Frederick William | |
Succession: | Elector of Hesse |
Reign: | 1847–1866 |
Predecessor: | William II |
Successor: | Electorate abolished |
Spouse: | Gertrude Falkenstein, Princess of Hanau |
House: | House of Hesse |
Father: | William II |
Mother: | Princess Augusta of Prussia |
Issue: | Princess Augusta of Hanau and Hořowitz Princess Alexandrine of Hanau and Hořowitz Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Hanau and Hořowitz Prince Moritz of Hanau and Hořowitz Prince Wilhelm of Hanau and Hořowitz Princess Maria of Hanau and Hořowitz Prince Karl of Hanau and Hořowitz Prince Heinrich of Hanau and Hořowitz Prince Philipp of Hanau and Hořowitz |
Birth Date: | 20 August 1802 |
Birth Place: | Hanau, Holy Roman Empire |
Death Place: | Prague, Austria-Hungary |
Frederick William I (20 August 1802 – 6 January 1875) was, between 1847 and 1866, the last Prince-elector of Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel).
He was born at Hanau on 20 August 1802. He was the son of Prince William, later William II, Elector of Hesse, and Princess Augusta of Prussia, daughter of King Frederick William II of Prussia. During the French occupation of Hesse-Kassel from 1806 to 1813, he stayed with his mother in Berlin. Reportedly, he had a poor relationship with his father because of his father's affair with Emilie Ortlöpp.
Frederick was educated at Marburg and Leipzig.
On 30 September 1831, he became co-regent and, in 1847, Prince-elector.[1] Under influence of his minister Hans Daniel Ludwig Friedrich Hassenpflug, he conducted a reactionary policy, which made him very unpopular. He was forced to give in to the demands of the March Revolution, but reinstated Hassenpflug in 1850 after the revolution had been crushed.
In the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, he chose the side of Austria. His capital, Kassel, was occupied by Prussia, and, as a consequence of his refusal to negotiate,[1] he was transferred as a prisoner to Stettin on 23 June. Hessen-Kassel was annexed by Prussia in the same year.
Frederick William never accepted the Prussian dominance over his territory. Even after the creation of the unified German Empire in 1871, he tried to regain his throne.
On 26 June 1831 Frederick William was morganatically married to Gertrude Falkenstein Lehmann (1803–1882). She had been born in Bonn and was a daughter of apothecary Johann Gottfried Falkenstein and his wife, Magdalena Schulz. When Frederick William met Gertrude, she was the wife of Lt Karl Michael Lehmann (married in 1822) and the mother of two sons.[2] Gertrude and her husband were divorced in 1830/31, but already by this time, some children had been born to her and Frederick William. They were married in 1831, after which they had further children.
In 1831, Frederick William's father William II made Gertrude Her Illustrious Highness Countess of Schaumburg. In 1853, she was made Princess of Hanau and Horowitz. All of the nine children that she bore to Frederick William, whether born before or after their marriage, were made Princes of Hanau, and granted the style of Serene Highness in 1862,[3] including:[4]
He died at Prague in 1875, where his widow also died on 9 July 1882. Because of his morganatic marriage, his sons were excluded from succession. He was succeeded, as titular Prince-elector of Hesse, by Prince Frederick William of Hesse, from the house of Hesse-Rumpenheim.[3]
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