Eberhardine Luise of Württemberg

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Eberhardine Luise of Württemberg (1675–1707)

Eberhardine Luise von Württemberg (born October 11, 1675 in Stuttgart ; † March 26, 1707 there ) was a Württemberg princess.

After the second-born, baptized on October 14, 1675 daughter of Duke Wilhelm Ludwig von Württemberg and his wife Magdalena Sibylla had lost at the age of less than two years her father took her - until the coming of age of the younger brother and later Duke Eberhard Ludwig as administrator of the duchy appointed - Uncle Friedrich Karl von Württemberg-Winnental to Vatters-instead of influence on their lives. He handed her over to his lady d'honneur , the court master Margaretha von Wachenheim (1629–1699), for upbringing, in order to - at least it is assumed - to withdraw her from the influence of her devout mother. Qualified teachers ensured a proper education; It is reported that she had a good affection and pleasure in some foreign languages, and decent and useful genealogical, geographic, and historical sciences alongside Musiq for the princely persons, and in this she achieved several perfection . Nevertheless, Eberhardine Luise remained unmarried, possibly because she had apparently had major health problems since childhood. Heart problems ( caring heart palpitations ) had already appeared in the eighth year of life , after which she fell more and more into a sickly physical disposition . At the age of 31 she finally succumbed to pneumonia after being sick for two weeks. On March 31, 1707 she was buried in the princely crypt of the Stuttgart collegiate church.

literature

  • Three Christian corpse sermons, About the high-soul Ableiben, The once most luminous princess and princess, Princess Eberhardina Louisa, Hertduchess of Würtemberg and Teck, Countess of Würtemberg and Teck, Countess of Mömpelgart, Mistress of Heydenheim, etc. Paul Treu, Stuttgart [1707 ] ( online at Tübingen University Library ).
  • Manfred Waßner: Eberhardina Luisa. In: The House of Württemberg. A biographical lexicon. Edited by Sönke Lorenz . Kohlhammer, Stuttgart 1997 ISBN 3-17-013605-4 , p. 167 f. No. 4.0.39.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. The exact time of death is given in the personal information for their funeral sermons : Saturday, the 26th of this month [d. i. March], at 1 o'clock in the morning ( Drey Christian Corpse Sermons (see literature)), Personalia , p. 23 ( online ); accordingly also the front page of the funeral sermon by Ehrenreich Weißmann ( Drey Christian Corpse Sermons (see literature), front page of the funeral sermon by Ehrenreich Weißmann ( online )). - The widespread indication of the day of death as March 25 must therefore be corrected.
  2. Main State Archives Stuttgart , A 21 Bü 81 No. 7 .
  3. Drey Christian Leich-Sermons (see literature), Personalia , p. 10 ( online ).
  4. Bernd Wunder: The instructions for the French ambassadors in Stuttgart (1672-1711). In: Zeitschrift für Württembergische Landesgeschichte 62 (2003), pp. 179–253, p. 234 at note 167.
  5. On the person cf. Main State Archive Stuttgart J 67 Bü 97 ( online ).
  6. ^ Waßner: Eberhardina Luisa. (see literature).
  7. Drey Christian Leich-Sermons (see literature), Personalia , p. 12 ( online ).
  8. ^ Drey Christian Corpse Sermons (see literature), Personalia , p. 13 ( online ).
  9. ^ Drey Christian corpse sermons (see literature), title page of the corpse sermon by Ehrenreich Weißmann ( online ).