Margravine Elisabeth Louise of Brandenburg-Schwedt

Elisabeth Louise of Brandenburg-Schwedt
Princess Augustus Ferdinand of Prussia

Elisabeth Louise, c. 1760
Born (1738-04-22)22 April 1738
Schwedt
Died 22 February 1820(1820-02-22) (aged 81)
Berlin, Brandenburg
Burial Berlin Cathedral
Spouse Prince Augustus Ferdinand of Prussia
Issue Princess Friederike Elisabeth of Prussia
Prince Friedrich Heinrich of Prussia
Louise, Princess Radziwiłł
Prince Heinrich Friedrich of Prussia
Prince Friedrich Ludwig Christian of Prussia
Prince Friedrich Paul of Prussia
Prince Friedrich Wilhelm Heinrich of Prussia
Full name
German: Anna Elisabeth Luise
House Hohenzollern
Father Margrave Frederick William of Brandenburg-Schwedt
Mother Sophia Dorothea of Prussia

Margravine Anna Elisabeth Louise of Brandenburg-Schwedt (22 April 1738 10 February 1820) was a Prussian princess. She was a daughter of Margrave Frederick William of Brandenburg-Schwedt and his wife Princess Sophia Dorothea of Prussia.[1]

Family

Elisabeth Louise was one of five children born to Margrave Frederick William of Brandenburg-Schwedt and Sophia Dorothea of Prussia. Her siblings included Sophia Dorothea, Duchess of Württemberg, and Philippine, Landgravine of Hesse-Cassel.

Her father was a son of Philip William, Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt and Princess Johanna Charlotte of Anhalt-Dessau.

Her mother was a daughter of Frederick William I of Prussia and Sophia Dorothea of Hanover. Through her mother, Elisabeth Louise was a niece of Frederick the Great.

Marriage and children

On 27 September 1755 in Charlottenburg Palace, Berlin, Elisabeth Louise married her uncle Prince Augustus Ferdinand of Prussia, a younger brother of her mother, Sophia Dorothea.[1] He was eight years older than she and was a younger son of Frederick William I of Prussia and Sophia Dorothea of Hanover (herself the only daughter of George I of Great Britain).

The couple had seven children:

The biological father of her daughter Louise, who was born in 1770, may have been Count Friedrich Wilhelm Carl von Schmettau.[2] Louise was described as nice, witty and kind.[3] The Swedish Princess Hedwig Elizabeth Charlotte described her at the time of her visit in 1798:

In the afternoon, we visited this Princess, who lives at Bellevue in the outskirts of Berlin. It is a little villa, very suitable for a private person but far from royal. The reception here was quite disimilar from the one at my aunt. Princess Ferdinand is stiff and made it obvious that she wished to impress us. I was of course polite, but after I had noticed, that she took on a condescending tone and wished to embarrass me, I replied the same way and displayed the same haughtiness. The Princess is no longer young, has surely been beautiful, looks like an aristocratic Frenchwoman but not like a Princess, for she has nothing royal about her. I do not think she is that clever, but she can make a pleasant conversation and is quite confident, as one becomes through a long habit of socializing in the grand world.[4]

Elisabeth Louise was one of the few members of the royal house to remain in Berlin during the French occupation in 1806. While most of the royal family left, reportedly because of the anti-Napoleonic criticism they had expressed, and the members of the royal court either followed them or left the capital for their country estates, Elisabeth Louise remained with her spouse and Princess Wilhelmina of Hesse-Kassel because of "their great age", as did Princess Augusta of Prussia, who was pregnant at the time.[5]

One visitor to her in 1813–14 commented that, "I never saw such a formal, stiff, disagreeable old woman - vieille cour outree, and she frightened me to death. I was glad to get away...".[6]

Death

Augustus Ferdinand died in Berlin on 2 May 1813. Elisabeth Louise died seven years later, on 22 February 1820. She is buried in Berlin Cathedral.

Ancestry

References

  1. 1 2 Lundy, Darryl. "The Peerage: Anne Elisabeth Luise Prinzessin von Brandenburg-Schwedt". Retrieved 15 December 2009.
  2. Tobias Debuch: Prinz Louis Ferdinand von Preußen (1772–1806) als Musiker im soziokulturellen Umfeld seiner Zeit. Berlin 2004, S. 9 f.
  3. Weidinger, Carl, Das Leben und Wirken Friedrichs des Grossen, Königs von Preussen, B.G. Teubner, 1863, p. 326
  4. Charlottas, Hedvig Elisabeth (1927) [1797–99]. af Klercker, Cecilia, ed. Hedvig Elisabeth Charlottas dagbok [The diary of Hedvig Elizabeth Charlotte] (in Swedish). VI 1797–1799. Translated by Cecilia af Klercker. Stockholm: P.A. Norstedt & Söners förlag. p. 121. OCLC 14111333. (search for all versions on WorldCat)
  5. Charlottas, Hedvig Elisabeth (1936) [1800–06]. af Klercker, Cecilia, ed. Hedvig Elisabeth Charlottas dagbok [The diary of Hedvig Elizabeth Charlotte] (in Swedish). VII 1800–1806. Translated by Cecilia af Klercker. Stockholm: P.A. Norstedt & Söners förlag. p. 455. OCLC 14111333. (search for all versions on WorldCat)
  6. Westmorland, Countess Priscilla Anne Wellesley Pole Fane (2009). The letters of Lady Burghersh: (afterwards Countess of Westmorland) From Germany and France During the Campaign of 1813–14. Cornell University Library. p. 57. ISBN 1-112-58028-X.
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