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See also: king of Prussia, son of
See also: Augustus See also: William, second son of King
See also: Frederick William I. and of Louise Amalie of See also: Brunswick, See also: sister of the wife of Frederick the See also: Great, was See also: born at Berlin on the 25th of See also: September 1744, and became heir to the See also: throne on his See also: father's See also: death in 1757
.
The boy was of an easy-going and pleasure-loving disposition, averse from sustained effort of any kind, and sensual by nature
.
His See also: marriage with Elisabeth Christine, daughter of Duke See also: Charles of Brunswick, contracted in 1765, was dissolved in 1769, and he soon afterwards married Frederika Louisa, daughter of the
See also: land-See also: grave See also: Louis IX. of Hesse-
See also: Darmstadt
.
Although he had a numerous See also: family by his wife, he was completely under the influence of his See also: mistress, Wilhelmine Enke, afterwards created Countess Lichtenau, a woman of strong intellect and much ambition
.
He was a See also: man of singularly handsome presence, not without See also: mental qualities of a high See also: order; he was devoted to the arts—Beethoven and Mozart enjoyed his patronage and his private orchestra had a See also: European reputation
.
But an See also: artistic temperament was hardly that required of a king of Prussia on the See also: eve of the Revolution; and Frederick the Great, who had employed him in various services—notably in an abortive confidential See also: mission to the See also: court of See also: Russia in 178o—openly expressed his misgivings as to the character of the See also: prince and his surroundings
.
The misgivings were justified by the event
.
Frederick William's accession to the throne (See also: August 17, 1786) was, indeed, followed by a series of See also: measures for lightening the burdens of the See also: people, reforming the oppressive French See also: system of tax-See also: collecting introduced by Frederick, and encouraging See also: trade by the diminution of customs dues and the making of roads and canals
.
This gave the new king much popularity with the mass of the people; while the educated classes were pleased by his removal of Frederick's See also: ban on the See also: German language by the See also: admission of German writers to the Prussian See also: Academy, and by the active encouragement given to See also: schools and See also: universities
.
But these reforms were vitiated in their source
.
In 1781 Frederick William, then prince of Prussia, inclined, like many sensual natures, to mysticism, had joined the Rosicrucians, and had fallen under the influence of Johann Christof Wollner (1732–1800), and by him the royal policy was inspired
.
Wollner, whom Frederick the Great had described as a " treacherous and intriguing See also: priest," had started See also: life as a poor tutor in the family of General von Itzenplitz, a See also: noble of the mark of See also: Brandenburg, had, after the general's death and to the See also: scandal of king and See also: nobility, married the general's daughter, and with his See also: mother-in-See also: law's assistance settled down on a small estate
.
By his See also: practical experiments and by his writings he gained a considerable reputation as an economist; but his ambition was not content with this, and he sought to extend his influence by joining first the Freemasons and after-wards (1779) the Rosicrucians
.
Wollner, with his impressive See also: personality and easy if superficial eloquence, was just the man to See also: lead a See also: movement of this kind
.
Under his influence the order spread rapidly, and he soon found himself the supreme director (Oberhauptdirektor) of some 26 " circles," which included in their membership princes, See also: officers and high officials
.
As a Rosicrucian Wollner dabbled in See also: alchemy and other mystic arts, but he also affected to be zealous for Christian orthodoxy, imperilled by Frederick II.'s patronage of "enlightenment," and a few months before Frederick's death wrote to his friend the Rosicrucian Johann Rudolph von Bischoffswerder (1741–1803) that his highest ambition was to be placed at the See also: head of the religious department of the See also: state" as an unworthy instrument in the See also: hand of Ormesus " (the prince of Prussia's Rosicrucian name) " for the purpose of saving millions of souls from perdition and bringing back the whole country to the faith of Jesus Christ."
Such was the man whom Frederick William II., immediately after his accession, called to his counsels
.
On the 26th of Au gust 1786 he was appointed privy councillor for See also: finance (Geheimer Oberfinanzrath), and on the 2nd of See also: October was ennobled
.
Though not in name, in fact he was See also: prime See also: minister; in all See also: internal affairs it was he who decided; and the fiscal and economic reforms of the new reign were the application of his theories
.
Bischoffswerder, too, still a See also: simple major, was called into the king's counsels; by 1789 he was already an adjutant-general
.
These were the two men who enmeshed the king in a web of Rosicrucian mystery and intrigue, which hampered whatever healthy development of his policy might have been possible, and led ultimately to disaster
.
The opposition to Wollner was, indeed, at the outset strong enough to prevent his being entrusted with the department of See also: religion; but this too in See also: time was over-come, and on the 3rd of See also: July 1788 he was appointed active privy councillor of state and of See also: justice and head of the spiritual
department for Lutheran and Catholic affairs
.
War was at once declared on what—to use a later term—we may See also: call the ' modernists." The king, so long as Wollner was content to condone his immorality (which Bischoffswerder, to do him justice, condemned), was eager to help the orthodox crusade
.
