- Sophia Dorothea of Celle
Infobox Hanoverian Royalty
name =Sophia Dorothea of Celle
title =Hereditary Princess of Hanover
imgw =243
spouse =George Louis, Hereditary Prince of Hanover
issue =George II
Sophia, Queen in Prussia
titles =Sophia Dorothea of Celle
"HSH" The Hereditary Princess of Hanover
"HSH" The Hereditary Princess of Brunswick-Lüneburg
"HSH" Duchess Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick-Celle
royal house =House of Hanover
father =George William, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
mother =Eleonore Desmier d'Olbreuse
date of birth =birth date|1666|9|15|df=y
place of birth =Celle ,Germany
date of death =Death date and age|1726|11|13|1666|9|15|df=yes
place of death =Ahlden ,Germany |Sophia Dorothea (
15 September 1666 –13 November 1726 ) was the wife and cousin of George Louis, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, laterGeorge I of Great Britain , and mother of George II through an arrangedmarriage of state , instigated by the machinations of Duchess Sophia of Hanover.Parentage and marriage
Sophia Dorothea, was born on
15 September 1666 , the only child ofGeorge William, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg by his long term mistress,Eleonore d'Esmier d'Olbreuse (1639–1722), Countess of Williamsburg, aHuguenot lady, the daughter of Alexander II d'Olbreuse, Marquess of Desmiers. George eventually married his daughter's mother officially in 1676 (they had been marriedmorganatically previously).There was some talk of marriage between Sophia and the (then) future king of Denmark, but the reigning queen was talked out of it by Duchess Sophia (her future mother-in-law). Another engagement to the duke of Wolfenbüttel was broken off after Duchess Sophia convinced her brother-in-law of the advantage of having Sophia Dorothea marry her cousin. This occurred on the day the engagement between Sophia Dorothea and the duke was to be announced.
When told of the change in plans and her new future husband, Sophia Dorothea shouted that "I will not marry the pig snout!" (a name he was known by in
Hanover ), and threw a miniature of George Louis brought for her by Duchess Sophia against the wall. [citation needed] Forced by her parents, she fainted into her mother's arms on her first meeting with her future mother-in-law. She fainted again when presented to George Louis.In 1682, Sophia Dorothea married her cousin, George Louis, who inherited the
Duchy of Lüneburg after the death of his father-in-law and uncle, George William in 1705, and also later inherited the Kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland and became George I through his mother, Duchess Sophia, a granddaughter of King James I.The marriage of George Louis and Sophia Dorothea was an unhappy one. The immediate family of George Louis, especially Duchess Sophia, hated and despised Sophia Dorothea. The desire for the marriage was almost purely financial, as she wrote her niece Elizabeth Charlotte, "One hundred thousand thalers a year is a goodly sum to pocket, without speaking of a pretty wife, who will find a match in my son George Louis, the most pigheaded, stubborn boy who ever lived, and who has round his brains such a thick crust that I defy any man or woman ever to discover what is in them. He does not care much for the match itself, but one hundred thousand thalers a year have tempted him as they would have tempted anybody else.". [Herman, Eleanor: Sex with the Queen, page 100. William Morrow, 2006 ]
These feelings of contempt were shared by George himself, who was oddly formal to her. She was frequently scolded for her lack of etiquette. The two had loud and bitter arguments. Things seemed better after their first two children (a son named George Augustus born in 1683 and a daughter named after her in 1686). But George Louis acquired a mistress Melusina von Schulenburg and started pointedly neglecting his wife. George Louis' parents asked him to be more circumspect with his mistress (fearful that a disruption in the marriage would disrupt the hundred thousand thalers), he responded by going out of his way to treat his wife brutally.
