Thank you for quoting these! I had definitely read them, but I can't find them on the Trier project, so it must have been somewhere else.
Speaking of the Trier project, as far as I can tell, it's mostly reposting books from the nineteenth and early twentieth century, and the 76 volumes comprising the Oeuvres and Politische Correspondenz definitely do not include anything published after 1939.
I discovered today that the political correspondence was published 1876-1939, covering everything through April 1782 in 46 volumes (this much I knew), then the project stalled, then volumes 47 and 48 were published in 2003 and 2015, bringing us up to June 1783. Trier only has up through 46, or at least I can't find the most recent two.
Also missing are most of the Fredersdorf letters, apparently, about which more in another comment.
And I'm starting to think Marwitz's first name just hasn't been preserved. But maybe it'll turn up! (Along with a family tree, detailing just *how* intertwined this family is with the Hohenzollern soap opera.)
Re: Two Brothers, One Marwitz
Speaking of the Trier project, as far as I can tell, it's mostly reposting books from the nineteenth and early twentieth century, and the 76 volumes comprising the Oeuvres and Politische Correspondenz definitely do not include anything published after 1939.
I discovered today that the political correspondence was published 1876-1939, covering everything through April 1782 in 46 volumes (this much I knew), then the project stalled, then volumes 47 and 48 were published in 2003 and 2015, bringing us up to June 1783. Trier only has up through 46, or at least I can't find the most recent two.
Also missing are most of the Fredersdorf letters, apparently, about which more in another comment.
And I'm starting to think Marwitz's first name just hasn't been preserved. But maybe it'll turn up! (Along with a family tree, detailing just *how* intertwined this family is with the Hohenzollern soap opera.)