On the 9th of July was issued the famous religious edict, which forbade Evangelical ministers to teach anything not contained in the letter of their official books, proclaimed the See also: necessity of protecting the Christian religion against the " enlighteners " (Aufkldrer), and placed educational establishments under the supervision of the orthodox See also: clergy
.
On the 18th of See also: December a new censorship law was issued, to secure the orthodoxy of all published books; and finally, in 1791, a sort of See also: Protestant Inquisition was established at Berlin (Immediat-Examinationscommission) to See also: watch over all ecclesiastical and scholastic appointments
.
In his zeal for orthodoxy, indeed, Frederick William outstripped his minister; he even blamed Wollner's " idleness and vanity " for the inevitable failure of the attempt to regulate opinion from above, and in 1794 deprived him of one of his secular offices in order that he might have more time " to devote himself to the things of See also: God "; in edict after edict the king continued to the end of his reign to make regulations " in order to maintain in his states a true and active See also: Christianity, as the path to genuine fear of God."
The effects of this policy of See also: blind obscurantism far outweighed any See also: good that resulted from the king's well-meant efforts at economic and See also: financial reform; and even this reform was but spasmodic and partial, and awoke ultimately more discontent than it allayed
.
But far more fateful for Prussia was the king's attitude towards the army and See also: foreign policy
.
The army was the very foundation of the Prussian state, a truth which both Frederick William I. and the great Frederick had fully realized; the army had been their first care, and its efficiency had been maintained by their See also: constant See also: personal supervision
.
Frederick William, who had no taste for military matters, put his authority as " War-See also: Lord " into commission under a supreme See also: college of war (Oberkriegs-Collegium) under the duke of Brunswick and General von Mollendorf
.
It was the beginning of the See also: process that ended in 1806 at See also: Jena
.
In the circumstances Frederick William's intervention in European affairs was not likely to prove of benefit -to Prussia
.
The Dutch See also: campaign of 1787, entered on for purely family reasons, was indeed successful; but Prussia received not even the cost of her intervention
.
An attempt to intervene in the war of Russia and See also: Austria against See also: Turkey failed of its See also: object; Prussia did not succeed in obtaining any concessions of territory from the alarms of the See also: Allies, and the dismissal of Hertzberg in 1791 marked the final abandonment of the See also: anti-See also: Austrian tradition of Frederick the Great
.
For, meanwhile, the French Revolution had entered upon alarming phases, and in August 1791 Frederick William, at the meeting at See also: Pillnitz, arranged with the emperor Leopold to join in supporting the cause of Louis XVI
.
But neither the king's character, nor the confusion of the Prussian finances due to his extravagance, gave promise of any effective See also: action
.
A formal See also: alliance was indeed signed on the 7th of See also: February 1792, and Frederick William took See also: part personally in the See also: campaigns of 1792 and 1793
.
He was hampered, however, by want of funds, and his counsels were distracted by the affairs of Poland, which promised a richer booty than was likely to be gained by the anti-revolutionary crusade intoSee also: France
.
A subsidy treaty with the See also: sea See also: powers (See also: April 19, 1794) filled his coffers; but the insurrection in Poland that followed the See also: partition of 1793, and the See also: threat of the isolated intervention of Russia, hurried him into the See also: separate treaty of See also: Basel with the French Republic (April 5, 1795), which was regarded by the great monarchies as a betrayal, and See also: left Prussia morally isolated in See also: Europe on the eve of the titanic struggle between the monarchical principle and the new See also: political creed of the Revolution
.
Prussia had paid a heavy price for the territories acquired at the expense of Poland in 1793 and 1795, and when, on the 16th of See also: November 1797, Frederick William died, he left the state in bankruptcy and confusion, the army decayed and the See also: monarchy discredited
.
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3
Frederick William II. was twice married: (1) in 1765 to See also: Elizabeth of Brunswick (d
.
1841), by whom he had a daughter, Frederika, afterwards duchess of
See also: York, and from whom he was divorced in 1769; (2) in 1769 to Frederika Louisa of Hesse-Darmstadt, by whom he had four sons, Frederick William III., Louis (d
.
1796), See also: Henry and William, and two daughters,
See also: Wilhelmina, wife of William of Orange, afterwards William I., king of the See also: Netherlands, and See also: Augusta, wife of William II., elector of Hesse
.
Besides his relations with his maltresse en titre, the countess Lichtenau, the king—who was a See also: frank polygamist—contracted two " marriages of the left hand " with Fraulein von Voss and the countess Donhoff
.
See article by von Hartmann in Allgem. deutsche Biog
.
(See also: Leipzig, 1878) ; Stadelmann, Preussens Konige in ihrer Tdtigkeit fur die Landeskultur,vol. iii
.
" See also: Friedrich Wilhelm II." (Leipzig, 1885) ; Paulig, Friedrich Wilhelm II., sein Privatleben u. See also: seine Regierung (Frankfurtan-der-See also: Oder, 1896)
.
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