Yeah, all I found, also by Krieger, summarized here, was that it was in the royal Hohenzollern collection when Eversmann's descendants decided to gift it to the royal family, and it was part of the 1914 exhibition. I also wondered what happened to it (1914 is early enough to disappear for the usual reason).
(Btw, in that comment, I wrote "19th century editor" out of habit (apparently that's a set phrase for my fingers now ;) and meant "19th century owner" (lol, I just started to do it again, and had to hit backspace!).
Spoiler: the list doesn't include Pslam 73. :P I'm still skeptical.
Well, that wasn't the Eversmann Bible, though, that was the concordance owned by Muller that Fritz borrowed for a few days. (We now know Fritz is someone who will write and draw in your books when he borrows them, though I think the circumstances count as extenuating. ;))
More seriously, the Muller account also provides corroborating evidence that Fritz, during this period, was going through the only officially allowed reading material he had and marking it up. So while I don't know if the passages marked, or all of them, are by Fritz, it's a possibility.
Re: Book review I: Der Meister von Sanssouci - Fredersdorf and historical footnotes
(Btw, in that comment, I wrote "19th century editor" out of habit (apparently that's a set phrase for my fingers now ;) and meant "19th century owner" (lol, I just started to do it again, and had to hit backspace!).
Spoiler: the list doesn't include Pslam 73. :P I'm still skeptical.
Well, that wasn't the Eversmann Bible, though, that was the concordance owned by Muller that Fritz borrowed for a few days. (We now know Fritz is someone who will write and draw in your books when he borrows them, though I think the circumstances count as extenuating. ;))
More seriously, the Muller account also provides corroborating evidence that Fritz, during this period, was going through the only officially allowed reading material he had and marking it up. So while I don't know if the passages marked, or all of them, are by Fritz, it's a possibility.