Abstract
Frederick II (“the Great”) (1712-86) acceded to the Prussian throne
in 1740 and immediately plunged into war with Austria over the conquest
of Silesia. The war lasted until 1763, with eleven years of intermittent
peace. Despite the pressures of various wars, Frederick initiated
fundamental administrative and judicial reforms during his
forty-six-year reign (1740-86), as well as ambitious cultural projects.
He was considered a major representative of European “enlightened
absolutism.” A gifted intellectual and writer, he sustained long
correspondences with the French philosophers and leading thinkers of the
time, notably the mathematician Pierre-Louis Moureau de Maupertuis and
the philosopher Voltaire, both of whom became part of his circle.
Frederick’s judicial reforms – which included, for example, opening
royal appeals courts to villagers embroiled in conflict with their noble
lordships – were of great significance, as was his abolition of judicial
torture. He successfully extended his father’s state-funded economic
projects, particularly in luxury goods and armaments, and he oversaw the
imposition of high standards of professional preparation in the
judiciary and civil bureaucracy. Like his father, he was often
high-handed and, in his advanced years, his attitude toward
“unenlightened” human nature frequently turned into outright misanthropy
and obstinacy. This portrait by Anton Graff, a Swiss painter whose
sitters included Friedrich Schiller and Heinrich von Kleist, shows
Frederick five years before his death. It captures something of the
price he paid for a lifetime of royal responsibilities and aggressive
military action.