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Princess Louise of Prussia (1770–1836)

Princess Louise
Princess Radziwiłł
A painting of Louise of Prussia, c. 1801. Painted by Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun.
Born(1770-05-24)24 May 1770
Berlin
Died7 December 1836(1836-12-07) (aged 66)
Berlin
Spouse
(m. 1796; died 1833)
Issue
Names
German: Friederike Dorothea Luise Philippine von Preußen
HouseHohenzollern
FatherPrince Augustus Ferdinand of Prussia
MotherMargravine Elisabeth Louise of Brandenburg-Schwedt
ReligionCalvinism

Princess Frederica Dorothea Louise Philippine of Prussia (24 May 1770 – 7 December 1836) was a member of the House of Hohenzollern. She was a niece of Frederick the Great, being the second daughter and third child of Prince Augustus Ferdinand of Prussia by his wife Margravine Elisabeth Louise of Brandenburg-Schwedt.

Louise and her husband, Prince Antoni Radziwiłł, were popular for their patronage of music, as well as their prominent positions in Berlin society. Louise is also notable for being the mother of Princess Elisabeth Radziwill, the childhood love of future German Emperor Wilhelm I, whose strong desire to marry her was thwarted out of considerations for Elisabeth's inequality of rank.

Biography

Early life

Princess Louise was born on 24 May 1770, in the Ordenspalais (the Palace of the Order of Saint John, of which her father was head) at Berlin to Prince Augustus Ferdinand and Princess Elisabeth Louise of Prussia;[1] her biological father may actually have been Count Friedrich Wilhelm Carl von Schmettau.[2] Her birth was a disappointment to her family, as at the time her elder brother Friedrich Heinrich Emil Karl, Prince of Prussia (1769–1773), was the only heir to the Hohenzollern throne of her uncle Frederick the Great. Despite this, her father was devoted to her, lavishing attention, while her mother showed little affection for her.[1][3] Her family would eventually come to hold seven siblings, two girls and five boys. They lived at the Friedrichsfelde estate in Berlin.

As she became older, she was given a Lutheran governess, Frau von Bielfeld; her daughter Lisette was three years older, and served as a companion to Louise. Lisette got her interested in romantic novels long before many other girls her age. Bielfeld was highly educated, but died after only five years, in October 1782.[4] Despite Frau von Bielfeld's attention to education, Louise's studies were much neglected, and she forgot much of what had been taught her.[3] As a consequence, Bielfeld left shortly before she died, and was replaced with her approval by a new thirty-year-old governess from the countryside, Fraulein von Keller; Louise and Keller soon formed a strong attachment.[3] Previously, Bielfeld had found it easier to complete Louise's schoolwork and show it to her parents, thus ending in little real improvement and understanding on Louise's part. Keller on the other hand was less educated and in need of instruction, consequently imbuing in Louise a taste for study.[5]

Marriage candidates

 
A young Princess Louise.

As a niece of Frederick the Great, there were often talks of possible matches for Louise. One such candidate was Prince Max of Bavaria, the heir-presumptive of Charles Theodore, Elector of Bavaria. The Elector sent an ambassador to Friedrichsfelde in 1785, most likely to inspect Louise's general appearance and character.[6] In the end however, Louise was considered too young, as Prince Max had wanted to marry her within the year; her father conversely refused to part from her until she was eighteen.[7] Max soon afterwards married Princess Augusta Wilhelmine of Hesse-Darmstadt instead.

Another possible candidate was Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany, the second son of George III of the United Kingdom, who traveled to Berlin in 1786 to attend military maneuvers; nothing came of this however, and it was rumored that he had instead been interested in Louise's cousin Princess Wilhelmine.[8] By her own admission, Louise remarked of the York affair, "Lacking charm and elegance, awkward from excessive shyness, I was poorly equipped to supplant my cousin. The Duke [was] a very handsome man...".[8] Frederick later married another relative of Louise's, Princess Frederika Charlotte, who was the daughter of her cousin Frederick William II of Prussia.

Marriage and issue

 
Princess Louise's husband Prince Antoni Radziwiłł, c. 1800.

