Jump to content

Wilhelmine, Gräfin von Lichtenau

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by KasparBot (talk | contribs) at 12:29, 2 May 2016 (migrating Persondata to Wikidata, please help, see challenges for this article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Wilhelmine, Gräfin von Lichtenau
Countess von Lichtenau
Portrait by Anna Dorothea Therbusch, 1776.
Born(1753-12-29)29 December 1753
Died9 June 1820(1820-06-09) (aged 66)
SpouseJohann Friedrich Rietz
Franz Ignaz Holbein
FatherJohann Elias Enke

Wilhelmine, Gräfin von Lichtenau, born as Wilhelmine Enke, also spelled Encke (29 December 1753 in Potsdam – 9 June 1820 in Berlin), was the official mistress of King Frederick William II of Prussia from 1769 until 1797 and was elevated by him into the nobility. She is regarded as politically active and influential in the policy of Prussia during his reign.[1]

Biography

Her father, Johann Elias Enke, was a chamber musician in service of King Frederick II of Prussia. Wilhelmine met Crown Prince Fredrick William in 1764. The king preferred that the crown prince maintain a relationship with her rather than have changing relationships with foreign women, and in 1769 she became the crown prince's official mistress. The couple had five children,[2] of whom only one survived to adulthood:[3]

  • A daughter (born and died 10 August 1770).
  • Ulrike Sophie von Berckholz (March 1774 - 5 September 1774).
  • Christina Sophie Frederica von Lützenberg (25-31 August 1777).
  • Count Alexander von der Marck (4 January 1779 - 1 August 1787), reportedly the King's favorite child; he was probably poisoned.
  • Countess Marianne Diderica Frederica Wilhelmine von der Marck (29 February 1780 - 11 June 1814), married firstly on 17 March 1797 to Hereditary Count Frederick of Stolberg-Stolberg (they divorced in 1799), secondly on 14 March 1801 to Baron Kaspar von Miaskowksi (also divorced) and thirdly in 1807 to Etienne de Thierry. She had four daughters in her three marriages, the eldest of them was the notorious poetess Countess Louise of Stolberg-Stolberg.

In 1782, Fredrick William arranged for her to marry his councillor and chamberlain Johann Friedrich Rietz (1755–1809), but the relationship between Wilhelmine and Fredrick William continued.

It is debated whether Wilhelmine co-operated with Johann Rudolph von Bischoffswerder and Johann Christoph von Wöllner to keep the monarch under control. Wilhelmine was given the title Countess von Lichtenau in 1794,[1] but that was not made public until 1796.

After Frederick William died in 1797, Wilhelmine was exiled and her property confiscated, although she was granted a pension (1800). In 1802 to 1806, she was married to the dramatic Franz Ignaz Holbein, known as "Fontano" and 26 years her junior, in Breslau (now in Poland and renamed Wrocław). In 1811, Napoleon allowed her to return to Berlin.

Legacy

Wilhelmine, known popularly as "Beautiful Wilhelmine", is closely associated with the Marmorpalais in Potsdam. As Friedrich Wilhelm II's official mistress, she had great influence on the interior decoration of the palace. Following plans by Michael Philipp Boumann, an early classicist style townhouse called Lichtenau Palace was erected for her at the edge of Potsdam's Neuer Garten, at a site on today's Behlertstrasse.[3]

She is a main character in Ernst von Salomon's 1965 novel Die schöne Wilhelmine, which also was turned into a 1984 television serial.[4][5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Taberner, Stuart (2011). The Novel in German Since 1990. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. pp. 101. ISBN 9780521192378
  2. ^ Wilhelmine Enke in: thePeerage.com [retrieved 10 May 2014].
  3. ^ a b «Wilhelmine Enke, the later Countess of Lichtenau». Discover Potsdam. Accessed 20/05/12.
  4. ^ Louis Ferdinand (28 April 1965). "Geliebt, geformt". Der Spiegel (in German). Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  5. ^ "Die schöne Wilhelmine". Filmportal.de (in German). Deutsches Filminstitut. Retrieved 5 June 2015.