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Charles II, Duke of Brunswick

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Predecessor
  
Frederick William


Name
  
Charles Duke

Charles II, Duke of Brunswick httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb7

Reign
  
16 June 1815 – 9 September 1830

Born
  
30 October 1804 Brunswick, Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel (
1804-10-30
)

House
  
House of Brunswick-Bevern

Father
  
Frederick William, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel

Mother
  
Princess Marie of Baden

Died
  
August 19, 1873, Geneva, Switzerland

Successor
  
William, Duke of Brunswick

Parents
  
Frederick William, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel, Princess Marie of Baden

Grandparents
  
Charles William Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbuttel

Great-grandparents
  
Frederick, Prince of Wales

Similar People
  
Frederick William - Duke of B, Charles William Ferdinan, Charles Louis - Hereditar, Princess Amalie of Hesse‑Darmstadt

Charles II (German Karl II.; 30 October 1804 – 18 August 1873), Duke of Brunswick, ruled the Duchy of Brunswick from 1815 until 1830.

Contents

Charles II, Duke of Brunswick Charles II Duke of Brunswick 18041873 in military uniform blue

Biography

Charles was born in Brunswick, the eldest son of Frederick William, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg. After the death of his father in 1815, Charles inherited the Duchy, but since he was still underage, he was put under the guardianship of George, the Prince Regent of the United Kingdom and Hanover. When Charles neared his 18th birthday, a dispute over the date of his majority erupted; Charles claimed majority at age 18, while George considered the age of majority to be 21 years. A compromise was made, and Charles reached his majority at age 19, and took over government on 30 October 1823.

In 1827, Charles declared some of the laws made during his minority invalid, which caused a dispute with Hanover. The German Confederation finally had to intervene in this conflict and ordered Charles to accept all the laws from his minority, which he did.

Charles' administration was considered corrupt and misguided. When in 1830 the July Revolution broke out, Charles happened to be in Paris; he fled home to Brunswick, where he announced his intention to suppress all revolutionary tendencies by force of arms. But on 6 September, he was attacked by stone throwers while riding home from the theater; on the next day, a large mob tried to break into the palace. Charles fled; the palace was completely destroyed by fire. When Charles' brother, William, arrived in Brunswick on 10 September, he was received joyfully by the people. William originally considered himself only his brother's regent, but after a year declared himself ruling duke. Charles made several desperate attempts to depose his brother by diplomacy and by force, but they were unsuccessful. None of the other European monarchs wanted to support Charles.

Charles spent the rest of his life outside of Germany; mostly in Paris and London. While he lived in London he engaged in a high-profile feud with the publisher Barnard Gregory due to articles published about the Duke in The Satirist. After the war between France and Germany broke out, he moved to Geneva, where he died in the Beau-Rivage Hotel in 1873, aged 68. He left his considerable wealth to the City of Geneva which, at his request, constructed the Brunswick Monument to his memory. Charles never married.

Legacy

A contemporary obituarist referred to the Duke as "that painted, bewigged Lothario, whose follies, eccentricities, and diamonds made him the talk of Europe." During his lifetime he sued several newspaper publishers for libel when they alleged that, amongst other things, he solicited homosexual encounters. However, in 1849 he won a defamation case for the publication of an article by a newspaper, The Weekly Dispatch, in 1830, after sending a manservant to procure archive copies of the edition from the publishers and the British Museum. No copies now survive, although given the Duke's other legal cases, the nature of the libel may be assumed. However this case (Brunswick v Harmer) established a precedent in English defamation law, as the ruling was interpreted by courts to allow defamation plaintiffs to sue if there was a “new publication” of the original libel. It was used, for example, in 2009 to decree that internet company Google, who made historical libels available on their web pages, could be liable for damages. The multiple publication rule was finally curtailed in the UK by The Defamation Act 2013.

Titles and styles

  • 30 October 1804 – 16 October 1806: His Serene Highness Duke Charles Frederick of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
  • 16 October 1806 – 16 June 1815: His Highness The Hereditary Duke of Brunswick
  • 16 June 1815 – 9 September 1830: His Highness The Duke of Brunswick
  • 9 September 1830 – 18 August 1873: His Highness Duke Charles II of Brunswick
  • References

    Charles II, Duke of Brunswick Wikipedia