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Chlodwig Carl Viktor, Prince of
Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst, Prince of Ratibor and Corvey
(German:
Fürst zu
Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst, Fürst von Ratibor und
Corvey) (31 March 1819 – 6 July 1901), usually
referred to as the Prince of Hohenlohe[1], was a
German statesman, who served as Chancellor of Germany and Prime Minister of Prussia from 1894 to
1900. Prior to his appointment as Chancellor, he had served in a
number of other positions, including as Prime Minister of Bavaria (1866–1870),
German Ambassador to Paris (1873–1880), Foreign Secretary (1880)
and Imperial
Lieutenant of Alsace-Lorraine (1885–1894). He was
regarded as one of the most prominent liberal politicians of his
time in Germany.
Birth
Chlodwig was born at Rotenburg an der Fulda, in Hesse, a member of the princely
House of Hohenlohe. His
father, Prince Franz Joseph (1787–1841), was a Catholic; his mother, Princess Konstanze of
Hohenlohe-Langenburg, a Lutheran. In accordance with the compromise
customary at the time, Chlodwig and his brothers were brought up in
the religion of their father, while his sisters followed that of
their mother.
Early
career
As the younger son of a cadet line of his house it was necessary
for Chlodwig to follow a profession. For a while he thought of
obtaining a commission in the British army through the influence of
his aunt, Princess Feodora of
Hohenlohe-Langenburg, half-sister to Queen Victoria of the United
Kingdom. Instead, however, he decided to enter the Prussian
diplomatic service.
Chlodwig's application to be excused the preliminary steps,
which involved several years' work in subordinate positions in the
Prussian civil service, was refused by King Frederick William IV.
As auscultator in the courts at Koblenz he acquired a taste for jurisprudence.
He became a Referendar in September 1843, and after some months of
travel in France, Switzerland and Italy he went to Potsdam as a civil servant 13 May 1844.
These early years were invaluable, not only as giving him
experience of practical affairs but as affording him an insight
into the strength and weakness of the Prussian system. The
immediate result was to confirm his Liberalism. The Prussian
principle of propagating enlightenment with a stick did not appeal
to him; he recognized the confusion and want of clear ideas in the
highest circles, the tendency to make agreement with the views of
the government the test of loyalty to the state; and he noted in
his journal (25 June 1844) four years before the revolution of
1848, "a slight cause and we shall have a rising." "The free
press," he notes on another occasion, "is a necessity, progress the
condition of the existence of a state." If he was an ardent
advocate of German unity, and saw in Prussia the instrument for its
attainment, he was throughout opposed to the "Prussification" of
Germany.
Succession to family
titles and estates
Chlodwig was the second of six sons. In 1834 his mother's
brother-in-law Landgrave Viktor Amadeus of Hesse-Rotenburg died, leaving his estates
to his nephews. It was not until 1840 that it was determined how to
divide these estates. On 15 October 1840 Chlodwig's older brother,
Viktor Moritz Karl zu Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst, 1st Fürst von
Corvey, (10 February 1818 - 30 January 1893), renounced his rights
as first-born son to the Principality of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst,
and was made Duke of Ratibor and Prince of Corvey by King Frederick William IV of
Prussia; at the same time Chlodwig received the additional
title of Prince of Ratibor and Corvey. He also received the
lordship of Treffurt in
the Prussian governmental district of Erfurt.
On 14 January 1841 Chlodwig's father, Fürst Franz Joseph
(1787–1841), died. As second son he ought to have succeeded as
Prince (Fürst) of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst, but instead
he renounced his rights to his third brother Philipp Ernst, (24 May
1820 - 3 May 1845), with the stipulation that they would revert to
him in case of his brother's death. On 3 May 1845 Philipp Ernst
died, and Chlodwig succeeded as 7th Prince of
Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst. As such he was an hereditary member of
the Upper House of the Bavarian Reichsrat. Such a position was
incompatible with his political career in Prussia. On 18 April 1846
he took his seat as a member of the Bavarian Reichsrat, and the
following 26 June he received his formal discharge from the
Prussian service.
Chlodwig's political life for the next eighteen years was
generally uneventful. During the Revolution of
1848 his sympathies were with the Liberal idea of a united
Germany, and he compromised his chances of favor from King Maximilian II of Bavaria by
accepting the task of announcing to the courts of Rome, Florence
and Athens the accession to office of the Archduke
Johann of Austria as regent of Germany.
