cahn: (Default)
cahn ([personal profile] cahn) wrote2021-01-01 10:38 am

Frederick the Great, Discussion Post 22 (or: Yuletide 2020 edition)

ETA: Whoops, I missed my cue -- this might as well be the next discussion post, I guess! :)

This is about the fic I didn't author (I have another reveals post for the fics I did author).

So my goal this Yuletide was NOT to write any historical fandom (because hard!) and just enjoy the excellent stuff that other people wrote. And... that sort of happened? I didn't end up authoring anything history-intensive? Buuuuut I ended up spending a lot more time than I did on any of my own fics working with [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard on her fic, which she was worried about being able to pull off because she had had this completely insane idea to write a long casefic about Frederick the Great that every time I turned around had another twist put in :P :) She supplied me with what we called a "rough opal in matrix" bus pass casefic, and I cut away the matrix that remained and in some cases carved the opal -- that is to say, writing additional text for some of the scenes, what we liked to call "putting in feels," and in at least two cases entirely rewriting and/or restructuring the scene she'd written. She didn't always keep what I wrote (which we'd agreed upon in the beginning), but when she did (which was most of the time :) ) she then went in and rewrote/restructured what I put in to wordsmith (some of the words I gave her were really rough) and match her style, adding even more scenes -- that is, polishing it up and adding some gold and diamonds -- and voila, a beautiful pendant, I mean, story :)

I'm really proud of it and also it was really fun and also what I could handle this year, especially because mildred did all the parts I thought were hard and also wrote all the parts involving actual history or subtle AU before I was brought in so I didn't actually have to know historical stuff (though I guess I will never forget the battle of Leuthen now), and took full responsibility for how the whole thing turned out, so all I had to do was be like "Here, I'll write some rough feels for you for this scene!" The funny part was that I would often then write a paragraph justifying why I *had* to write the scene the way I did, and more likely than not mildred would be like, "yeah, I was sure you would do that, of course it should be written like that." (The most glaring example of this was where I inserted the Letter of Doom at the climax. I was worried there was some reason she didn't want it there, but she said, no, she just didn't have time to put it in herself and was just trusting me to do that :) ) She started jokingly calling me her "other self," to which I replied that it was with 1000% less angst and frustration -- as Frederick the Great's brother was his "other self" (which actually comes up in the fic) that he could trust to do all kinds of competent things, but they had a relationship that was, um, fraught? radioactive? Whereas this was just fun :)

Mildred did so much more than I did (we estimated a 90%/10% word ratio, not even counting the part where she wordsmithed a lot of my text) that I felt very uncomfortable being listed as a co-author, but hey, ~3000 words is a respectable Yuletide fic length :)

Yet They Grind Exceedingly Small (30384 words) by mildred_of_midgard
Chapters: 5/5
Fandom: 18th Century CE RPF, Historical RPF
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Major Character Death
Relationships: Anna Amalie von Preußen & Wilhelmine von Preußen, Anna Amalie von Preußen & Friedrich Heinrich Ludwig von Preußen, Wilhelmine von Preußen & Elisabeth Friederike Sophie von Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Friedrich II von Preußen | Frederick the Great & Wilhelmine von Preußen | Wilhelmine of Prussia
Characters: Anna Amalie von Preußen (1723-1787), Wilhelmine von Preußen | Wilhelmine of Prussia (1709-1758), Friedrich Heinrich Ludwig von Preußen | Henry of Prussia (1726-1802), Elisabeth Friederike Sophie von Brandenburg-Bayreuth (1732-1780), Wilhelmine von Hesse-Kassel (1726-1808), August Wilhelm von Preußen | Augustus William of Prussia (1722-1758), Alcmene 1 | Frederick the Great's Italian Greyhound, Voltaire (Writer), Friedrich II von Preußen | Frederick the Great
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Dysfunctional Family, Suicide, Alternate Universe - Dark, Siblings, Canon-Typical Violence, Mystery, Tide of History Challenge
Summary:

January 1758. Prince William is dead, some say of a broken heart. Frederick wants to absolve himself of blame for William's death. Henry schemes to end the Third Silesian War on his terms. Amalie and Wilhelmine team up to find out what really happened to their brother. Alcmene just wants to be told she's a good dog.

selenak: (Fredersdorf)

Re: Gröben; Bielfeld; Strasbourg

[personal profile] selenak 2021-01-09 05:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Gröben the STD spreader: I just couldn't resist!

I love the idea re: Algarotti. Does it work out date-wise? (I.e. from when exactly is this letter?)

Thank you for linking Bielfeld's account. I have to say, "The King was a good deal piqued by this indiscretion; for if the marechal knew that it was the King of Prussia, he ought not to have received his visit, but to have prevented him with the marks of utmost repect" is as Fritzian an alternate story for "Broglie locked me up!" that I can imagine. :)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Fritz and STDs

[personal profile] mildred_of_midgard 2021-01-09 06:04 pm (UTC)(link)
I love the idea re: Algarotti. Does it work out date-wise? (I.e. from when exactly is this letter?)

Well, Algarotti's STD letter is late 1740 (December, iirc), and Fritz's letters to Gröben are from 1734, so Fritz's hypothetical sexual relationship with Gröben would definitely precede the one with Algarotti. That said, [personal profile] felis tells us that Gröben was transferred out of Fritz's regiment in 1738, so there would have to be a lapse of at least a year (the first encounter between Fritz and Algarotti being 1739).

That said, STDs do often go from symptomatic to asymptomatic to symptomatic, and there were no antibiotics back then to actually *fix* the problem, so the following is possible:

1733-1738: Fritz acquired an STD. Got treated (at the suggestion of the Schwedt brothers?).
1739: Fritz was asymptomatic in 1739 and attributed that to the success of some treatment. Had sex with Algarotti.
Late 1740: Algarotti and Fritz both become symptomatic.
1741: Fritz receives treatment in the field, as Münchow claimed in the 1790s that his brother had told him.

Of course, in 1741, we also have Georgii, so the plot thickens...

The *only* part of this for which we have hard evidence is Fritz writing to Algarotti sympathetically about A having an STD. To my mind that's completely different from Marwitz's STD (which he got from Fritz, royal super-spreader? :P), which was said mockingly and to a third party, under circumstances where Fritz had a lot of incentive to lie or spread unsubstantiated rumors. I thus give it good odds that Algarotti of "six degrees" fame really did have an STD. (Joking aside, if there was a super-spreader, it might well have been him. And if Fritz did have an STD in the field in the 1740s, right after Algarotti turns up symptomatic in late 1740, he might still have gotten it from Algarotti.)

I have to say, "The King was a good deal piqued by this indiscretion; for if the marechal knew that it was the King of Prussia, he ought not to have received his visit, but to have prevented him with the marks of utmost repect" is as Fritzian an alternate story for "Broglie locked me up!" that I can imagine. :)

Yup. Fritz rewriting the history of that event from day 1. Later, AW would be omitted when it was convenient for Fritz to remember it that way.