Peter Antonovich of Brunswick
Peter Antonovich of Brunswick-Lüneburg (1745–1798), was the second son of Duke Anthony Ulrich of Brunswick and Grand Duchess Anna Leopoldovna of Russia, and younger brother of Ivan VI.
Peter Antonovich | |||||
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Silhouettes of Peter and his siblings at Horsens. | |||||
Born | 1745 Kholmogory | ||||
Died | 1798 Horsens | ||||
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House | House of Brunswick-Bevern | ||||
Father | Duke Anthony Ulrich of Brunswick | ||||
Mother | Grand Duchess Anna Leopoldovna of Russia |
The siblings were kept prisoner because their right to the Russian throne, according to the succession of Empress Anna, made them potential political threats to Empress Elizabeth, Emperor Peter III, and eventually Empress Catherine the Great. In contrast to their elder brother, the deposed Ivan VI, who was placed in solitary confinement, the younger siblings were kept together with their father after the death of their mother in 1746. In Kholmogory, the family occupied the Bishop's house within the fortress compound, where they were allowed a small garden and some animals. They were kept under watch by guards and kept a small retinue of servants. As their father had sexual relations with the female servants, their staff eventually consisted of their half siblings. By an imperial decree of 1750, the siblings were banned from learning to read and write.
In 1766, their father was offered his freedom by Empress Catherine the Great, but he refused to leave without his children, and therefore remained with them until his death in 1776, by then blind. In 1780, Empress Catherine was arranging for their release and transfer to the custody of their paternal aunt, the Danish queen dowager Juliana Maria of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel in Denmark. Before their release, they were brought to Archangelsk to be interviewed and inspected by Governor Aleksei Melgunov. Melgunov provided personal descriptions of each sibling in his report. He reported that all four siblings were physically weak and suffered from poor health. Peter was lopsided and bow-legged and seemed consumptive; Aleksei was physically stronger but suffered from seizures; Catherine was thin and deaf and suffered from seizures, could lipread but had poor control over her voice. As for Elizabeth, she was described as plump, energetic, talkative and reliable, and also as the dominant personality and spokesperson of the family. While physically weak, however, all four siblings were described as intelligent, likable and humane people, who had learned to read and write through their own devices despite the prohibition of the imperial decree. They reportedly had friendly relationships with each other, spending their days tending to the garden, their hens and ducks, riding, chasing each other on the frozen lake during winter, and playing chess and cards.
During Melgonov's inspection, Elizabeth, described as the head of the family, communicated the siblings lives and wishes. She stated that when young, before their father had become blind, they had all wished to be free, and had hoped for the day when they would be released. They had asked for permission to ride a sleigh through the streets, but never received a reply to any request made. As for herself personally, she had wished to be educated about the manners of the outside world and to participate in high society. Later, however, after they had lived all their lives as prisoners, they had grown content with their lives. They had only three wishes: first, that they be allowed to visit a meadow, as they had heard that it contained flowers not to be found in their garden; second, that the wives of the officers should be allowed to visit them to provide company; and finally, that they be taught how to put on and wear the complicated upper-class garments they were provided with, such as corsets, because neither they nor their servants knew how they should be put on or worn. If these three wishes were granted, she stated, they would all be content to continue to live as before.
Before their release, the siblings were provided with new wardrobes and household gifts from the empress, so that Russia would make a good impression in Denmark. When told that they would be transferred to Denmark, they asked that they be housed in a remote place with few people there. While leaving Russia on ship on the 27 June 1780, the siblings reportedly started to cry upon seeing the fortress in Arhangelsk, believing that they had been tricked and would be separated and each placed in solitary confinement. On 30 August 1780, the siblings arrived in Denmark. For bureaucratic reasons, however, they were forced to separate from their servants (and half siblings) upon their arrival. In Denmark, their aunt, Queen Dowager Juliana Maria, reportedly never visited them even once. They lived under house arrest in Horsens in Jutland under the guardianship of Juliana Maria and at the expense of Empress Catherine. Although they were prisoners, they lived in relative comfort and retained a small "court" of between 40 and 50 people, all Danish except for their Russian Orthodox priest.[1] The siblings, being unused to their new degree of freedom in a new environment and surrounded by people whose language they could not understand, were reportedly unhappy in Denmark.
References
- Marie Tetzlaff : Katarina den stora (1998)
- Evgeniĭ Viktorovich Anisimov: Five Empresses: Court Life in Eighteenth-century Russia (2004)