Refusal of the imperial title edit Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria had made it clear in November 1848 that he would not accept the title of Emperor of the Germans from the Frankfurt National Assembly because the Frankfurt Constitution would have required German speaking Austria to have a separate constitution government and administration from the rest of the Empire 59 On 28 March 1849 the Assembly elected Frederick William IV as Emperor of the Germans but he refused the crown In a letter to a confidant he wrote I can call God to witness that I do not want it for the simple reason that Austria will then be separated from Germany 60 The exclusion of Austria would have ruined Frederick William IV s vision of the renewal of a Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation of which Austria had been part for centuries Accepting the imperial dignity would also have meant an open foreign policy snub of Austria and probably have provoked a war 61 Even more important was the fact that in the King s opinion the imperial dignity could only be conferred by the princes or a college of electors as had been the case until 1806 As a representative of the principle of monarchical legitimacy he detested the idea of a unilateral taking of power that would have violated the historical rights of other German monarchs 62 The crown offered by representatives of the people was furthermore unacceptable to Frederick William whose monarchical self image was based on the traditional idea of divine right and who rejected the idea of popular sovereignty In a letter dated 13 December 1848 Frederick William stated to the Prussian ambassador to England Christian Charles Josias von Bunsen Such an imaginary hoop the crown baked from dirt and weeds should a legitimate king of Prussia be pleased with it I tell you bluntly If the thousand year old crown of the German nation which has been dormant for 42 years is to be awarded once again it is I and those like me who will award it 63 The Erfurt Union edit Main article Erfurt Union nbsp March April 1850 states that had delegates elected to the Erfurt Parliament yellow states part of the Four Kings Alliance dark red King Frederick Augustus II of Saxony provoked an uprising in Dresden in May 1849 by refusing to accept the Frankfurt Constitution He wrote a letter to the Prussian king urging him to put down the uprising by force On 5 May 1849 Frederick William sent Prussian troops to Dresden under Colonel Friedrich von Waldersee who took control of the city on 9 May Seven hundred revolutionaries were taken prisoner and 250 killed in the fighting 64 The suppression of the uprising in Saxony strengthened Prussia s negotiating position in its attempt to establish a united German federal state of princes under Prussian leadership The basis for the union was the Three Kings Alliance of 26 May 1849 between Prussia the Kingdom of Saxony and the Kingdom of Hanover The three monarchs committed themselves for a period of one year to work together to realise a conservative imperial constitution based on the Prussian three class electoral system 65 Ernst August I of Hanover and Friedrich August II of Saxony however only heeded the KIng s request while absolutist Austria was tied up with uprisings in Hungary Since eight individual German states including the Kingdom of Bavaria and the Kingdom of Wurttemberg did not participate in the Erfurt Union from the outset Frederick William IV began to lose interest in the project 66 By the winter of 1849 the Kingdoms of Hanover and Saxony had withdrawn their consent as well In contrast to Prussia Austria wanted to restore the German Confederation and opposed Prussia s Erfurt Union plans Saxony Hanover Bavaria and Wurttemberg sided with Austria in the Four Kings Alliance With the backing of the conservative opponents of the Erfurt Union in the Prussian government Austria was able to revive the German Confederation which had been inactive since the 1848 revolutions In the Punctation of Olmutz Prussia declared its willingness to return to the German Confederation without Austria having assured it of