In April 1795, Prince Michał Hieronim Radziwiłł and his wife traveled to Berlin with their daughter Christina and son Antoni; on 1 May, they were presented at the royal court at Bellevue Palace.[9] The Radziwiłłs were a Polish Catholic family that belonged to the oldest and most renowned of dynasties in Poland, and were also in possession of much wealth. They were great favorites with Louise's parents, and frequently dined at their home. As time went by, Louise and Antoni began to desire to marry. While many of her family members were in favor of such a match, her mother, never close with Louise, disapproved.[10] Her parents eventually gave their full consent on the assurance that she would live near them during her marriage.[11]

Her cousin Frederick William II of Prussia also gave his consent, pleased that the couple planned to settle in Berlin.[12] As arrangements for their betrothal were underway however, Frederick William, having speedily and happily agreed to their marriage, surprisingly delayed his correspondence for several days. When he finally sent a letter, it read that "Prince Anton not being of a sovereign house, he could not sanction a ceremonial betrothal".[13] Louise's parents were bitterly wounded, and blamed one of his advisers for this change of opinion. In a later letter, the king stated his support for the marriage, but had felt himself bound by his ministers' attentions to traditional etiquette and ceremony.[14]

In 1796 Louise was duly happily married to Prince Antoni Radziwiłł. Though his family possessed wealth and rank, the marriage was nonetheless considered unequal to be matched with the House of Hohenzollern.[15] The Swedish Princess Hedwig Elisabeth Charlotte of Holstein-Gottorp described the couple and the contemporary view around the marriage in Berlin at the time of her visit in 1798:

A witty and talented woman, a typical French "grande dame". I found it particularly interesting to make her acquaintance, as our late King had been in love with her and she could therefore have been our Queen, if he had become a widower. Her husband was well off but looked like a footman. The match was a misalliance, but as they loved each other, and as he was very wealthy, it was allowed to pass. The King, the Queen and the entire royal family however disliked her because of this marriage which, according to wicked tongues, was necessary to avoid scandal.[16]

The couple had seven children:

Name Birth Death Notes
Wilhelm Paweł Radziwiłł 19 March 1797 5 September 1870 Prussian general, married Princess Helena Radziwill on 23 January 1825 and had no issue. Later married Countess Mathilde von Clary und Aldringen and had 6 children.
Ferdynant Fryderyk Radziwiłł 13 August 1798 9 September 1827 He died at age 29 at Ruhberg
Bogusław Fryderyk Radziwiłł January 3, 1809 January 2, 1873 Prussian military officer; married Countess Leontine Gabrielle von Clary und Aldringen on 17 October 1832 at Ruhberg, and had 8 children.
Władysław Radziwiłł 1811 1831
Eliza Fryderyka Radziwiłł 28 October 1803 27 August 1834 She was the beloved of William I, German Emperor, and later engaged to Prince Friedrich of Schwarzenberg, though the betrothal was dissolved.
Wanda Augusta Wilhelmina Radziwiłł 29 January 1813 16 September 1845 married Adam Konstanty Czartoryski on 12 December 1832 at Schmiedeberg, Germany, and had 3 children.

Later life

The growing family took up residence at Radziwill Palace in Berlin. Louise was a happy wife, and the couple's soirees and banquets were said to be more entertaining than anything at the Prussian court.[15] Anton, himself an excellent musician, patronized the best artists of the day; Louise warmly shared in all his interests.[15] One visitor commented on their young family in Berlin:

"Thursday evening I went for the first time to Princess Louisa's, who receives every night. She is quite adored here, and is the person who makes society here. She is ugly, but particularly pleasing, and with no sort of form about her. Her husband, Prince Radziwill, is much the most agreeable man I have ever seen here, and they have a great many beautiful children, particularly a little girl of ten years old, who is the most graceful little creature I have ever saw, and who has taken a great fancy to me.[17] The youngest, a baby of nine months old, is beautiful".[18]

Louise, like many other high rank ladies of the day, visited hospitals, treating soldiers during the Napoleonic Wars; sacrifices were also made by Louise and her family, such as the removal of all travel to and from Berlin, as all horses were sent to the Prussian army.[19]

