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Announcing Rheinsberg: Frederick the Great discussion post 10
So for anyone who is reading this and would like to learn more about Frederick the Great and his contemporaries, but who doesn't want to wade through 500k (600k?) words worth of comments and an increasingly sprawling comment section:
We now have a community,
rheinsberg, that has quite a lot of the interesting historical content (and more coming regularly), organized nicely with lots of lovely tags so if there's any subject you are interested in it is easy to find :D
We now have a community,
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
Re: Peter Keith
Re: Peter Keith
I like your idea of the "move on" speech. Peter is significantly older and more experienced, after all, and can do a bit of mentoring. In keeping with the line in Lehndorff's diary after Peter's death, where he says Peter was a man of merit who could serve as an example to others. :) Follow that example, Lehndorff!
By the way, per Kloosterhuis' citations, the obituary that Lehndorff says the Academy of Sciences is going to put out does survive, in a private publication. I haven't been able to track it down, but I'd been wondering if it was out there, and I'm glad to know it is.
Re: Peter Keith
Peter is significantly older and more experienced, after all, and can do a bit of mentoring.
Indeed, and remember Lehndorff in the early 50s still having day-dreams about the King as a father figure (his own father died right after Lehndorff was born, he never knew him), which, post Hotham, he finally gives up? Could also be because he found an actual mentor!
Re: Peter Keith
Maybe we will manage to track it down one day. Along with Martin von Katte‘s unpublished book about Hans Herrmann.
Life goals!