cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
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We now have a community, [community profile] rheinsberg, that has quite a lot of the interesting historical content (and more coming regularly), organized nicely with lots of lovely tags so if there's any subject you are interested in it is easy to find :D

Re: Henri de Catt

Date: 2020-02-04 04:25 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Neat! We even have the letters where FW gave very detailed instructions on Fritz's imprisonment. Check out YouthDocuments, pages 44 ff. for the instructions on getting him to Küstrin without being captured, the terms of imprisonment, then the interrogation protocol, then another letter on not letting him escape from Küstrin. There's also one letter in there to Wilhelmine during the Küstrin period, which I don't think is in Trier.

Nothing in the last 25 pages of Catt that I could see that convinces me Fritz talked about Katte, but the diary's up, so now you can check yourself. I only read parts of the French and skimmed quite a bit, and I haven't had time to read through the entire translation, so I'm sure there are at least some goodies I'm missing, even if not Katte ones. (I didn't see "If they had raised me instead of humiliating me" or "I have to be won over with praise," both of which could be Fritz talking or Catt putting his opinions in Fritz's mouth. Agree with you that the impersonal sounds more like Fritz, though.)

Oh, btw, speaking of Fritz's imprisonment conditions, I was starting to think I had hallucinated (or read in fanfic) the line where Fritz said he preferred starving at Küstrin to starving at Wusterhausen (which is corroboration of Wilhelmine's accounts of going hungry), but Lavisse had it: Fritz to Grumbkow, as reported by Sauveterre, French ambassador to Prussia (French Rottenburg's replacement, I think).

More evidence, if that's reliable (and god knows it sounds like him), that Fritz was taunting his captors because he didn't think anything worse than imprisonment was in the cards.

So I still think offering his life for Katte's in August was less of a literal offer than a bargaining ploy. "You'll have to kill me, and I don't think you're going to kill me, so you'll give me what I want if I just don't back down, right? I'm really good at not backing down." Only when he gets the news about Katte's imminent execution does he seem to panic and realize he's in over his head. And then he starts offering his life, his rights to the succession, whatever it takes.

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Edited Date: 2020-02-04 04:54 am (UTC)

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