legal equality in the leadership of the Confederation 67 Other political events editIn addition to the 1848 revolution and the constitutional question that dominated Frederick William IV s reign there were a number of other notable political events during his time on the throne The Rhine Crisis of 1840 arose when French Prime Minister Adolphe Thiers demanded that the Rhine be reinstated as France s eastern border The ensuing diplomatic crisis stoked German nationalism and led the German Confederation to improve its defences in the west The tension ended when Thiers resigned nbsp The Hohenzollern Castle in the Province of Hohenzollern Its construction between 1846 and 1867 was begun by Friedrich Wilhelm IV on the site of the family s two earlier castles The First Schleswig War in 1848 was a conflict between German forces and Denmark over control of Schleswig and Holstein Prussia led troops into Denmark but had to back down under pressure from the European great powers The Province of Hohenzollern in southern Germany the ancestral home of the Hohenzollerns was created and annexed to Prussia in 1850 In the Jade Treaty of 1853 Prussia which until then had had access to the sea only on the Baltic purchased land on the North Sea where the city of Wilhelmshaven was built The Neuchatel Crisis 1856 1857 was dispute over control of the Principality of Neuchatel in the Swiss Confederation that led to Prussia cede its historic claim Later years editIn his final years the King was affected by a serious illness the symptoms of which from the perspective of the medical knowledge of the era appeared to be a mental illness 68 According to current medical knowledge Friedrich Wilhelm suffered from a cerebral vascular disease a cerebral arteriosclerosis which could not be described as a mental illness 69 It is likely that psychopathological abnormalities occurred before the strokes he suffered making him barely able to perform his government offices 70 The strokes which began on 14 July 1857 affected his speech centre After Prince William s term acting as deputy for the King had been extended three times the ailing Frederick William signed a regency charter for him on 7 October 1858 based on an expert opinion from the royal personal physicians 71 The charter included the formal possibility of a resumption of official duties The signing of the Regency Charter heralded the New Era in Prussia marking the end of Frederick William IV s idea of government Prince Regent William dismissed the reactionary minister president Otto von Manteuffel and recruited Karl Anton von Hohenzollern Sigmaringen from the liberal nationalist camp 72 He also dismissed the courtiers who had belonged to Frederick William IV s camarilla Death and burial edit nbsp The crypt containing the sarcophagi of Frederick William IV and his wife Elisabeth in the Church of Peace Sanssouci Park in PotsdamOn 24 November 1859 the king suffered a stroke that paralysed his left side 73 Since he was no longer able to be transported the court remained at Sanssouci On 4 November 1860 he lost consciousness after another stroke and on 2 January 1861 he died In accordance with his testamentary instructions from 1854 the King was buried in the Friedenskirche in Potsdam after his heart had been removed and buried separately alongside his parents in the mausoleum in Charlottenburg Palace Park Honours editGerman decorations 74 nbsp Prussia Knight of the Black Eagle 15 October 1805 75 Iron Cross 2nd Class Service Award Cross nbsp Ascanian duchies Grand Cross of Albert the Bear 18 May 1838 76 nbsp Baden 77 Grand Cross of the House Order of Fidelity 1830 Grand Cross of the Zahringer Lion 1830 nbsp Bavaria Knight of St Hubert 1823 78 nbsp Brunswick Grand Cross of Henry the Lion 79 nbsp nbsp nbsp Ernestine duchies Grand Cross of the Saxe Ernestine House Order October 1838 80 nbsp Hanover Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order 1826 81 Knight of St George 1839 82 nbsp Hesse and by Rhine Grand Cross of the Ludwig Order 11 April 1830 83 nbsp Hesse Kassel Grand Cross of the Golden Lion 5 September 1841 84 nbsp Hohenzollern Cross of Honour