Frederick Charles Augustus, Count of Lippe

Count Frederick Charles Augustus of Lippe-Biesterfeld (20 January 1706 in Biesterfeld 31 July 1781 in Friedrichsruh) was a Count of Lippe and Lord of Lippe-Biesterfeld, Sternberg and Schwalenberg and a Knight of the Order of the Red Eagle.

Frederick Charles Augustus
Count of Lippe
Born(1706-01-20)20 January 1706
Biesterfeld
Died31 July 1781(1781-07-31) (aged 75)
Friedrichsruh
Noble familyHouse of Lippe
Spouse(s)Countess Barbara Eleonore of Solms-Baruth
FatherRudolf Ferdinand of Lippe-Sternberg-Schwalenberg
MotherLouise Juliane of Kunowitz

He was the eldest son of Rudolf Ferdinand of Lippe-Sternberg-Schwalenberg (17 March 1671 12 July 1736) and Louise Juliane of Kunowitz (21 August 1671 21 October 1754) and the grandson of Jobst Herman of Lippe-Biesterfeld.

Life

Biesterfeld estate in 1764

Charles Frederick Augustus was the last Lord of Biesterfeld. During his reign, he had the manor's brewery moved from Schwalenberg to Biestereld and added a distillery, investing 6000 taler in this endeavour.

In 1763, he constructed a hunting lodge in the Sachsenwald forest, near Hamburg, named Friedrichsruh after himself. The nearby village was later renamed after the hunting lodge.[1] However, the hunting lodge was demolished in 1859 to make room for a guest house. Otto von Bismarck was granted the Sachsenwald as a gratification for the foundation of the German Empire in 1871. He expanded the guest house to a castle, which was destroyed during World War II. The new manor house that took its place is still named Friedrichsruh Castle and home to the current Prince Bismarck.

The manor house and farm at Biesterfeld were demolished around 1820.

Marriage and issue

Count Charles Frederick Augustus married on 7 May 1732 with Countess Barbara Eleonore of Solms-Baruth (30 October 1707 16 June 1744). They had the following children:

  • Wilhelmine Louise Constantine (15 June 1733 18 February 1766)
married Count Seyfried of Promnitz (1734-1760), the son of Count Erdmann II of Promnitz
married secondly Count John Christian of Solms-Baruth (1733-1800)
  • Simon Rudolph Ferdinand (6 October 1734 23 May 1739)
  • Charles Ernest Casimir (2 November 1735 19 November 1810)
married Countess Ferdinande of Bentheim-Tecklenburg (1734-1779)
  • Lippe House at Oberkassel, Bonn
    Frederick William (25 January 1737 July 31, 1803)
married Elisabeth Johanna, Edle von Meinertzhagen (1752-1811) who inherited a small manor house at Oberkassel, Bonn, where the couple moved in 1770, and which would become the home to the Lippe-Biesterfeld family for the following 209 years
  • Marie Wilhelmine Henriette (5 December 1740 19 April 1741)
  • Henry Louis (21 April 1743 16 September 1794)
married Elisabeth Kellner (1765-1794), who was made Countess of Lippe-Falkenflucht in 1790
  • Marie Barbara Eleonore (June 16, 1744 June 16, 1776)
married Count William of Schaumburg-Lippe (1724-1777)
  • Ferdinand John Benjamin (June 16, 1744 April 23, 1772)
married Countess Wilhelmine of Schönburg-Lichtenstein (1746-1819)

Ancestry

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gollark: But it is said that locks only work for keeping out honest people, inasmuch as they can be bypassed or picked or whatever quite easily.
gollark: What are you responding to here?
gollark: Also, that's price discrimination and very dodecahedral.
gollark: Intelligence 407.5 workaround: just buy one bottle, leave the store, buy another one, and so onb.

References

  • Willy Gerking: Die Grafen zur Lippe-Biesterfeld, 2001

Footnotes

  1. Hanswilhelm Haefs: Ortsnamen und Ortsgeschichten in Schleswig-Holstein: zunebst dem reichhaltigen slawischen Ortsnamenmaterial und den dänischen Einflüssen auf Fehmarn und Lauenburg, Helgoland und Nordfriesland. Woraus sich Anmerkungen zur Landesgeschichte ergeben, Books on Demand, Norderstedt 2004, ISBN 3-8334-0509-0, p. 105
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