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Charles Alexander, Duke of Wurttemberg

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Noble family
  
House of Wurttemberg

Name
  
Charles Duke

Charles Alexander, Duke of Wurttemberg
Spouse(s)
  
Maria Augusta of Thurn and Taxis

Father
  
Frederick Charles, Duke of Wurttemberg-Winnental

Mother
  
Eleonore Juliane of Brandenburg-Ansbach

Born
  
24 May 1684 Stuttgart (
1684-05-24
)

Died
  
12 March 1737(1737-03-12) (aged 52) Ludwigsburg

Charles Alexander of Wurttemberg (24 May 1684 – 12 March 1737) was a Wurttemberg noble from 1698 who governed the Kingdom of Serbia as regent from 1720 until 1733, when he assumed the position of Duke of Wurttemberg, which he had held until his death.

Contents

Biography

Born in Stuttgart, he was the eldest son of Frederick Charles, Duke of Wurttemberg-Winnental, and Eleonore Juliane of Brandenburg-Ansbach.

He succeeded his father as Duke of Wurttemberg-Winnental in 1698. As a successful army-commander in service of the Holy Roman Emperor, he had converted to Roman Catholicism in 1712. He was militarily successful under Prince Eugene of Savoy in the Spanish War of Succession as well as in the war against the Turks. In 1719 he was appointed imperial governor of Belgrade.

In 1720 Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI appointed him governor of the Kingdom of Serbia in Belgrade. After 13 years of autocratic reigning over Serbia, in 1733 Charles Alexander inherited the Duchy of Wurttemberg centered around Stuttgart from his cousin, Eberhard Louis. As Duke of Wurttemberg he moved the court back from Ludwigsburg to Stuttgart. He ruled over the duchy until his sudden death in 1737, and was succeeded by his nine-year-old son, Charles Eugene.

During his reign, he employed as his financier the ill-fated Joseph Suss Oppenheimer, who was executed in 1738 for abuse of office during the reign of the duke.

He married Maria Augusta Anna of Thurn and Taxis (11 August 1706 – 1 February 1756).

In literature and film

Although the story of Duke Karl Alexander and Joseph Sus Oppenheimer constituted a relatively obscure episode in German history, it became the subject of a number of literary and dramatic treatments over the course of more than a century; the earliest of these having been Wilhelm Hauff's 1827 novella, titled Jud Sus. The most successful literary adaptation was Lion Feuchtwanger's 1925 novel titled Jud Sus based on a play that he had written in 1916 but subsequently withdrew.

Ashley Dukes and Paul Kornfeld also wrote dramatic adaptations of the Feuchtwanger novel. In 1934, Lothar Mendes directed "Jew Suss", a film adaptation of the novel.

Charles Alexander and his relationship with Oppenheimer is fictionally portrayed in Veit Harlan's 1940 Nazi propaganda film titled Jud Sus.

Although inspired by the historical details of Sus's life, Hauff's novella, Feuchtwanger's novel, and Harlan's film only loosely correspond to the historical sources available at the Landesarchiv Baden-Wurttemberg.

References

Charles Alexander, Duke of Wurttemberg Wikipedia