Abstract
In the eighteenth century, the landgraves of Hesse-Kassel,
particularly Frederick II (r. 1760-85), financed their lavish court
expenditures and the expansion of their capital of Kassel into a center
of arts and culture by leasing Hessian-trained soldiers to warring
foreign monarchs. Many of the soldiers “recruited” from across Germany,
such as Johann Gottfried Seume (1763-1810), were actually forced into
Hessian service. From 1776 to 1784, Landgrave Frederick II delivered
approximately 12,000 mercenaries to King George III of England, who
employed them in the fight against American revolutionary troops. The
image below shows a contingent of mercenaries being taken aboard a ship
bound for North America.