cahn: (Default)
cahn ([personal profile] cahn) wrote2020-10-05 10:05 pm
Entry tags:

Frederick the Great, Discussion Post 19

Yuletide nominations:

18th Century CE Federician RPF
Maria Theresia | Maria Theresa of Austria
Voltaire
Friedrich II von Preußen | Frederick the Great
Ernst Ahasverus von Lehndorff
Friedrich Heinrich Ludwig von Preußen | Henry of Prussia (1726-1802)
Wilhelmine von Preußen | Wilhelmine of Prussia (1709-1758)
Anna Amalie von Preußen | Anna Amalia of Prussia (1723-1787)
Catherine II of Russia
Hans Hermann von Katte
Peter Karl Christoph von Keith
Michael Gabriel Fredersdorf
August Wilhelm von Preußen | Augustus William of Prussia (1722-1758)

Circle of Voltaire RPF
Emilie du Chatelet
Jeanne Antoinette Poisson (Madame de Pompadour)
John Hervey (1696-1743)
Marie Louise Mignot Denis
Lady Mary Wortley-Montagu
Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis
Armand de Vignerot du Plessis de Richelieu (1696-1788)
Francesco Algarotti
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Re: Peter Keith

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2020-10-09 02:15 am (UTC)(link)
I knoooow, I'm glad he was at Trinity. <3 Peter. Although maybe next time enroll, Peter? I know you could hardly imagine that posterity would be so interested in finding traces of you in the historical record, but you would be surprised what we get up to in this salon! (Just ask Fredersdorf.)

Next question: if Katte *and* Peter had made it to safety...how much worse would things have been for Fritz?
selenak: (Antinous)

Re: Peter Keith

[personal profile] selenak 2020-10-09 06:00 am (UTC)(link)
Alas the chances are quite good then, I fear. Though to be fair: in Fiat Justitia, I achieve it by letting one general move somewhat slower in a spontanous situation. Executing Fritz, by contrast, would have given FW ample opportunity to think, and consider the consequences. Renember, in rl, Frau von Kameke saying "don't be like Peter the Great of Philip of Spain" had a sobering effect, and both these precedents were also impressive because the monarchs in question ended up having no son at all to pass their Empire on to. (Peter had two more other than Alexeij when killing him, but they both died. Hello, century of Czarinas.) FW was just the type to believe God would punish him for a son killing by taking his other sons if he has time to think it through. If he's in the same room with Fritz after having learned both Katte and Peter have made successful escapes, and Fritz, full of relief about that, can't resist taunting him, all bets are off.
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Re: Peter Keith

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2020-10-13 12:58 am (UTC)(link)
Yep, I agree him having time to think about it lowers the odds. FW was in some ways someone who could be talked out of his initial impulses. But there's always the chance!

Re Mosel, is there any evidence for this episode outside Wilhelmine's memoirs? (I don't count Pöllnitz as an independent source, since he wasn't even in Prussia at the time, and they obviously conferred on their memoir writing.) It made a fantastic "what if?" for fiction, of course, but MacDonogh doubts whether it ever happened, because there's no contemporary evidence. And while it's the kind of thing you might try to hush up, is it the kind of thing you would be successful at hushing up?
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Re: Peter Keith

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2020-10-11 03:30 am (UTC)(link)
MacDonogh thinks so!

There was still a chance that Frederick would also be executed...Katte’s death, however, announced a slight lightening of the regime in Küstrin, and a minor rehabilitation for Frederick. Frederick William had assuaged his blood-lust. That, and the problems which might beset the succession, convinced him to spare Frederick, rather than the plea for mitigation that he had received from the emperor in Vienna on 1 November.

Which is consistent with [personal profile] selenak's case that if Keith, then (probably) not Katte.
selenak: (Default)

Re: Peter Keith

[personal profile] selenak 2020-10-11 06:03 am (UTC)(link)
Hang on, if FW received the Emperor's plea for Fritz' life on November 1st, that means the story of Seckendorff holding the letter back until later can't be right?
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Re: Peter Keith

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2020-10-11 03:44 pm (UTC)(link)
So I just checked the Monarchenbriefe collection (I knew this would be worth the $30 I paid for 30 pages! :P), and the editor actually says two things (well, two things relevant to us) about the letter:

1. It was composed (verfaßt) by Seckendorff. (!!)
2. It was only handed over on October 31, when it was clear that FW would pardon Fritz.

Clear to Seckendorff, maybe.

Interestingly, this is the date the Köpenick court returned the second verdict of incompetence to try Fritz (and imprisonment for Katte).

Also, this collection includes the reply from Fritz to Charles VI, saying that he will as long as he lives do his best to demonstrate his devotion to the Emperor. But that promise dies with Charles, the editor points out.

Is this like Wilhelmine saying that her promise not to let the Marwitzes marry outside of Prussia died with FW?
selenak: (Default)

Re: Peter Keith

[personal profile] selenak 2020-10-12 06:43 am (UTC)(link)
Clear to Seckendorff, maybe.