The affair
It was under these circumstances that Sophia Dorothea re-made the acquaintance of
Philip Christoph von Königsmarck , with whom her name is inseparably associated. The two first met inCelle when he was sixteen. The two flirted innocently, and traced their names on the palace windows with the words "Forget me not." On1 March 1688 he reminded her of their previous acquaintance, and the two renewed it. George Louis' younger brothers loved the count and brought him to Sophia Dorothea's salon in the evening to cheer her up. For the two years he stayed in Hanover, there was no reason to believe their relationship was anything but platonic. He left for a military expedition to the Peloponnesus in 1690 -- it was a disaster. He returned and the relationship between him and Sophia Dorothea intensified. They began sending each other love letters which, if they are to be believed, suggest that their relationship was consummated.In 1692, the early letters were shown to the newly minted Elector Ernest Augustus (Sophia Dorothea's father-in-law). He decided he did not want any scandal and sent Königsmarck to fight with the Hanoverian army against
Louis XIV . Other soldiers were given leave to visit Hanover, but he was not. One night Königsmarck deserted his post and rode for six days to visit Hanover. The day after arriving, he called onField Marshal Heinrich and, confessing his breach of duty, begged for leave to stay in Hanover. It was agreed, though Heinrich suggested the affair be ended or that Königsmarck leave the country. Ernst August exiled Königsmarck.George Louis criticized his wife on her affair, and she criticized him for his. The argument escalated to the point that the prince threw himself on Sophia Dorothea and started tearing out her hair and strangling her, leaving purple bruise marks. He was pulled off of her by her attendants.
Königsmarck presumably was killed while assisting her in a futile attempt to escape from
Hanover . In 1694 the Count disappeared (several guards and theCountess Platen confessed to being involved in his death on their deathbeds); the princess was divorced by her husband and nevertheless imprisoned at theCastle of Ahlden . She remained in captivity until her death more than 30 years later on13 November 1726 . Sophia Dorothea is sometimes referred to as the "princess of Ahlden." Her two children were the British king, George II, and Sophia Dorothea, wife ofFrederick William I of Prussia , and mother of Frederick the Great.Sophia's infidelity to her husband is not absolutely proven, as it is possible that the letters which purport to have passed between Königsmarck and herself are forgeries.
Titles, styles, honours and arms
Titles
*
15 September 1666 -1682: "Her Serene Highness" Duchess Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick-Celle
*1682-October 1692: "Her Serene Highness" The Hereditary Princess of Brunswick-Lüneburg
*October 1692-1694: "Her Serene Highness" The Hereditary Princess of Hanover
*1694 -13 November 1726 : Sophia Dorothea of CelleIssue
Footnotes
Authorities
*"Briefwechsel des Grafen Konigsmark and der Prinzessin Sophie Dorothea von Celle", edited by WF Palmblad (Leipzig, 1847)*AFH Schaumann, "Sophie Dorothea Prinzessin von Ahlden", and "Kurfurstin Sophie von Hannover" (Hanover, 1878)
*CL von Pöllnitz, "Histoire secrette de la duchesse d'Hanovre" (London, 1732)
*WH Wilkins, "The Love of an Uncrowned Queen" (London, 1900)
*A Kocher, "Die Prinzessin von Ahlden," in the "Historische Zeitschrift" (Munich, 1882)
*Vicomte H de Beaucaire, "Une Misalliance dans la maison de Brunswick" (Paris, 1884)
*AD Greenwood, "Lives of the Hanoverian Queens of England" (1909), vol. i.
*A Weir, "Britain's Royal Families - The Complete Genealogy" (2002)References
*Herman, Eleanor. "Sex with the Queen". New York, HarperCollins, 2006. ISBN 0-06-084673-9
*1911Persondata
NAME= Dorothea, Sophia, of Celle
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=The Electoral Princess of Hanover, The Hereditary Princess of Brunswick-Lüneburg
DATE OF BIRTH=15 September 1666
PLACE OF BIRTH=
DATE OF DEATH=13 November 1726 )
PLACE OF DEATH=Ahlden ,Germany
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