Abstract
This portrait shows Princess Sophie Friederike Auguste of
Anhalt-Zerbst (1729-96) in 1745, the year she married the heir to
Russian throne, Karl Peter Ulrich von Schleswig-Holstein-Gottorf
(1728-62). In July of 1762, only seven months after her husband had been
crowned Peter III of Russia, she commissioned members of the imperial
guard to depose her politically besieged spouse and then acquiesced to
his assassination, whereupon she acceded to the Russian throne as
Catherine II (“the Great”) of Russia (r. 1762-96). Over the course of
her long reign, she became one of the major representatives of
“enlightened absolutism” and pursued relationships with prominent
Enlightenment thinkers, most famously Voltaire and Diderot. Despite her
exposure to the social and philosophical currents of her day, she
favored the noble class at the peasantry’s expense. Nonetheless, she
initiated important reforms, including judicial improvements in the
cities and land-settlement programs for European peasant-colonists, many
from the German lands. The partitions of Poland (1772, 1793, 1795),
which she undertook with Austria and Prussia, brought the borders of the
Russian Empire into direct contact with Germany for the first time.