Charles Eugene, Duke of Württemberg
Charles Eugene | |
---|---|
Duke of Württemberg | |
Reign | 12 March 1737 – 24 October 1793 |
Predecessor | Charles Alexander |
Successor | Louis Eugene |
Born |
Brussels | 11 February 1728
Died |
24 October 1793 65) Hohenheim | (aged
Spouse |
Elisabeth Fredericka Sophie of Brandenburg-Bayreuth Franziska von Hohenheim |
Father | Charles Alexander, Duke of Württemberg |
Mother | Maria Augusta of Thurn and Taxis |
Charles II Eugene (German: Carl II. Eugen), Duke of Württemberg (11 February 1728 – 24 October 1793) was the eldest son of Duke Charles I Alexander and Princess Maria Augusta of Thurn and Taxis (11 August 1706 – 1 February 1756).
Life
Born in Brussels, he succeeded his father as ruler of Württemberg at the age of 9, but the real power was in the hands of Administrators Carl Rudolf, Duke of Württemberg-Neuenstadt (1737–1738) and Carl Frederick von Württemberg-Oels (1738–1746).
He was educated at the court of Frederick II of Prussia. In the Seven Years' War against Prussia, Charles Eugene advanced into Saxony.[1] He ruled until his death in 1793, when he was succeeded by his younger brother.
He was an early patron of Friedrich Schiller. He also studied keyboard with Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach in the 1740s (Bach's "Württemberg" sonatas, published in 1744, were dedicated to Charles Eugene). In 1765, Charles Eugene founded a public library in Ludwigsburg (now the Württembergische Landesbibliothek, Stuttgart) and was responsible for the construction of a number of other key palaces and buildings in the area including the New Palace which still stands at the centre of the Schlossplatz, Castle Solitude and Castle Hohenheim.
Charles Eugene married twice, first in Bayreuth on 26 September 1748 to Margravine Elisabeth Fredericka Sophie of Brandenburg-Bayreuth with whom he had one daughter, Friederike Wilhelmine Augusta Luise Charlotte, who was born in Stuttgart on 19 February 1750 and died after 13 months in Stuttgart on 12 March 1751. Elisabetha left Charles Eugene in 1756 to return to her parents' court in Bayreuth although they never divorced. In the meantime, Charles Eugene kept a string of mistresses and fathered eleven children by them. The last of these mistresses was Franziska von Hohenheim, whom he raised to the status of Countess and married in Stuttgart on 10 or 11 January 1785.
Charles Eugene was known for his interest in agriculture and travel and is considered the inspiration behind today's Hohenheim university. His original botanical gardens form the basis for today's Landesarboretum Baden-Württemberg and Botanischer Garten der Universität Hohenheim, which still contain some of the specimens he planted. He also built a large number of palaces and bankrupted his lands through courtly extravagance, accepting huge French government loans in exchange for maintaining large numbers of support troops in Württemberg.
In his early years he ruled with an iron fist. However, he also displayed humanist tendencies. For example, in 1744 he ordered that the corpse of Joseph Süß Oppenheimer – the executed Jewish financial advisor of his father, Charles Alexander – whose decaying corpse had been suspended in an iron cage by Stuttgart's Prag gallows for six years – be taken down and given a decent burial. He was also well known for his extensive library, his extravagant interest in opera, and interest in large scale horticulture for the feeding of the masses.
Between 1751 and 1759 Karl Eugen was involved in an increasingly bitter struggle with his adviser, the eminent Liberal jurist Johann Jakob Moser who strongly opposed the Duke's absolutist tendencies. In 1759 Charles Eugene had Moser charged with authoring "a subversive writing" and cast into prison for the next five years. However, in 1764 Moser was released, due in part to the intercession of Friedrich the Great of Prussia, and was rehabilitated and restored to his position, rank and titles.
Charles Eugene died in Hohenheim.
Mistresses and illegitimate issue
By an unknown mistress he had:
- Karoline (31 December 1755 - 14 May 1839), unmarried and without issue
By Luisa Toscani he had:
- Karl von Ostheim (1761 - Batavia, 24 February 1793), unmarried and without issue
- Karl Alexander von Ostheim (31 December 1765 - after 1821), unmarried and without issue
By an unknown mistress he had:
- Charlotte (9 February 1762 - 31 August 1811), married 30 June 1783 Julius Friedrich von Lützow (? - 4 July 1833), without issue
By Teresa Bonafoni he had:
- Karl Bonafoni (2 July 1768 - 30 April 1769)
- Karl genannt Borel (18 May 1770 - before 1821), who committed suicide, unmarried and without issue
By Anna Eleonora Franchi he had:
- Eugen Franchi (5 October 1768 - c. 1794), unmarried and without issue
- Eleonore Franchi, Freiin von Franquemont (17 January 1771 - 1833), married in 1792 Jean François Louis Marie Albert Gaspard Grimod, Comte d'Orsay (15 June 1772 - 26 December 1843), and had issue
By an unknown mistress he had:
- Friedrich Wilhelm (? - 19 December 1790), unmarried and without issue
By Katharina Kurz he had:
- Karl=David von Franquemont (13 March 1769 - 20 July 1830), married firstly in May 1795 to a Freiin von Hügel, by whom he had a daughter, and married secondly in May 1795 to Luise Sophie Henriette von Jett (September 1783 - 24 January 1852), by whom he had a daughter:
- Charlotte Elisabeth Piron von Franquemont (1797 - 1868), who lived in Ceylon and married Hendrik Rademaker, without issue
- Karoline Luise von Franquemont (Samarang, 20 July 1800 - Ludwigsburg, 3 April 1857), married on 21 October 1819 Johann von Raben (? - 18 November 1853), without issue
By Regina Monti he had:
- Friedrich, Graf von Franquemont (Ludwigsburg, 5 March 1770 - 3 January 1842), unmarried and without issue, general and War minister.
Ancestry
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References
- ↑ (German) Brockhaus Geschichte, Second Edition
External links
- Media related to Charles Eugene, Duke of Württemberg at Wikimedia Commons
Charles Eugene, Duke of Württemberg Born: 11 February 1728 Died: 24 October 1793 | ||
Regnal titles | ||
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Preceded by Charles Alexander |
Duke of Württemberg 1737–1793 |
Succeeded by Louis Eugene |