In 1815, Louise's husband was appointed Duke-Governor of the Grand Duchy of Posen, where he moved with his family. Louise partook in various social causes. Antoni's administration was unsuccessful and near powerless at preventing the Germanisation of the region, as he was caught between his Polish subjects and Prussian authorities. Shortly after the outbreak of the November Uprising he was deprived of all the powers, the Grand Duchy was abolished and its autonomy was cancelled. It was directly incorporated into Prussia and renamed the Province of Posen. Antoni returned to his palace in Berlin, where he died on April 7, 1833. He was buried in the Poznań Cathedral. His children with Louise were Germanised and never returned to Poznań; however, as owners of the manor Nieborów near Warsaw and huge family estates in today's Belarus, they paid frequent visits to other parts of Poland. Louise died three years after her husband, on 7 December 1836.

Relationship of their daughter and Prince Wilhelm of Prussia

 
Louise's daughter Eliza.

Their sons were raised as Roman Catholics, while their daughters were raised in Louise's Calvinist faith. The children were closely brought up alongside their Hohenzollern cousins, as they were similar in age; their eldest son became the playmate of Prince Wilhelm, future Emperor of Germany. Wilhelm lived for some time in Königsberg and became greatly attached to their daughter Elisa, as she was a comfort to him during the loss of his mother in 1810; as he became older, Wilhelm desired to marry her.[20][21] To boost her suitableness, there were talks of Elisa being adopted by the childless Alexander I of Russia or by her uncle Prince Augustus of Prussia, but both plans failed to win the support of all parties involved.[22] Learned men of the Prussian court also attempted to trace her ancestry in the hopes of discovering her relation to Polish kings; this failed when others denied the claims of royal Polish ancestry.[23] Their wish for marriage was thus denied by King Frederick William III, as she was considered of insufficient rank despite her mother's birth.[24][25] Adoption to them would have been unsuitable as it would not change "the blood" of Elisa. Another factor was the influence of the Mecklenburg relations of the deceased Queen Louise in the German and Russian courts, who were not fond of Elisa's father and against the possible marriage. Furthermore, Elisa was considered not sufficiently royal because her father was not a reigning prince.

Thus, in June 1826, Wilhelm's father felt forced to demand the renunciation of a potential marriage to Elisa. Wilhelm spent the next few months looking for a more suitable bride, but did not relinquish his emotional ties to Elisa. He was sent off to the Weimar court to look for a suitable wife, where he wed Princess Augusta of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, fourteen years his junior on 11 June 1829.[26] This marriage would prove to be unhappy. Wilhelm saw his cousin, Elisabeth, for the last time in 1829. She died of tuberculosis five years later, unmarried.

Ancestry

References

  1. ^ a b Allison, p. 26.
  2. ^ Tobias Debuch: Prinz Louis Ferdinand von Preußen (1772–1806) als Musiker im soziokulturellen Umfeld seiner Zeit. Berlin 2004, S. 9 f.
  3. ^ a b c Allison, p. 32.
  4. ^ Allison, p. 28.
  5. ^ Allison, p. 33.
  6. ^ Allison, pp. 42-43.
  7. ^ Allison, p. 43.
  8. ^ a b Allison, p. 46.
  9. ^ Allison, pp. 121-22.
  10. ^ Allison, pp. 127-29.
  11. ^ Allison, p. 130.
  12. ^ Allison, p. 131.
  13. ^ Allison, p. 132.
  14. ^ Allison, p. 133.
  15. ^ a b c Tschudi, p. 30.
  16. ^ Charlottas, Hedvig Elisabeth (1927) [1797-1799]. af Klercker, Cecilia (ed.). Hedvig Elisabeth Charlottas dagbok [The diary of Hedvig Elizabeth Charlotte] (in Swedish). Vol. VI 1797-1799. Translated by Cecilia af Klercker. Stockholm: P.A. Norstedt & Söners förlag. p. 123. OCLC 14111333. (search for all versions on WorldCat)
  17. ^ Their daughter Eliza, soon to be Prince Wilhelm's love interest.
  18. ^ Westmorland, p. 55.
  19. ^ Westmorland, p. 56.
  20. ^ Tschudi, p. 31.
  21. ^ Strauss, pp. 93-94.
  22. ^ Kasson, pp. 362-63.
  23. ^ Kasson, p. 363.
  24. ^ Tschudi, pp. 31-32.
  25. ^ Fleming, pp. 236-237.
  26. ^ Strauss, p. 94.
  27. ^ 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. 19.

