Abstract
The federal states’ diplomatic envoys
[Gesandten] to Prussia were also
their states’ accredited representatives to the Federal Council
[Bundesrat]. The envoys’ proximity to
Bismarck in this photograph indicates their place in the diplomatic
pecking order. Thus, Count Hugo von Lerchenfeld-Koefering, the Kingdom
of Bavaria’s envoy in Berlin, stands at Bismarck’s right hand (to his
left in this photograph). Count Wilhelm von Hohenthal and Bergen, the
Kingdom of Saxony’s envoy, flanks Bismarck on the opposite side. Baron
Adolf Marschall von Bieberstein, the tall figure standing to
Lerchenfeld’s left, represented the Grand Duchy of Baden. Hohenthal was
Lerchenfeld’s closest and ablest colleague in Berlin. As Bavaria’s
Minister President Count Georg von Hertling once remarked after an
uncomfortable experience in Dresden: “Relations between Bavaria and
Saxony remained normal only as long as Count Hohenthal took his
breakfast every morning in the Bavarian embassy in Berlin.” (Hugo Graf
Lerchenfeld-Koefering, Erinnerungen und
Denkwürdigkeiten, 2nd ed., Berlin: Mittler & Sohn, 1935, p.
197.) This photograph was taken by Julius Braatz in the Reichstag.