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JOHANN See also: great-See also: grandson of See also: Charles Ancillon, was
See also: born at Berlin on the 3oth of See also: April 1766
.
He studied See also: theology at See also: Geneva, and after See also: finishing his course was appointed See also: minister to the French community at Berlin
.
At the same See also: time his reputation as a See also: historical See also: scholar secured him the See also: post of professor of See also: history at the military See also: academy
.
In 1793 he visited See also: Switzerland, and in 1796 See also: France, and published the impressions gathered during his travels in a series of articles which he afterwards collected under the title of Melanges de litterature et de philosophic (18o1)
.
Ancillon took See also: rank among the most famous historians of his See also: day by his next See also: work, Tableau See also: des revolutions du systente politique de l'See also: Europe depuis le X TT' siecle (1803, 4 vols.; new ed., 1824), which gained him the eulogium of the Institute of France, and See also: admission to the Academy of Berlin
.
It was the first attempt to recognize psychological factors in historical movements, but otherwise its importance was exaggerated
.
Its " sugary optimism, unctuous phraseology and pulpit logic " appealed, however, to the reviving See also: pietism of the age succeeding the Revolution, and these qualities, as well as his eloquence as a preacher, early brought Ancillon into See also: notice at See also: court
.
In iSo8 he was appointed tutor to the royal princes, in 18o9 councillor of See also: state in the department of See also: religion, and in 1810 tutor of the See also: crown See also: prince (afterwards See also: Frederick See also: William IV.), on whose sensitive and dreamy nature he was to exercise a powerful but far from wholesome influence
.
In
See also: October 1814, when his pupil came of age, Ancillon was included by Prince Harden-See also: berg in the See also: ministry, as privy councillor of legation in the department of See also: foreign affairs, with a view to utilizing his supposed gifts as a philosophical historian in the -preparation of the projected Prussian constitution
.
But Ancillon's reputed liberalism was of too invertebrate a type to survive the trial of actual contact with affairs
.
The See also: practical difficulty of the constitutional problem gave the " court See also: parson "—as Gneisenau had contemptuously called him—excuse enough for a change of front which, incidentally, would please his exalted patrons
.
He covered his defection from Hardenberg's liberal constitutionalism by a series of " philosophical " See also: treatises on the nature of the state and of See also: man, and became the soul of the reactionary See also: movement at the Berlin court, and the faithful henchman of Metternich in the general politics of See also: Germany and of Europe
.
In 1817 Ancillon became a councillor of state, and in 1818 director of the See also: political section of the ministry for foreign affairs under Count See also: Bernstorff
.
In his chief's most important work, the establishment of the Prussian Zollverein, Ancillon had no share, while the entirely subordinate role played by Prussia in Europe during this See also: period, together with the See also: personal See also: part taken by the See also: sovereign in the various congresses, gave him little scope for the display of any See also: diplomatic talents he may have possessed
.
During this time he found plentiful leisure to write a series of See also: works on political philosophy, such as the Nouveaux essais de politique et de philosophic (See also: Paris, 1824)
.
In May 1831 he was made an active privy councillor, was appointed chief of the department for the principality of Neuchatel, in See also: July became secretary of state for foreign affairs, and in the spring of 1832, on Bernstorff's retirement, succeeded him as See also: head of the ministry
.
By the See also: German public, to whom Ancillon was known only through his earlier writings and some isolated protests against the " demagogue-hunting " in fashion at Berlin, his advent to power was hailed as a See also: triumph of liberalism
.
They were soon undeceived
.
Ancillon had convinced himself that the rigid class distinctions of the Prussian See also: system were the philosophically ideal basis of the state, and that See also: representation " by estates " was the only See also: sound constitutional principle; his last and indeed only See also: act of importance as minister was his collaboration with Metternich in the Vienna Final Act of the 12th of See also: June 1834, the See also: object of which was to rivet this system upon Germany for ever
.
He died on the loth of April 1837, the last of his See also: family
.
His historical importance lies neither in his writings nor in his political activity, but in his personal influence at the Prussian-See also: ANCONA 95
I
court, and especially in its lasting effect on the character of Frederick William IV
.
See C
.
A
.
L
.
P . Varnhagen von Ense, Bldtter aus der preussischen Geschichte, 5 vols . ( See also: Leipzig, 1868—1869) ; ib
.
Tagebiicher, vol. i
.
(Leipzig, 1861); H
.
O
.
See also: Treitschke, Deutsche Geschichte (Leipzig, 1899—1894), and essay on Ancillon in Preussische Jahrbiicher for April 1872; Allgemeine Deutsche Biographic, s.v
.
(Leipzig, 1875)
.
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