Sources

  • Westmorland, Countess Priscilla Anne Wellesley Pole Fane (2009). The letters of Lady Burghersh: (afterwards Countess of Westmorland) From Germany and France During the Campaign of 1813-14. Cornell University Library. ISBN 978-1-112-58028-4.
  • Fleming, Patricia H. (June 1973). "The Politics of Marriage Among Non-Catholic European Royalty". Current Anthropology. 14 (3): 231–249. doi:10.1086/201323. S2CID 144634148.
  • Kasson, John A. (April 1888). "The Hohenzollern Kaiser". The North American Review. 146 (377): 361–378.
  • Louise Radziwill, Alfred Richard Allison (2009). Forty Five Years of My Life. Bibliolife, LLC. ISBN 978-1-113-72511-0.
  • Strauss, Gustave Louis Maurice (2008). Emperor William: The Life of a Great King and Good Man. BiblioLife, LLC. ISBN 978-0-559-67584-3.
  • Tschudi, Clara (2009). Augusta, Empress of Germany. BiblioLife, LLC. ISBN 978-1-113-51294-9.

External links

  • Princess Louise on Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (in German)

princess, louise, prussia, 1770, 1836, other, people, named, louise, prussia, louise, prussia, disambiguation, princess, louiseprincess, radziwiłła, painting, louise, prussia, 1801, painted, elisabeth, vigée, lebrun, born, 1770, 1770berlindied7, december, 1836. For other people named Louise of Prussia see Louise of Prussia disambiguation Princess LouisePrincess RadziwillA painting of Louise of Prussia c 1801 Painted by Elisabeth Vigee Lebrun Born 1770 05 24 24 May 1770BerlinDied7 December 1836 1836 12 07 aged 66 BerlinSpouseAntoni Radziwill m 1796 died 1833 wbr IssueWilhelm Radziwill Ferdynant Radziwill Boguslaw Fryderyk Radziwill Wladyslaw Radziwill Elisa Radziwill Wanda RadziwillNamesGerman Friederike Dorothea Luise Philippine von PreussenHouseHohenzollernFatherPrince Augustus Ferdinand of PrussiaMotherMargravine Elisabeth Louise of Brandenburg SchwedtReligionCalvinism Princess Frederica Dorothea Louise Philippine of Prussia 24 May 1770 7 December 1836 was a member of the House of Hohenzollern She was a niece of Frederick the Great being the second daughter and third child of Prince Augustus Ferdinand of Prussia by his wife Margravine Elisabeth Louise of Brandenburg Schwedt Louise and her husband Prince Antoni Radziwill were popular for their patronage of music as well as their prominent positions in Berlin society Louise is also notable for being the mother of Princess Elisabeth Radziwill the childhood love of future German Emperor Wilhelm I whose strong desire to marry her was thwarted out of considerations for Elisabeth s inequality of rank Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Marriage candidates 1 3 Marriage and issue 1 4 Later life 1 5 Relationship of their daughter and Prince Wilhelm of Prussia 2 Ancestry 3 References 4 Sources 5 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Princess Louise was born on 24 May 1770 in the Ordenspalais the Palace of the Order of Saint John of which her father was head at Berlin to Prince Augustus Ferdinand and Princess Elisabeth Louise of Prussia 1 her biological father may actually have been Count Friedrich Wilhelm Carl von Schmettau 2 Her birth was a disappointment to her family as at the time her elder brother Friedrich Heinrich Emil Karl Prince of Prussia 1769 1773 was the only heir to the Hohenzollern throne of her uncle Frederick the Great Despite this her father was devoted to her lavishing attention while her mother showed little affection for her 1 3 Her family would eventually come to hold seven siblings two girls and five boys They lived at the Friedrichsfelde estate in Berlin As she became older she was given a Lutheran governess Frau von Bielfeld her daughter Lisette was three years older and served as a companion to Louise Lisette got her interested in romantic novels long before many other girls her age Bielfeld was highly educated but died after only five years in October 1782 4 Despite Frau von Bielfeld s attention to education Louise s studies were much neglected and she forgot much of what had been taught her 3 As a consequence Bielfeld left shortly before she died and was replaced with her approval by a new thirty year old governess from