Frederick II, Landgrave of Hesse

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Frederick II (German: Friedrich II. (Hessen-Kassel)) (14 August 172031 October 1785) was Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel from 1760 to 1785.

He was born at Kassel in Hesse, the son of William VIII, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel and his wife Dorothea Wilhelmine of Saxe-Zeitz. In 1760, he succeeded his father as Landgrave. Despite his Catholicism, Kassel remained Calvinist.

Statue of Frederick II in Kassel
Statue of Frederick II in Kassel

On 8 May 1740, by proxy at London, and on 28 June 1740 in person at Cassel, he married Princess Mary, daughter of King George II of Great Britain and Caroline of Ansbach. They had four sons:

  1. William, died young in 1742
  2. William I, Elector of Hesse (3 June 174327 February 1821)
  3. Charles (19 December 174417 August 1836)
  4. Frederick (11 September 174720 May 1837). Father of Prince William of Hesse-Kassel.

In 1747, he left his family. In 1749, Frederick converted from Calvinism to Catholicism. The couple formally separated in 1755, and Friedrich entered service in the Prussian military.

After Mary died in 1772, he married on 10 January 1773 with Margravine Philippine of Brandenburg-Schwedt (1745-1800) at Berlin.

His three sons were fostered by Protestant relatives since 1747 and with Landgravine Mary moved to Denmark in 1756, to care of children of her late sister Louise of Great Britain who had died in 1751. Two elder boys married Danish princesses, their first cousins, in 1763 and 1766 respectively. The younger sons remained in Denmark, becoming its important lords and royal functionaries. Only the eldest returned to Germany, when inheriting the principality of Hanau, and then in 1785 ascended the Kassel landgraviate too.

Landgrave Frederick II died in 1785 at Castle Weißenstein, Kassel.

Preceded by
William VIII
Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel
1 February 176031 October 1785
Succeeded by
William IX

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