Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

George Albert, Prince of East Frisia

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Noble family
  
Cirksena

Died
  
June 12, 1734

Name
  
George Prince

George Albert, Prince of East Frisia
Father
  
Christian Everhard, Prince of East Frisia

Mother
  
Eberhadine Sophie of Oettingen-Oettingen

Born
  
13 June 1690 (
1690-06-13
)

Spouse
  
Sophie Caroline of Brandenburg-Kulmbach (m. 1723)

Parents
  
Christian Everhard, Prince of East Frisia

Children
  
Charles Edzard, Prince of East Frisia

Grandparents
  
Christine Charlotte of Wurttemberg, George Christian, Prince of East Frisia

Great-grandparents
  
Juliana of Hesse-Darmstadt, Ulrich II, Count of East Frisia, Eberhard III, Duke of Wurttemberg

George Albert (13 June 1690 – 12 June 1734) was a member of the family of the Cirksena and was the fourth Prince of East Frisia. He ruled from 1708 to 1734.

Contents

Life

He was the second son of Prince Christian Eberhard. On 24 September 1709, he married in Idstein his first wife, Countess Christine Louise of Nassau-Idstein (born: 31 March 1691; died: 13 April 1723).

East Frisia was hit hard by the Christmas flood of 1717: 2,752 people drowned and large tracts of land were devastated.

Christiane Louise died on 13 April 1723; on 8 December of that year, in Berum, George Albert married his second wife, Sophie Caroline of Brandenburg-Kulmbach, daughter of Margrave Christian Heinrich of Brandenburg-Bayreuth-Kulmbach. She received from George Albert the manor Furstinnen-Grashaus in the polder Carolinengroden as a present. She drew revenues from it until her death in 1764.

During George Albert's rule the old conflict between the Prince and a part of the Estates escalated into the so-called Appeal War of 1726-1727. The Estates were in divided into a obedient and a renitent faction; the former sided with the Prince; the latter raised troops to fight him. George Albert emerged victorious from this conflict. Even the city of Emden, which had led the renitent faction, submitted to him. However, due to the poor negotiating skills of George Albert's Chancellor Enno Rudolph Brenneysen, no peace could be agreed between the warring factions. The Chancellor and the Prince demanded that the rebels be punished harshly, but in 1732, they were pardoned by the Emperor.

When Prince George Albert died on 11 June 1734, his son Charles Edzard, took office at the age of 18. Charles Edzard was the George Albert's last surviving descendant. He could not resolve the conflicts with the Estates, either.

Legacy

In 1715, George Albert issued the world's first Stallion Inspection Regulation.

In 1729-1730 Prince George Albert built a port at Carolinensiel, now a museum harbor. The port was named after his second wife, Sophie Caroline.

In an attempt to keep alcoholism under control, George Albert forbade ball shooting matches on 9 February 1731. He sharply condemned the "disorders, excessive drinking, eating, solding, swearing, cursing and severe beatings" that often occurred at ball shooting matches. This, too, stressed the relationship between the prince and his subjects.

References

George Albert, Prince of East Frisia Wikipedia