of the Princely House Order of Hohenzollern 1st Class 85 nbsp Nassau Knight of the Gold Lion of Nassau May 1858 86 nbsp Oldenburg Grand Cross of the Order of Duke Peter Friedrich Ludwig with Golden Crown 8 October 1843 87 nbsp Saxe Weimar Eisenach Grand Cross of the White Falcon 16 February 1829 88 nbsp Saxony Knight of the Rue Crown 1839 89 nbsp Wurttemberg Grand Cross of the Civil Merit Order 1818 90 Foreign decorations 74 nbsp Austrian Empire Grand Cross of St Stephen 1833 91 nbsp Belgium Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold 18 January 1850 92 nbsp Denmark Knight of the Elephant 19 January 1840 93 France nbsp Kingdom of France 94 Knight of the Holy Spirit 5 February 1824 Knight of St Michael 5 February 1824 nbsp French Empire Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour November 1856 95 nbsp Kingdom of Greece Grand Cross of the Redeemer nbsp Netherlands Grand Cross of the Military William Order 9 February 1842 96 Grand Cross of the Netherlands Lion nbsp Duchy of Parma Senator Grand Cross of the Constantinian Order of St George with Collar 1856 97 nbsp Russian Empire Knight of St Andrew 15 September 1801 Knight of St George 4th Class nbsp Kingdom of Poland Knight of the White Eagle 1829 98 nbsp Kingdom of Sardinia Knight of the Annunciation 9 October 1847 99 nbsp Spain Knight of the Golden Fleece 10 February 1818 100 nbsp Sweden Knight of the Seraphim 29 August 1811 101 nbsp Two Sicilies Knight of St Januarius Grand Cross of St Ferdinand and Merit nbsp United Kingdom Knight of the Garter 25 January 1842 102 Ancestry editAncestors of Frederick William IV of Prussia8 Prince Augustus William of Prussia4 Frederick William II of Prussia9 Duchess Luise of Brunswick Wolfenbuttel2 Frederick William III of Prussia10 Louis IX Landgrave of Hesse Darmstadt5 Princess Frederica Louisa of Hesse Darmstadt11 Countess Palatine Caroline of Zweibrucken1 Frederick William IV of Prussia12 Duke Charles Louis Frederick of Mecklenburg Strelitz6 Charles II Grand Duke of Mecklenburg Strelitz13 Princess Elisabeth Albertine of Saxe Hildburghausen3 Duchess Louise of Mecklenburg Strelitz14 Prince George William of Hesse Darmstadt7 Princess Friederike of Hesse Darmstadt15 Countess Maria Louise Albertine of Leiningen Dagsburg FalkenburgReferences edit Dorgerloh Hartmut ed 18 August 2011 Palaces and Gardens Prussian Palaces and Gardens Foundation Berlin Brandenburg p 4 Stiftung Preussische Schlosser und Garten Berlin Brandenburg 1992 2012 Hartmut Dorgerloh ed Konig Friedrich Wilhelm IV Potsdam Brandenburg Germany Ministerium fur Wissenschaft Forschung und Kultur des Landes Brandenburg Retrieved 10 January 2012 Koch H W 2014 A History of Prussia Milton Park UK Taylor amp Francis p 227 ISBN 978 1317873082 a b Koch 2014 p 227 Blasius Dirk 1992 Friedrich Wilhelm IV 1795 1861 Psychopathologie und Geschichte Frederick William IV 1795 1861 Psychopathology and History in German Gottingen Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht p 46 ISBN 978 3525362297 Herre Franz 2007 Friedrich Wilhelm IV Der andere Preussenkonig Frederick William IV The Other Prussian King in German Gernsbach Katz p 4 ISBN 978 3 938047 22 4 Schonpflug Daniel 2010 Luise von Preussen Konigin der Herzen Louise of Prussia Queen of Hearts in German 3rd ed Munich C H Beck p 222 ISBN 978 3 406 59813 5 Herre 2007 p 15 Herre 2007 p 19 Giersberg Hans Joachim ed 1995 Friedrich Wilhelm IV Kunstler und Konig Frederick William IV Artist and King in German Frankfurt am Main H W Fichter Edition p 24 Galle Maja 2002 Der Erzengel Michael in der deutschen Kunst des 19 Jahrhunderts The Archangel Michael in the German Art of the 19th Century in German Munich Utz p 45 ISBN 978 3831601851 Kroll Frank Lothar 1990 Friedrich Wilhelm IV und das Staatsdenken der deutschen Romantik Frederick William IV and the Statesmanship of German Romanticism in German Berlin Colloquium Verlag p 31 ISBN 978 3767807785 Punctation of Olmutz Encyclopedia Britannica 22 November 2023 Retrieved 6 January 2024 Letzner Wolfram 2016 Berlin eine Biografie Menschen und Schicksale von den Askaniern bis Helmut Kohl und zur Hauptstadt Deutschlands