In general this period of Chlodwig's life was occupied in the
management of his estates, in the sessions of the Bavarian
Reichsrat and in travels. In 1856 he visited Rome, during which he
noted the influence of the Jesuits. In 1859 he was studying the
political situation at Berlin, and in the same year he paid a visit
to England. The marriage of his cadet brother, Konstantin Viktor
Prinz zu Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst von Ratibor und
Corvey, (8 September 1828 - Vienna, Austria, 14 February 1896), to Marie Antoinette
Prinzessin zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg, (18 February 1837 - 21
January 1920), on 15 October 1859 at Weimar, Germany led also to frequent visits to Vienna. Thus Chlodwig was brought
into close touch with all the most notable people in Europe,
including Catholic leaders of the Austrian Empire .
At the same time, during this period (1850-1866) he was
endeavouring to get into relations with the Bavarian government,
with a view to taking a more active part in affairs. Towards the
German question his attitude at this time was tentative. He had
little hope of a practical realization of a united Germany, and
inclined towards the tripartite divisions under Austria, Prussia
and Bavaria the so-called Trias.
He attended the Fürstentag at Frankfurt in 1863, and in
the Schleswig-Holstein question was a supporter
of the prince of Augustenburg. It was at this time that, at the
request of Queen Victoria, he began to send her
regular reports on the political condition of Germany.
His portrait was painted by Philip de
Laszlo.
Minister-President of
Bavaria
After the Austro-Prussian War of 1866
Chlodwig argued in the Bavarian Reichsrat for a closer union with
mainly Protestant Prussia. King Ludwig II of Bavaria was opposed
to any dilution of his power, but was eventually brought around,
after Bismarck secretely bequeathed him a
large sum from the Welfen-Funds (a large part of the
fortune of the royal House of Hanover used after the annexation of Hannover by Prussia to fight Hannoverian
loyalists) to pay off his large debts.
On 31 December 1866 Chlodwig was appointed minister of the royal
house and of foreign affairs and president of the council of
ministers. According to Chlodwig's son Alexander
(Denkwurdigkeiten, i. 178, 211)) Chlodwig's appointment as
Minister-President occurred at the instigation of the composer Richard
Wagner.
As head of the Bavarian government Chlodwig's principal task was
to discover some basis for an effective union of the South German
states with the North German Confederation.
During the three critical years of his tenure of office he was,
next to Bismarck, the most important statesman in Germany. He
carried out the reorganization of the Bavarian army on the Prussian
model, brought about the military union of the southern states, and
took a leading share in the creation of the customs parliament
(Zollparlament), of which on the 28th of April 1868 he was elected
a vice-president.
During the agitation that arose in connection with the summoning
of the First Vatican Council Chlodwig
took up an attitude of strong opposition to the ultramontane position. In common with his
brothers, the Duke of Ratibor and Cardinal Gustav Adolf zu
Hohenlohe, he believed that the policy of Pope Pius IX of setting the Church in
opposition to the modern state would prove ruinous to both, and
that the definition of the dogma of papal infallibility would
irrevocably commit the Church to the pronouncements of the Syllabus of
Errors (1864).
This view he embodied into a circular note to the Roman Catholic
powers (9 April 1869), drawn up by Johann Joseph Ignaz von
Döllinger, inviting them to exercise the right of sending
ambassadors to the council and to combine to prevent the definition
of the dogma. The greater powers, however, were for one reason or
another unwilling to intervene, and the only practical outcome of
Chlodwig's action was that in Bavaria the powerful ultramontane
party combined against him with the Bavarian patriots who accused
him of bartering away Bavarian independence to Prussia. The
combination was too strong for him; a bill which he brought in for
curbing the influence of the Church over education was defeated,
the elections of 1869 went against him, and in spite of the
continued support of the king he was forced to resign (7 March
1870).
Continuing
influence
Though out of office, his personal influence continued to be
very great both at Munich and
Berlin, in no small part due
to the favorable terms of the treaty of the North German
Confederation with Bavaria, which embodied his views, and with its
acceptance by the Bavarian parliament. Elected a member of the
German Reichstag, he was on 23 March
1871 chosen as one of its vice-presidents. He was instrumental in
founding the new groups which took the name of the Liberal Imperial
party (Liberale Reichspartei), the objects of which were to support
the new empire, to secure its internal development on Liberal
lines, and to oppose the Catholic
Centre.
Like his brother the Duke of Ratibor, Chlodwig was from the
first a strenuous supporter of Bismarck's anti-papal policy (the
Kulturkampf), the main lines of which
(prohibition of the Society of Jesus, etc.) he himself
suggested. Although he sympathized with the motives of the Old
Catholics, he did not join them, believing that the only hope
for a reform of the Church lay with those who desired it remaining
in her communion. In 1872 Bismarck proposed appointing Chlodwig's
younger brother Cardinal Gustav Adolf Prinz zu
Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst, (Rotenburg, Germany, 26 March 1823 - Rome, Italy, 30
October 1896), as Prussian envoy to the Holy See, but Pope Pius IX refused to receive
him in this capacity.