the countryside Fraulein von Keller Louise and Keller soon formed a strong attachment 3 Previously Bielfeld had found it easier to complete Louise s schoolwork and show it to her parents thus ending in little real improvement and understanding on Louise s part Keller on the other hand was less educated and in need of instruction consequently imbuing in Louise a taste for study 5 Marriage candidates Edit A young Princess Louise As a niece of Frederick the Great there were often talks of possible matches for Louise One such candidate was Prince Max of Bavaria the heir presumptive of Charles Theodore Elector of Bavaria The Elector sent an ambassador to Friedrichsfelde in 1785 most likely to inspect Louise s general appearance and character 6 In the end however Louise was considered too young as Prince Max had wanted to marry her within the year her father conversely refused to part from her until she was eighteen 7 Max soon afterwards married Princess Augusta Wilhelmine of Hesse Darmstadt instead Another possible candidate was Prince Frederick Duke of York and Albany the second son of George III of the United Kingdom who traveled to Berlin in 1786 to attend military maneuvers nothing came of this however and it was rumored that he had instead been interested in Louise s cousin Princess Wilhelmine 8 By her own admission Louise remarked of the York affair Lacking charm and elegance awkward from excessive shyness I was poorly equipped to supplant my cousin The Duke was a very handsome man 8 Frederick later married another relative of Louise s Princess Frederika Charlotte who was the daughter of her cousin Frederick William II of Prussia Marriage and issue Edit Princess Louise s husband Prince Antoni Radziwill c 1800 In April 1795 Prince Michal Hieronim Radziwill and his wife traveled to Berlin with their daughter Christina and son Antoni on 1 May they were presented at the royal court at Bellevue Palace 9 The Radziwills were a Polish Catholic family that belonged to the oldest and most renowned of dynasties in Poland and were also in possession of much wealth They were great favorites with Louise s parents and frequently dined at their home As time went by Louise and Antoni began to desire to marry While many of her family members were in favor of such a match her mother never close with Louise disapproved 10 Her parents eventually gave their full consent on the assurance that she would live near them during her marriage 11 Her cousin Frederick William II of Prussia also gave his consent pleased that the couple planned to settle in Berlin 12 As arrangements for their betrothal were underway however Frederick William having speedily and happily agreed to their marriage surprisingly delayed his correspondence for several days When he finally sent a letter it read that Prince Anton not being of a sovereign house he could not sanction a ceremonial betrothal 13 Louise s parents were bitterly wounded and blamed one of his advisers for this change of opinion In a later letter the king stated his support for the marriage but had felt himself bound by his ministers attentions to traditional etiquette and ceremony 14 In 1796 Louise was duly happily married to Prince Antoni Radziwill Though his family possessed wealth and rank the marriage was nonetheless considered unequal to be matched with the House of Hohenzollern 15 The Swedish Princess Hedwig Elisabeth Charlotte of Holstein Gottorp described the couple and the contemporary view around the marriage in Berlin at the time of her visit in 1798 A witty and talented woman a typical French grande dame I found it particularly interesting to make her acquaintance as our late King had been in love with her and she could therefore have been our Queen if he had become a widower Her husband was well off but looked like a footman The match was a misalliance but as they loved each other and as he was very wealthy it was allowed to pass The King the Queen and the entire royal family however disliked her because of this marriage which according to wicked tongues was necessary to avoid scandal 16 The couple had seven children Name Birth Death NotesWilhelm Pawel Radziwill 19 March 