Berlin a Biography People and Fates from the Ascanians to Helmut Kohl and the Capital of Germany in German Mainz Nunnerich Asmus ISBN 978 3 945751 37 4 a b Feldhahn Ulrich 2011 Die preussischen Konige und Kaiser The Prussian Kings and Emperors in German Lindenberg Kunstverlag Josef Fink pp 21 23 ISBN 978 3 89870 615 5 Bussmann Walter 1990 Zwischen Preussen und Deutschland Friedrich Wilhelm IV Eine Biographie Between Prussia and Germany Frederick William IV A Biography in German Berlin Siedler p 166 ISBN 978 3886803262 Barclay David E 1995 Anarchie und guter Wille Friedrich Wilhelm IV und die preussische Monarchie Anarchy and Good Will Frederick William IV and the Prussian Monarchy in German Berlin Siedler p 91 ISBN 978 3886804634 Siemann Wolfram 1985 Deutschlands Ruhe Sicherheit und Ordnung Die Anfange der politischen Polizei 1806 1866 Germany s Tranquility Security and Order The Beginnings of the Political Police 1806 1866 in German Berlin De Gruyter p 195 ISBN 3 484 35014 8 von Sternburg Wilhelm 2005 Die Geschichte der Deutschen The History of the Germans in German Frankfurt am Main Campus Verlag p 134 ISBN 978 3593371009 Mommsen Wolfgang J 2000 1848 Die ungewollte Revolution Die revolutionaren Bewegungen in Europa 1830 1849 1848 The Unwanted Revolution The Revolutionary Movements in Europe 1830 1849 in German Frankfurt am Main Fischer Taschenbuch p 71 ISBN 978 3596138999 Clark Christopher 2008 Preussen Aufstieg und Niedergang 1600 1947 Prussia Rise and Fall 1600 1947 in German Munich Pantheon p 503 ISBN 978 3 570 55060 1 Kroll Frank Lothar 2014 Staatsideal Herrschaftsverstandnis und Regierungspraxis The Ideal of the State the Understanding of Sovereignty and Government Practice In Meiner Jorg Werquet Jan eds Friedrich Wilhelm IV von Preussen Politik Kunst Ideal Frederick William IV of Prussia Politics Art Ideal in German Berlin Lukas Verlag p 26 ISBN 978 3 86732 176 1 Clark 2008 p 500 Kroll Frank Lothar 2008 Die Hohenzollern in German Munich C H Beck p 88 ISBN 978 3 406 53626 7 Neugebauer Wolfgang 2003 Preussen Prussia Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart Band 6 Religion in History and the Present Vol 6 Tubingen Mohr Siebeck p 1636 Rathgeber Christina 2016 Von der Kirchengesellschaft zur Kirche in der Gesellschaft Frommigkeit staatliches Handeln und die fruhe Politisierung der preussischen Katholiken 1815 1871 From a Church Society to Church in Society Piety State Action and the Early Politicisation of Prussian Catholics 1815 1871 in German Berlin Boston de Gruyter p 51 ISBN 978 3 11 044693 7 Deya Hannelore 2013 Neues historisches Lexikon Edition Vorpommern New Historical Dictionary Western Pomerania Edition in German Grambin Haff Verlag p 29 ISBN 978 3 942916 83 7 Kroll 1990 p 69 a b Kroll 1990 p 70 Winkler Heinrich August 2014 Der lange Weg nach Westen Teil 1 The Long Road to the West Part 1 in German Munich C H Beck p 86 ISBN 978 3 406 66080 1 Kroll 2014 p 27 Barclay 1995 p 184 a b Clark 2008 p 528 Mommsen 2000 p 82 Nipperdey Thomas 1983 Deutsche Geschichte 1800 1866 Burgerwelt und starker Staat Civil Society and a Strong State in German Munich C H Beck p 399 ISBN 3 406 09354 X Barclay 1995 p 198 Siemann Wolfram 1985 Die deutsche Revolution von 1848 49 The German Revolution of 1848 49 in German Frankfurt am Main Suhrkamp p 23 ISBN 978 3518112663 Hachtmann Rudiger 1997 Berlin 1848 Eine Politik und Gesellschaftsgeschichte der Revolution Berlin 1848 A Political and Social History of the Revolution in German Bonn Dietz p 291 ISBN 978 3801240837 Herre 2007 p 92ff Sprecher Eva 1995 Betrachtungen zum Eisenbahnbau unter Friedrich Wilhelm IV Reflections on Railway Building under Frederick William IV In Betthausen Peter Kahlau Irene Noack Karl Heinz eds Friedrich Wilhelm IV Kunstler und Konig Zum 200 Geburtstag Frederick William IV Artist and King On his 200th Birthdate in German Frankfurt am Main Fichter Verlag p 171 Oster Uwe A 2010 Preussen Geschichte eines Konigreiches Prussia History of a Kingdom in German 2nd ed Munich Piper p 273 ISBN 978 3 492 26491 4 Zamoyski Adam 2016 Phantome des Terrors Die Angst vor der Revolution und die Unterdruckung der