Who did generally have a good reading on FW, plus of course had Grumbkow to tell him the FW mood du jour. Mind you, if this was the same day FW was absolutely incensed to learn the Katte verdict, he was hardly in a calm state of mind. So maybe Seckendorff, with or without Grumbkow's imput, also saw the connection between FW deciding not to kill his son but killing Katte as a replacement victim. (Jochen Kepler in his FW novel Der Vater lets FW pull out all the Abraham-Isaac-ram similes at this point.)

Is this like Wilhelmine saying that her promise not to let the Marwitzes marry outside of Prussia died with FW?

I guess. Though imo if Charles hadn't died, Fritz would not have been idle for long but found a different excuse to cover himself with military glory by invading. Maybe he'd have offered Charles his "protection", too
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Seckendorff

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2020-10-12 11:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Who did generally have a good reading on FW, plus of course had Grumbkow to tell him the FW mood du jour.

Right, that's what I was thinking: he might have been the first to figure this out, while everyone else is left wondering. Which is why November 1 as a date at which the pardon has been decided felt far too early to you and me. Seckendorff (and Grumbkow) were more on top of things!

Also: not that I want to give you more opportunities to make me fall even further behind in commenting than I already am, zomg :P, but while researching this question, I (re)discovered a 1792 biography + collection of contemporary documents of Seckendorff written by a descendant or other family member, which is now in the library in 4 volumes. The first two volumes seem to be a straightforward biography in German, judging by my skimming of German in an old-fashioned font, and the next two are commentaries and documentation around his political accomplishments, in a mixture of French and German.

Anyway, it's there if we want it, as reference if nothing else. I put it in the biographies folder, despite the collection of documents. Many of these bios are a mixture, thanks to scholars being nice about publishing their sources. (Debating moving Volz's Spiegel to the documents folder, since it seems to be more purely a collection of documents?)
selenak: (Sternennacht - Lefaym)

Re: Seckendorff

[personal profile] selenak 2020-10-13 05:57 am (UTC)(link)
Volz: It is a collection of documents (some of which are excerpts of memoirs, granted), and yes, thus would fit better in the documents folder.

And I salute the royal detective for finding yet another source for us! Have only read the preface and am mightly amused, because:

Preface writer: Seckendorff rocked! No other envoy in this century has accomplished as much as he!

Ghost of Seckendorff *smugly*: Told you so.

Preface writer: as a warrior-diplomat combo, he was unequalled!

All the other envoys: still got imprisoned twice, and once by his own team. We didn't, except Poniatowski.

Poniatowski: I was the victim of a love triangle involving me, Poland and Catherine, what with me loving both passionately and both turning out to demand opposing goals from me. Fall and imprisonment resulting from this is the meat of which tragedies are made. Seckendorff, otoh, got locked up twice because he had made himself enemies, and because the Margrave of Brandenburg was nothing but a gangster with good PR. You can't compare this!

Mitchell: while I can't claim to be a soldier myself, I did survive battles. It also occurs to me that given his missions to the Czarina Catherine, Prince Henry should count as a warrior-diplomat combination as well, and frankly, I would back his soldier credentials against Seckendorff's any time. He also did not have to get the Czarina drunk in order to accomplish the first division of Poland to mutual benefits.

Poniatowski: *sobs*

More seriously, going by the preface, this was the first serious Seckendorff biography, with two previous attempts being anti-Seckendorff pamphlets by enemies, and our preface writer swears he's used all the material he could find. Note that as the book was published in 1792, this can't include Wilhelmine's memoirs. (Or for that matter Lehndorff's entertaining diary entry on paying a visit to old Seckendorff in Magdeburg where he's making an acid remark about the way Fritz describes him in the "History of the House of Brandenburg". But: the biography writer would have been able to interview people who'd actually known Seckendorff in his later years, and have had access to print media long since lost, newspaper accunts, pamphlets and the like.
Edited 2020-10-13 06:07 (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Re: Seckendorff

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2020-10-17 01:10 am (UTC)(link)
This sounds awesome, and I look forward to more tidbits!

Preface writer: Seckendorff rocked! No other envoy in this century has accomplished as much as he!

Ghost of Seckendorff *smugly*: Told you so.

Preface writer: as a warrior-diplomat combo, he was unequalled!

All the other envoys: still got imprisoned twice, and once by his own team. We didn't, except Poniatowski.


MT: You know, all that money you poured into Fritz's coffers? (And Wilhelmine's.) I could have used that when I inherited a BANKRUPT COUNTRY. Okay, Fritz was a drop in the bucket. But it's the principle of the thing! All we got in return was one freaking salmon.

But: the biography writer would have been able to interview people who'd actually known Seckendorff in his later years, and have had access to print media long since lost, newspaper accunts, pamphlets and the like.

Let us hope he made good use of them!