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Fuck Yeah Preußen




A little slideshow about Frederick the Great that I found on YouTube.

Music: Präsentiermarsch des Leib-Kürassier-Regiments “Großer Kurfürst” (schlesisches) Nr. 1 von Cuno Graf von Moltke (1896).

Happy birthday, old man!


11 Anmerkungen | Reblog | Vor 3 Monaten

Herzlichen Glückwunsch zum Geburtstag, Fritz!

It’s the 24th January in 2012 and 300 years ago was the birthday of the most important and beloved king of Prussia:


Frederick II. / Frederick the Great / Der Alte Fritz (The Old Fritz)


rederick the Great… this is a name full of significance in history of Germany. If we look back with perspective, he is the one behind the independence of Germany, even though Bismarck is the one who made war to gain it. This absolute king, also called Frederick II, is the symbol of Germany’s independence and is the subject of this biography.

He has his place in books about history of Germany, but also in the creation of his country. Our goal here is to paint a portrait of this man who had a huge impact on the existence of a nation. From his childhood and the period in which he lived to his realizations, without forgetting what made him a unique historical character. This is not about dates but about his life. It is now time to dive into history of a little country called Prussia during the 18th century, and believe me, it is worth it.

Historical context and childhood

Everything started at the beginning of the century. Europe was smaller before the Russian Empire really got involved in the continent. Kings and priests represented the elite of european society. They were the ones making political decisions and their influence affected the daily lives of populations. War was a natural way to conduct foreign policy for powers like the Ottoman Empire, Austria, France, England and a slowing-down Spain. Prussia – which will unite Germany during the 19th century – was just like Poland… a second-rate country.

Frederick the Great was born on January 24, 1712, in the middle of a cold winter. This day meant celebration for the Hohenzollern royal family. This latest son was much needed. His father, Frederick-Wilhelm, had already lost two children and had to keep this baby alive to ensure a smooth royal transition when he would die. The baby’s health was somewhat fragile during the first couple of years, but he survived. Frederick-Wilhelm was happy about it. The baby was raised at Potsdam Palace. His mother spoke French around him and she told him that French was the language of culture, while German was used by inferior people… and the kid included his father in this category.

The king made sure to train and educate his son properly. He raised him like any other kid, gave him military education, and the brat (nicknamed Fritz) just hated that. The king wanted to make sure that his son was a real man. He did not want him to wear fancy clothes; he disliked the French style and language of his son. Each time the child did something wrong, his father would hit literally him. One day, Fritz got tired of this treatment and wrote a letter to his grandfather (who lived in England) to tell him that he wanted to suicide. He got caught and went to jail at Kuestrin for a few months. During this period, he studied agriculture, economy and administration. To recover freedom, he had to swear he would never seek revenge for this punishment, that he was always going to obey his father and that he would never get married without his father’s approval. Then, he went back to Potsdam. In 1732, his father told him that he found a woman for him to marry. Elizabeth Christine von Braunschweig-Bevern was her name. The wedding planned for June 12, 1733 did not excite Frederick at all. In any case, he went back to the soldier’s training routine once united to his wife.

In 1736, his life changed. The king gave him the Rheinsberg Palace and more money. This new situation made Frederick happier and richer. He was Voltaire’s pen pal (whom he admired and argued with), he played and composed songs, had his personal orchestra… pretty much all the things his father despised. He read, studied the Enlightenment and learned military strategy. He even wrote an anti-Machiavelli theory. He lived like a gentleman during four years before becoming King of Prussia. He was still happy despite a grudge with his father. In 1740, Frederick-Wilhelm died and the throne called his son as the successor. This event was to change Prussia forever, giving [virtual] birth to Germany as we know it, inspiring itself from this new king who would leave his mark.

Characteristics

Before taking a look at what he realized, we have to see what the new king was all about. He mastered French better than any Prussian. He was going to be a hero; would introduce reforms; be an Enlightened man; wanted the German population to have a new existence (does this sound familiar?) and his victories would have their place in history books. He was the nation’s symbol of patriotism.

He was a poet and writer. He would write many poems and 30 books while composing music. He was a gay man surrounded by a male society at “Château Sans-Souci”, which he built. According to him, people must be judged on their intelligence and skills, privileges having nothing to do with it. He was a fascinating character for his rivals.

Realizations

Frederick the Great’s personality appears through what he did in Prussia. And he did a whole lot of things…

Here is Prussia when he took over: a poorly populated country (2 million people) cities are weakling; the economy is not developed; Berlin is the only important city; agriculture is stuck under the administration of the Junkers; provinces are not united. When he died, 6 million people lived in Prussian territory, increased the land to 195 000 square kilometers instead of 120 000 and its geography was more coherent.