1797 5 September 1870 Prussian general married Princess Helena Radziwill on 23 January 1825 and had no issue Later married Countess Mathilde von Clary und Aldringen and had 6 children Ferdynant Fryderyk Radziwill 13 August 1798 9 September 1827 He died at age 29 at RuhbergBoguslaw Fryderyk Radziwill January 3 1809 January 2 1873 Prussian military officer married Countess Leontine Gabrielle von Clary und Aldringen on 17 October 1832 at Ruhberg and had 8 children Wladyslaw Radziwill 1811 1831Eliza Fryderyka Radziwill 28 October 1803 27 August 1834 She was the beloved of William I German Emperor and later engaged to Prince Friedrich of Schwarzenberg though the betrothal was dissolved Wanda Augusta Wilhelmina Radziwill 29 January 1813 16 September 1845 married Adam Konstanty Czartoryski on 12 December 1832 at Schmiedeberg Germany and had 3 children Later life Edit The growing family took up residence at Radziwill Palace in Berlin Louise was a happy wife and the couple s soirees and banquets were said to be more entertaining than anything at the Prussian court 15 Anton himself an excellent musician patronized the best artists of the day Louise warmly shared in all his interests 15 One visitor commented on their young family in Berlin Thursday evening I went for the first time to Princess Louisa s who receives every night She is quite adored here and is the person who makes society here She is ugly but particularly pleasing and with no sort of form about her Her husband Prince Radziwill is much the most agreeable man I have ever seen here and they have a great many beautiful children particularly a little girl of ten years old who is the most graceful little creature I have ever saw and who has taken a great fancy to me 17 The youngest a baby of nine months old is beautiful 18 Louise like many other high rank ladies of the day visited hospitals treating soldiers during the Napoleonic Wars sacrifices were also made by Louise and her family such as the removal of all travel to and from Berlin as all horses were sent to the Prussian army 19 In 1815 Louise s husband was appointed Duke Governor of the Grand Duchy of Posen where he moved with his family Louise partook in various social causes Antoni s administration was unsuccessful and near powerless at preventing the Germanisation of the region as he was caught between his Polish subjects and Prussian authorities Shortly after the outbreak of the November Uprising he was deprived of all the powers the Grand Duchy was abolished and its autonomy was cancelled It was directly incorporated into Prussia and renamed the Province of Posen Antoni returned to his palace in Berlin where he died on April 7 1833 He was buried in the Poznan Cathedral His children with Louise were Germanised and never returned to Poznan however as owners of the manor Nieborow near Warsaw and huge family estates in today s Belarus they paid frequent visits to other parts of Poland Louise died three years after her husband on 7 December 1836 Relationship of their daughter and Prince Wilhelm of Prussia Edit Louise s daughter Eliza Their sons were raised as Roman Catholics while their daughters were raised in Louise s Calvinist faith The children were closely brought up alongside their Hohenzollern cousins as they were similar in age their eldest son became the playmate of Prince Wilhelm future Emperor of Germany Wilhelm lived for some time in Konigsberg and became greatly attached to their daughter Elisa as she was a comfort to him during the loss of his mother in 1810 as he became older Wilhelm desired to marry her 20 21 To boost her suitableness there were talks of Elisa being adopted by the childless Alexander I of Russia or by her uncle Prince Augustus of Prussia but both plans failed to win the support of all parties involved 22 Learned men of the Prussian court also attempted to trace her ancestry in the hopes of discovering her relation to Polish kings this failed when others denied the claims of royal Polish ancestry 23 Their wish for marriage was thus denied by King Frederick William III as she was considered of insufficient rank despite her mother s birth 24 25 Adoption to them would