Freiheit 1789 1848 Phantoms of Terror The Fear of Revolution and the Suppression of Freedom 1789 1848 in German Munich C H Beck p 523 ISBN 978 3 406 69766 1 Proklamation Sr Majestat des Konigs von Preussen Friedrich Wilhelm IV An Meine lieben Berliner Proclamation of His Majesty the King of Prussia Frederick William IV To my dear Berliners full German text documentArchiv de in German Retrieved 21 December 2023 Richter Gunter 1987 Zwischen Revolution und Reichsgrundung Between Revolution and the Founding of the Empire In Ribbe Wolfgang ed Geschichte Berlins Band 2 Von der Marzrevolution bis zur Gegenwart History of Berlin Vol 2 From the March Revolution to the Present in German Munich C H Beck p 616 ISBN 3 406 31591 7 Herre 2007 p 114 Schwibbe Michael Huth Peter 2008 Zeit Reise 1200 Jahre Leben in Berlin A Travel in Time 1 200 Years of Life in Berlin in German Berlin Zeit Reise Verlag p 104 ISBN 978 3 00 024613 5 Barclay 1995 p 229 Friedrich Norbert 1999 Auf dem Weg zum Grundgesetz Beitrage zum Verfassungsverstandnis des neuzeitlichen Protestantismus On the Road to the Basic Law Contributions to the Constitutional Understanding of Modern Protestantism in German Munster Lit Verlag p 39 ISBN 978 3825842246 Richter 1987 p 634 Herre 2007 p 118 Sellin Volker 2014 Das Jahrhundert der Restaurationen 1814 1906 The Century of Restorations 1814 1906 in German Munich Oldenbourg p 68 ISBN 978 3 486 76504 5 Hein Dieter 2015 Die Revolution von 1848 49 The Revolution of 1848 49 in German 5th ed Munich C H Beck ISBN 978 3 406 45119 5 Sellin 2014 p 69 Zamoyski 2016 p 535 Friedrich 1999 p 39 Robinson James Harvey September 1894 The Constitution of the Kingdom of Prussia Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 13 14 Peter Jelena 1 February 2000 Das Preussische Dreiklassenwahlrecht The Prussian Three Class Franchise Deutsches Historisches Museum Deutsches Historisches Museum in German Retrieved 3 April 2023 Constitution of the Kingdom of Prussia via Wikisource Oster 2010 p 40 Senn Rolf Thomas 2013 In Arkadien Friedrich Wilhelm IV von Preussen Eine biographische Landvermessung In Arcadia Frederick William IV of Prussia A Biographical Survey of the Country in German Berlin Lukas Verlag p 368 ISBN 978 3 86732 163 1 Oster 2010 p 293 Clark 2008 p 592 Krebs Gilbert Poloni Bernard eds 1994 Volk Reich und Nation Texte zur Einheit Deutschlands in Staat Wirtschaft und Gesellschaft People Reich and Nation Texts on the Unity of Germany in State Economy and Society in German Paris Universite de la Sorbonne Nouvelle p 120 ISBN 978 2910212025 Greiling Werner 2001 Zwischen Marzunruhen und Maiaufstand Between the March Unrest and the May Uprising Konig Johann von Sachsen Zwischen zwei Welten King Johann of Saxony Between two Worlds in German Halle an der Saale Stekovics p 333 ISBN 978 3932863646 Bussmann Walter 1981 Vom Heiligen Romischen Reich deutscher Nation zur Grundung des Deutschen Reiches From the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation to the Founding of the German Empire In Bussmann Walter ed Handbuch der Europaischen Geschichte Handbook of European Historyt in German Vol 5 Stuttgart Klett Cotta p 513 ISBN 3 12 907570 4 Wienecke Janz Detlef 2008 Die grosse Chronik Weltgeschichte Industrialisierung und nationaler Aufbruch The Great Chronicle of World History Industrialisation and National Awakening in German Gutersloh Munich wissenmedia p 46 ISBN 978 3 577 09073 5 Ullrich Volker 2015 Otto von Bismarck in German Cologne Anaconda p 67 ISBN 978 3 499 50602 4 Blasius 1992 p 20 Herre 2007 p 165 Blasius Dirk 1997 Friedrich Wilhelm IV Personlichkeit Amt und Krankheit Frederick William IV Personality Office and Illness In Kruger Peter Schoeps Julius H eds Der verkannte Monarch Friedrich Wilhelm IV in seiner Zeit The Misunderstood Monarch Frederick William IV in his Times in German Potsdam Verlag fur Berlin Brandenburg p 116 ISBN 978 3930850679 Aus Preussen From Prussia Wiener Zeitung in German 11 October 1858 p 1 Lenger Friedrich 2003 Industrielle Revolution und Nationalstaatsgrundung 1849 1870er Jahre Industrial Revolution and the Founding of the Nation State 1849 1870s in