How did he do it all? War and administration.

When he took over, the last Habsburg (Charles VI) died to be followed by 40 years of war against Mary-Theresa of Hungary. Only the forces of nature would stop Frederick the Great!

Right after taking over, he attacked Silesia for conquest and the military conflicts in which he participated lasted until 1763. After that, Frederick the Great introduced something new to Prussia: the now-legendary will for Prussians to be powerful and build a military tradition. Something else was new because the changes had nothing to do with religion or ideology. The State, its power and its people were more important (German nationalism?) than traditional elites.

Frederick signed a pact with France to wage war against Austria in Silesia and he won. Therefore, Prussia’s strong unity slowly becomes reality with the conquered territories.

Before the Seven Years War, Frederick busted his alliances with Russia and France, mostly because he dumped them and made bad jokes about symbolic characters such as Madame de Pompadour and tsarina Elisabeth. In 1756, war was on the menu again. Prussia faced France, Russia, Austria, and the German Empire. Its ally ? An England that was determined to face France and ready to provide economic and military support to Prussia. War destroyed Prussia’s resources. During the conflict, Frederick the Great showed his genius and military strategy, his troops were disciplined, and his generals extremely competent. Berlin got occupied twice and almost everything collapsed, but…

Tsarina Elisabeth died in 1763. After taking over, Peter III changed Russia’s position take Prussia’s and England’s side, and then Catherine II assassinated him to grasp power. She simply stepped out of the conflict. This killed the morale of Frederick the Great’s opponents. The war was over. Total destruction was close, but Frederick’s bold moves paid off. In 1763, a new era began and Prussia became a major european power.

The funniest thing is that those years of conflict will lead Prussia to… a long lasting peace of 30 years. Frederick the Great will become a solid absolutist king just like Louis XIV. He will impose rational thought, secularization, legalist and humanist principles. The state is now everywhere in prussian life and it will respect Frederick’s dearest wishes. The army gets beefed up and efficiency is the only acceptable policy for the national administration. Prussia’s peace and security will barely be interrupted in this period until Bismarck’s easy victories from 1866 to 1870 and World War I in 1914. Frederick the Great’s successes gave birth to this nationalist tradition in Prussia and would also give birth to German pride.

In 1772, Frederick the Great divides Poland with Catherine II of Russia. It would be one of the classic divisions of Poland’s territory between its surrounding enemies.

Frederick the Great takes care of everything personally. He starts occupying the new territories. He is tolerant with religious diversity, abolishes torture, introduces new laws and fills the administration as well as the army ranks with nobility. It was the smartest thing for Frederick to do in order to ensure stability within his regime. The nobility was the only social class that (utimately) had the power to overthrow him. While liberalism rises everywhere, his reign is an icon of the Ancien Régime. He is the King, nobody else is.

Frederick the Great gives 50% of the state’s revenues to the army (a unique feat at the time) and builds the foundation of a new military tradition in Prussia, which will only end with Adolf Hitler’s collapse. Frederick the Great owns a lot of land, makes peasant life easier – happy peasants are better peasants – creates public organizations to sell food at a good price in difficult times; he guarantees credit and controls prices. Prussia now means stability and responsible government, which is a contrast when compared to the risks taken from 1740 to 1763. Frederick the Great made sure that Austria would not devour German territories. His successes – even after he died – cannot be destructed. When he was old, he also opposed to the possibility that intellectuals could have more power than the political men.

Frederick the Great governed Prussia during 46 years, gave importance to the army, reformed the administration and made his country a major power. He died in 1786, disease being the last opponent of his life.

Succession

Frederick II had no children. His immediate successor was his nephew, Friedrich Wilhelm II, and he ruled Prussia from 1786 to 1797.

Memory and conclusion

What did Frederick the Great leave behind him? He is the one who focused on militarism for the first time in German history. He started the military tradition that died in 1945. Without knowing, he inspired German leaders, including Adolf Hitler. He is the first symbol of their independence, just like George Washington was in the USA.

His memory was ruined by Bismarck and the Nazis. Bismarck made German unity official by using war as a nationalism-building too, as he said it himself. The Nazis revered him and used him as an inspiration. They wanted to follow his footsteps… in their own way. Hitler even had a portrait of him in his living room. This made people associated Frederick the Great to an ideology that lead to an ultranationalist hitlerian regime. From Frederick the Great, to Bismarck and Hitler, here is how it got simplified. Since then, the king’s image is not very positive, and this is too bad because of his legend, commitment and realizations. Such a character has been destroyed because of the mistakes made during the two world wars.