have been unsuitable as it would not change the blood of Elisa Another factor was the influence of the Mecklenburg relations of the deceased Queen Louise in the German and Russian courts who were not fond of Elisa s father and against the possible marriage Furthermore Elisa was considered not sufficiently royal because her father was not a reigning prince Thus in June 1826 Wilhelm s father felt forced to demand the renunciation of a potential marriage to Elisa Wilhelm spent the next few months looking for a more suitable bride but did not relinquish his emotional ties to Elisa He was sent off to the Weimar court to look for a suitable wife where he wed Princess Augusta of Saxe Weimar Eisenach fourteen years his junior on 11 June 1829 26 This marriage would prove to be unhappy Wilhelm saw his cousin Elisabeth for the last time in 1829 She died of tuberculosis five years later unmarried Ancestry EditAncestors of Princess Louise of Prussia 1770 1836 27 16 Frederick William Elector of Brandenburg8 Frederick I of Prussia17 Countess Luise Henriette of Nassau4 Frederick William I of Prussia18 Ernest Augustus Elector of Hanover9 Sophia Charlotte of Hanover19 Sophia of the Palatinate2 Prince Augustus Ferdinand of Prussia20 Ernest Augustus Elector of Hanover10 George I of Great Britain21 Sophia of the Palatinate5 Sophia Dorothea of Hanover22 George William Duke of Brunswick Luneburg11 Sophia Dorothea of Celle23 Eleonore d Esmier d Olbreuse1 Princess Louise of Prussia24 Frederick William I Elector of Brandenburg12 Philip William Margrave of Brandenburg Schwedt25 Sophia Dorothea of Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Glucksburg6 Frederick William Margrave of Brandenburg Schwedt26 John George II Prince of Anhalt Dessau13 Princess Johanna Charlotte of Anhalt Dessau27 Countess Henriette Catherine of Nassau3 Margravine Elisabeth Louise of Brandenburg Schwedt28 Frederick I of Prussia 814 Frederick William I of Prussia 429 Sophia Charlotte of Hanover 97 Princess Sophia Dorothea of Prussia30 George I of Great Britain 1015 Sophia Dorothea of Hanover 531 Sophia Dorothea of Celle 11References Edit a b Allison p 26 Tobias Debuch Prinz Louis Ferdinand von Preussen 1772 1806 als Musiker im soziokulturellen Umfeld seiner Zeit Berlin 2004 S 9 f a b c Allison p 32 Allison p 28 Allison p 33 Allison pp 42 43 Allison p 43 a b Allison p 46 Allison pp 121 22 Allison pp 127 29 Allison p 130 Allison p 131 Allison p 132 Allison p 133 a b c Tschudi p 30 Charlottas Hedvig Elisabeth 1927 1797 1799 af Klercker Cecilia ed Hedvig Elisabeth Charlottas dagbok The diary of Hedvig Elizabeth Charlotte in Swedish Vol VI 1797 1799 Translated by Cecilia af Klercker Stockholm P A Norstedt amp Soners forlag p 123 OCLC 14111333 search for all versions on WorldCat Their daughter Eliza soon to be Prince Wilhelm s love interest Westmorland p 55 Westmorland p 56 Tschudi p 31 Strauss pp 93 94 Kasson pp 362 63 Kasson p 363 Tschudi pp 31 32 Fleming pp 236 237 Strauss p 94 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 19 Sources EditWestmorland Countess Priscilla Anne Wellesley Pole Fane 2009 The letters of Lady Burghersh afterwards Countess of Westmorland From Germany and France During the Campaign of 1813 14 Cornell University Library ISBN 978 1 112 58028 4 Fleming Patricia H June 1973 The Politics of Marriage Among Non Catholic European Royalty Current Anthropology 14 3 231 249 doi 10 1086 201323 S2CID 144634148 Kasson John A April 1888 The Hohenzollern Kaiser The North American Review 146 377 361 378 Louise Radziwill Alfred Richard Allison 2009 Forty Five Years of My Life Bibliolife LLC ISBN 978 1 113 72511 0 Strauss Gustave Louis Maurice 2008 Emperor William The Life of a Great King and Good Man BiblioLife LLC ISBN 978 0 559 67584 3 Tschudi Clara 2009 Augusta Empress of Germany BiblioLife LLC ISBN 978 1 113 51294 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Princess Louise of Prussia 1770 1836 Princess Louise on Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Princess Louise of Prussia 1770 1836 amp oldid 1119344381, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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