Elisabeth of the Palatinate (1618–1680)

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Abbess Elisabeth von Herford
Bust of Elisabeth of the Palatinate in Herford

Elisabeth von der Pfalz (also Elisabeth von Böhmen, Elisabeth von Herford ; * December 26, 1618 in Heidelberg ; †  February 8, 1680 in Herford ) was the eldest daughter of Elector Friedrich V of the Palatinate and his wife Elisabeth Stuart , Princess of England, Scotland and Ireland, and was from 1667 as Elizabeth III. Abbess of the imperial women's monastery in Herford .

Life

Elisabeth was the third of thirteen children of the Palatinate Elector, who played a tragic role as the Bohemian winter king from 1619 to 1620 at the outbreak of the Thirty Years' War , and his wife Elisabeth, a daughter of James I of England and sister of Charles I.

She was first raised in Heidelberg by her grandmother, Electress Luise Juliane , a born princess of Orange, who then brought her to her parents who had fled to Berlin after the Battle of White Mountain in 1620 . The parents soon moved on to exile in the Netherlands and initially left Elisabeth in the care of the Elector's Brandenburg court. From 1627 she lived with her parents in The Hague . After her father's death in 1632, she was raised by her mother. She turned to science at an early age and developed serious worldviews.

At times, the Polish King Władysław IV. Wasa wooed her hand. Władysław withheld the papal rejection from the senate (November 1634) and then received the approval of the senate for this marriage (March 1635). Thereupon he demanded in vain (June 1635) the conversion of the princess.

She was in contact with Anna Maria von Schürmann , then with René Descartes , became his most ardent pupil and was in lively correspondence with him until his death, from which among other things his treatise Les Passions de l'âme arose. In her family, she was considered a difficult blue stocking to marry . In 1651 she followed her youngest sister Sophie , who later became Electress of Hanover, to the court of her brother Karl Ludwig at Heidelberg Castle . In the violent marital disputes between her brother and his wife Charlotte von Hessen-Kassel and their subsequent divorce, she, unlike Sophie, sided with her sister-in-law.

After she married for a long time at the court of her cousin, Elector Friedrich Wilhelm von Brandenburg , and then in Kassel with her cousin Hedwig Sophie. Landgravine von Hessen-Kassel, she was elected coadjutor of the Imperial Abbey of Herford in 1661 and abbess in 1667 . Since she had meanwhile turned more and more to an enthusiastic and mystical direction, she took in 1670 Labadists , then Quakers as well, in Herford. Their mystical eccentricities, however, aroused great offense among the Lutheran population.

Elisabeth was buried in Herford Minster .

Monument and namesake

A memorial was erected for her in the city of Herford on Elisabethstrasse, which is named after her. The artist Wolfgang Knorr created the bust. In addition, a Herford vocational college for social and health care sponsored by the Herford parish is named after her.

The Elisabeth of Bohemia Prize has been awarded since 2018 .

Letters

  • René Descartes: The correspondence with Elisabeth of the Palatinate . French German. Translated by Isabelle Wienand, Olivier Ribordy and Benno Wirz, with the assistance of Angela Schiffhauer. Hamburg: Meiner 2015. ISBN 978-3-7873-2478-1

literature

Web links

Commons : Elizabeth, Princess Palatine  - Collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, ed. 2013
  2. Dirk Van der Cruysse: Being a Madame is a great craft. Liselotte of the Palatinate. A German princess at the court of the Sun King. From the French by Inge Leipold. 7th edition, Piper, Munich 2001, ISBN 3-492-22141-6 , p. 42ff.
  3. Dirk Van der Cruysse, ibid., P. 46
predecessor Office successor
Elisabeth Louise Juliane of Pfalz-Zweibrücken Abbess of Herford
1667–1680
Elisabeth Albertine of Anhalt-Dessau