selenak: (Wilhelmine)
selenak ([personal profile] selenak) wrote in [personal profile] cahn 2020-03-22 06:28 am (UTC)

Re: Anhalt Sophie: Portrait of the Czarina as a young girl

due to both brothers suspecting (correctly, as it turned out) that the Prussian envoy at St. Petersburg, Solms, in whose hands the courier service was, was either not enough concerned with safety or in the pockets of the Russians

Do we know which it was?


According to Ziebura, Solms did eventually 'fess up to telling Panin all, but he assured Heinrich it was all for patriotic reasons, that this openess served Prussia best to win Russia's trust. ;)

([personal profile] cahn, Panin was back then Catherine's foreign secretary. He'd backed her coup against Peter. His English wiki page sounds just a liiiiiittle bit biased, but if you want to check out out, it's here. Seriously though, who wrote that page? Phrases like "Panin's strange tenderness towards Poland", "the efforts of the old statesman to prevent a matrimonial alliance between the Russian and Austrian courts determined Catherine to get rid of a counsellor of whom, for some mysterious reason, she was secretly afraid" or "Panin supported Catherine when she overthrew her husband, Tsar Peter III, and declared herself empress in 1762, but his jealousy of Catherine's lovers caused him to constantly try to sleep with her" (in vain) all sound as if they were cribed together from different novels.)

Anyway, Heinrich and Fritz did decide on using an alternate, non-embassy courier once the issue of Poland got on the table, with new cyphre; this was the Berlin business man Bachman who had a trading post in St. Petersburg, and with whose mail Heinrich could send some secret letters in addition to those he sent via offical embassay mail. But that still took two or three weeks per letter, so Fritz still couldn't micromanage from a far and had to more or less trust in his brother's ability to know what he was doing. Undoubtedly this was haaaaaard.

Poniatowski: recognizes a waistcoat a la mode when he spots one, see also here.

Blanning, who is the one who led us to Hahn (via Fredersdorf accusations), and who therefore should know about the nearsightedness, has Fritz showing off his fabled memory for names and faces in the 1760s!

Et tu, Blanning? Well, Fritz may well have had a great memory for names, per se. (The occasional Pliny/Ovid glitch excepted, he's doing fine with his writers and quotes till the end of his life from what I can see in Lucchesini's diary and in the letters to Heinrich.) Just not for the faces matching them, unless they get close enough. ;)

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