When you think about it, the Germans would respect Frederick the Great if the whole tradition lead them to victories and hegemony in Europe instead of the unusually rough treatment received at Versailles. Despite the treatment his character received through history, Frederick the Great had a big impact on his country’s future.

Source


32 Anmerkungen | Reblog | Vor 3 Monaten

thesouschef:

IT’S FREDERICK THE GREAT’S 300TH BIRTHDAY

Possible methods of celebration for this event include:

  • Getting the entire civilized world to declare war on you
  • Writing bad poetry
  • Making a potato cannon

301 Anmerkungen | Reblog | Vor 3 Monaten

Because Prussian history is always relevant.

drawingdreams:

January 18th, 1701: Elector Frederick III of the Duchy of Prussia makes Prussia into a kingdom and becomes King Frederick I. To put it more simply, 311 years ago, Prussia suddenly got a lot more badass.

Unfortunately, due to significant Polish influence in the area, it wasn’t until Frederick II the Great that the title actually became “King of Prussia” as opposed to just “King in Prussia”. But in any case, a king is a king, right?


78 Anmerkungen | Reblog | Vor 3 Monaten

Today in Prussian history: January 18th

18-01-1701:

The first King In Prussia, Frederik I. (Friedrich I.), gets crowned and the torn territory Brandenburg-Prussia becomes the Kingdom Of Prussia.

Frederik I. (former Elector Frederik III.) raised the political importance of his country and lay the foundation of the centralized state Prussia, which later ascended into a major power in Europe under his successors.
At that time, only the pope had the power to acknowledge the regality of rulers and allocate the titles “King” or “Emperor”. But Prussia was Lutheran since 1525 and the father of Frederick I., “The Great Elector” (“Der Große Kurfürst”), once represented the Protestant party against the papacy.
So there was no chance for the Elector Friedrich III. to be entitled of having an own kingdom and being called “King Of Prussia”.
He convinced the Holy Roman Emperor that Prussia could be ruled as an own kingdom, independently from the Holy Roman Empire and the pope.
That is basically the reason why his title was Friedrich I. In Prussia, instead of King Friedrich I. Of Prussia.

Portrait of Friedrich I. (1657-1713), around 1701
by Friedrich Wilhelm Heidemann (1668-1750)

Sources:

Wikipedia Germany
Gameo.Org

___________________________________________

A few facts I remembered from history class and researched to not make any wrong statements.
This is a very short version and was extremely hard to translate.
I also apologize for the childish wording, my English is far from professional.


33 Anmerkungen | Reblog | Vor 4 Monaten

"Prussia is not a Country that happens to possess an Army, Prussia is an Army that happens to possess a Country."

-Observation by Voltaire (via conquistawhore)

(Quelle: arcadian-phoenix)


129 Anmerkungen | Reblog | Vor 4 Monaten

The 300th birthday of Good Ol’ Fritz

Hey followers!
So Der Alte Fritz turns 300 on the 24th of January and that is kinda important to me (I don’t even know why?!), I start feeling proud and patriotic and that is why I made a little drawing of that old geezer:

Original (Well okay, he was still a young Crown Prince when this portrait was painted)

I also hope that there will be exhibitions in Berlin and Potsdam and that I can visit as many as possible!
There are also a lot of documentations on TV and I feel bad that I can’t share all that with my international followers.
But I hope that I can go to these exhibitions and I’ll take photos for you guys!

I also got this from my father:

It’s a German series (5 episodes) from the 70ies and is all about this guy. He was also pretty close to king Friedrich II. and had an affair with his sister.

The least I can do is take screenshots! Does anyone of you know how to make gifs? I’d love to make gifs for this blog, but I’ve never done it before.

Also, you can still submit anything relevant to this blog, I would really appreciate it!


12 Anmerkungen | Reblog | Vor 4 Monaten

"Es heißt, dass wir Könige Gottes Ebenbilder auf Erden sind. Ich habe mich daraufhin im Spiegel betrachtet. Sehr schmeichelhaft für den lieben Gott ist das nicht.“
“They say we kings are Gods’ likeness on earth. I then looked at myself in the mirror. That’s not very flattering for the Dear God."

-Friedrich der Große (via lillaljuvliga)
11 Anmerkungen | Reblog | Vor 4 Monaten
the-seed-of-europe:

cortendorf:

Cuirassier of the Prussian Garde du Corps.via wikimedia.org

You know what I’m thinking right?

the-seed-of-europe:

cortendorf:

Cuirassier of the Prussian Garde du Corps.
via wikimedia.org

You know what I’m thinking right?


63 Anmerkungen | Reblog | Vor 4 Monaten

Preußens Gloria (Prussia Glory March)

by Johann Gottfried Piefke

More information


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