cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
And including Emperor Joseph II!

from Derek Beales: Joseph II, Volume 2: Against the World, 1780 - 1790:

Joseph's alleged comment to Mozart about the Entführung, "Too many notes", has been taken as evidence of his ignorance. But he probably said something like, "Too beautiful for our ears, and monstrous many notes." It is always necessary to bear in mind, when appraising the emperor's remarks, his peculiar brand of humor or sarcasm. He was usually getting at someone. And he did not use the royal "we". The ears in question were those of the Viennese audience, whom he was mocking for their limited appreciation of Mozart's elaborate music.

(though not gonna lie, I think it is a LOT of notes)

Re: Love and arranged marriages

Date: 2022-02-14 02:13 pm (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
today there's an article in my favourite newspaper...which looks like it contribute a bit on the subject

Anything interesting? Is it paywalled?

And even MT would presumably not have expected to marry FS if he'd not been a Duke

I cannot *imagine* her being allowed to marry a non-ducal FS! She had the good luck of falling in love with someone extremely suitable for her. And that was largely because of a perfect storm of political considerations. Namely, she *wasn't* supposed to leave home and marry the highest-ranked guy she could get, in which case she would never have met him, because Europe would never stand for the highest-ranked guy getting the Holy Roman Empire. So she got to marry a lower-ranked guy who'd been hanging out at her court for years, where she could get to know him before marriage. Highly unusual circumstance here.

I'm trying to think of an example where a princess, not a prince, married a non-noble for love in the 18th century and am failing

Both Elizaveta and Catherine are suspected of having morganatically married non-nobles or petty nobles for love--Razumovsky and Potemkin respectively--but they were Tsarinas, and in both cases the alleged marriage was so secret that to this day it's contentious whether it happened at all.

[personal profile] cahn, I'm not sure if you've met Razumovsky in your reading or watching yet, but he was a peasant who sang in the church choir. His impressive singing voice ended up bringing him to the attention of Elizaveta, who took him as a lover, and possibly married him.
Edited Date: 2022-02-14 04:45 pm (UTC)

Re: Love and arranged marriages

Date: 2022-02-16 01:33 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
He was possibly my favorite too!

Re the discussion of marrying non-nobles, I should add that Elizaveta had the example of her father, Peter the Great, marrying a Lithuanian peasant (mother of Elizaveta and Peter III's mother), who then became Tsarina after Peter died. Will or no will, Razumovsky could have at least made a bid for power. But one thing the show gets right is that he didn't want to play the game of thrones, in which you win or you die.

ETA: forgot to mention her name. That's Catherine I, 1725-1727.
Edited Date: 2022-02-16 05:55 pm (UTC)

Re: Love and arranged marriages

Date: 2022-02-17 07:47 am (UTC)
selenak: (Default)
From: [personal profile] selenak
There's one big difference, though, isn't there, between the marriage of Peter the Great and Martha/Catherine the Lithunian on the one hand, and the possible marriages of Elizaveta to Razumovsky and Catherine II to Potemkin on the other. And that's the question of dynasty and succession. Elizaveta may or may not have had illegitimate children, but if she did, she clearly didn't regard them as qualified for the succession, nor did she try to make them this way. (By, saying, marrying them to legtimate high nobility.) Catherine II. definitely had illegitimate children (no matter who Paul's bio dad was), but again, no attempt to give them quasi legitimate status. Whereas Peter the Great definitely wanted any children from his second marriage to be recognized as legitimate and worthy of crowns, and to continue his dynasty in this way. That's something a male ruler could do (well, try at least), but not a female one.

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