Last post, we had (among other things) Danish kings and their favorites; Louis XIV and Philippe d'Orléans; reviews of a very shippy book about Katte, a bad Jacobite novel, and a great book about clothing; a fic about Émilie du Châtelet and Voltaire; and a review of a set of entertaining Youtube history videos about Frederick the Great.
Re: The Prussian archives deliver again!
Date: 2023-03-21 01:12 pm (UTC)It intrigued me too! But no, it's just the address that's in French. If the entire letter had been, I would have said so immediately (and I would have begun trying to read the letter). What few words I can make out are in German, and there are too many umlauts in the rest for French.
Speaking of deciphering, I made some headway yesterday on the Algarotti letter. Everything I can read off the top of my head is Fritz flattery: we're sad Algarotti died, of course, but the most important thing is that Algarotti was a Fritz fan, and so is the guy writing this letter to the "Alexander of the North". By the end of the letter, we're still discussing Fritz's exploits in war, so I'm guessing the middle bit that I can't read without a lot more effort than I've put in yet is a case of "second verse, same as the first." I haven't found anything interesting about Algarotti, though of course I will keep trying and report back if I find anything.
Keep in mind it's May 1764, meaning one year after Fritz won the Seven Years' War and acquired a lot of fanboys across Europe.
he does have his children (and very likely sister)
Since he tells Fritz she's been acting as a mother to them and to treat her as his widow, I'm assuming she's with them, yeah.
I'm unsurprised they don't come up in the Fritz correspondence more often, between the Fritz need to be the emotional priority
His Weasleys they are not!
and the practice of editors to cut out to them irrelevant family stuff is the family members aren't famous royals
Yeah, this is what I'm hoping: that interesting stuff about Suhm got cut, and that I'm able to master his handwriting well enough to figure it out and tell salon about it.
And lol, yes, my archive-ordering is very boyfriend-oriented: Peter Keith, Fredersdorf, Algarotti, Suhm, and this mysterious Lt. Groeben. :D
What was Nicholas Suhm's day job?
Mostly envoy! Though in 1740, he's Legationsrat in the secret cabinet, then he'll go back to being an envoy. It runs in the family: their father Burchardt was an envoy too.