German Stuttgart Klett Cotta p 281 ISBN 3 608 60015 9 Kitschke Andreas 2017 Die Kirchen der Potsdamer Kulturlandschaft The Churches of the Potsdam Cultural Landscape in German Berlin Lukas Verlag p 201 ISBN 978 3867322485 a b Preussen 1839 Konigliches Haus Hof und Staats Handbuch des Konigreichs Preussen in German Berlin p 3 retrieved 11 March 2020 Liste der Ritter des Koniglich Preussischen Hohen Ordens vom Schwarzen Adler 1851 Von Seiner Majestat dem Konige Friedrich Wilhelm III ernannte Ritter p 15 Anhalt Kothen 1851 Staats und Adress Handbuch fur die Herzogthumer Anhalt Dessau und Anhalt Kothen 1851 Katz p 10 Hof und Staats Handbuch des Grossherzogtum Baden 1838 Grossherzogliche Orden pp 28 42 Bayern 1858 Hof und Staatshandbuch des Konigreichs Bayern 1858 Landesamt p 7 Braunschweigisches Adressbuch fur das Jahr 1858 Braunschweig 1858 Meyer p 5 Herzogliche Sachsen Ernestinischer Hausorden Adress Handbuch des Herzogthums Sachsen Coburg und Gotha in German Coburg Gotha Meusel 1843 p 6 retrieved 12 March 2020 Hof und Staatshandbuch fur das Konigreich Hannover 1837 Berenberg 1837 p 20 Staat Hannover 1857 Hof und Staatshandbuch fur das Konigreich Hannover 1857 Berenberg p 32 Hessen Darmstadt 1858 Grossherzogliche Orden und Ehrenzeichen Hof und Staatshandbuch des Grossherzogtums Hessen fur das Jahr 1858 in German Darmstadt p 8 retrieved 12 March 2020 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hessen Kassel 1858 Kurfurstlich Hessisches Hof und Staatshandbuch 1858 Waisenhaus p 15 Hof und Adress Handbuch des Furstenthums Hohenzollern Sigmaringen 1844 Beck und Frankel 1844 p 19 Staats und Adress Handbuch des Herzogthums Nassau 1860 Schellenberg 1860 p 7 Staat Oldenburg 1858 Hof und Staatshandbuch des Grossherzogtums Oldenburg fur 1858 Schulze p 30 Grossherzoglicher Hausorden Staatshandbuch fur das Grossherzogtum Sachsen Sachsen Weimar Eisenach in German Weimar Bohlau 1855 p 10 retrieved 11 March 2020 Sachsen 1860 Staatshandbuch fur den Freistaat Sachsen 1860 Heinrich p 4 Wurttemberg 1858 Koniglich Wurttembergisches Hof und Staats Handbuch 1858 Guttenberg p 30 A Szent Istvan Rend tagjai Archived 22 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine H Tarlier 1854 Almanach royal officiel publie execution d un arrete du roi in French Vol 1 p 37 Kongelig Dansk Hof og Statscalender Statshaandbog for det danske Monarchie for Aaret 1860 p 27 in Danish Retrieved 12 March 2020 Teulet Alexandre 1863 Liste chronologique des chevaliers de l ordre du Saint Esprit depuis son origine jusqu a son extinction 1578 1830 Chronological list of knights of the Order of the Holy Spirit from its origin to its extinction 1578 1830 Annuaire bulletin de la Societe de l Histoire de France in French 2 117 Retrieved 24 March 2020 M Wattel B Wattel 2009 Les Grand Croix de la Legion d honneur de 1805 a nos jours Titulaires francais et etrangers Paris Archives amp Culture p 509 ISBN 978 2 35077 135 9 Militaire Willems Orde Preussen Friederich Wilhelm IV von in Dutch Almanacco di corte 1858 p 221 Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orla Bialego 1705 2008 2008 p 289 Luigi Cibrario 1869 Notizia storica del nobilissimo ordine supremo della santissima Annunziata Sunto degli statuti catalogo dei cavalieri Eredi Botta p 111 Caballeros existentes en la insignie Orden del Toison de Oro Guia de forasteros en Madrid para el ano de 1835 in Spanish En la Imprenta Nacional 1835 p 72 Per Nordenvall 1998 Kungl Maj ts Orden Kungliga Serafimerorden 1748 1998 in Swedish Stockholm ISBN 91 630 6744 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Shaw Wm A 1906 The Knights of England I London p 56External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Friedrich Wilhelm IV von Preussen Frederick William IV of PrussiaHouse of HohenzollernBorn 15 October 1795 Died 2 January 1861Regnal titlesPreceded byFrederick William III King of Prussia7 June 1840 2 January 1861 Succeeded byWilliam IGrand Duke of Posen7 June 1840 5 December 1848 Annexed to PrussiaPrince of Neuchatel7 June 1840 1857 Neuchatel Crisis Retrieved from https en wikipedia org 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