In 1873 Bismarck chose Chlodwig to succeed Count Harry Arnim as
German ambassador in Paris, where he remained for seven years. In
1878 he attended the Congress of Berlin as third German
representative. In 1880, after the death of the German Secretary of
State for Foreign Affairs, Bernhard Ernst von Bülow (20
October 1879), Chlodwig was called to Berlin as temporary head of
the Foreign Office and representative of Bismarck during his
absence through illness.
In 1885 Chlodwig was chosen to succeed Edwin Freiherr von
Manteuffel as governor of Alsace-Lorraine, incorporated after the
1870 war against France. In this capacity he had to carry out the
coercive measures introduced by Bismarck in 1887 and 1888, though
he largely disapproved of them; his conciliatory disposition,
however, did much to reconcile the Alsace-Lorrainers to German
rule.
Chancellor
of Germany
Chlodwig remained at Strasbourg till October 1894, when, at the
urgent request of the Emperor William
II, he consented, in spite of his advanced years, to accept the
chancellorship as Caprivi's
successor. The events of his chancellorship belong to the general
history of Germany; as regards the inner history of this time the
editor of his memoirs has very properly suppressed the greater part
of the detailed comments which the prince left behind him. In
general, during his term of office, the personality of the
chancellor was less conspicuous in public affairs than in the case
of either of his predecessors. His appearances in the Prussian and
German parliaments were rare, and great independence was left to
the secretaries of state.
Chlodwig resigned the chancellorship on 17 October 1900. He died
at Bad Ragaz, Switzerland, 6 July
1901.
Marriage and
family
On 16 February 1847 at Rödelheim Chlodwig
married Princess Marie of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn, daughter
of Ludwig Adolf
Friedrich, 2nd Prince of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Sayn and his first
wife Princess Caroline (Stephanie) Radziwill. Marie was the
heiress to vast estates in Imperial Russia. This led to two
prolonged visits to Verkiai,
Lithuania from 1851 to
1853 and again in 1860 in connection with the management of these
properties.
Chlodwig and Marie had six children:
- Elisabeth Constanze Leonille Stephanie (30 November 1847,
Schillingsfürst - 26 October 1915 Alt-Aussee)
- Philipp Ernst, 8th Prince of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst (5 June
1853, Schillingsfürst - 26 December 1915, Bad
Reichenhall); married 1st (10 January 1882, Vienna) Princess
Chariclée Ypsilanti (8
October 1863, Paris - 22 June
1912, Schillingsfürst); married 2nd morganatically (6 August 1913, Edinburgh) Henriette
Gindra, created Frau von Hellberg 10 July 1914 (7 October
1884, Vienna - 15 May 1952, Innsbruck)
- Albert (14 October 1857, Schillingsfürst - 13 April 1866,
Munich)
- Moritz, 9th Prince of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst (6 August 1862,
Lindau - 27 February 1940,
Schillingsfürst); married (19 August 1893, Dyck) Altgravine Rosa of Salm-Reifferscheidt-Krautheim
and Dyck (12 April 1868, Herrschberg am Bodensee - 1 December
1942, Munich)
- Alexander (6 August 1862, Lindau - 16 May 1924, Badenweiler); married (16 May 1895, Cologne) Emanuela Gallone dei
Principi di Tricase Moliterno (19 February 1854, Naples - 26 March 1936, Naples)
References
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia
Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in
the public
domain.
- Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst, Prince Chlodwig zu. Memoirs of
Prince Chlowig of Hohenlohe-Schillingsfuerst. London: W.
Heinemann, 1906. Chlodwig's own memoirs.
- Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst, Prince Alexander zu.
Denkwürdigkeiten. Stuttgart, 1907. An outspoken biography
by Chlodwig's youngest son.
- Hedemann, Alexandrine von. My Friendship with Prince
Hohenlohe. London: E. Nash,, 1912.
- Fraley, Jonathan David, Jr. The Domestic Policy of Prince
Hohenlohe as Chancellor of Germany, 1894-1900. 1971. A Ph.D.
dissertation at Duke University.
- Stalmann, Volker: Fürst Chlodwig zu
Hohenlohe-Schillingsfürst 1819-1901. Ein deutscher
Reichskanzler. Schöningh, Paderborn 2009. ISBN
3-506-70118-3.
- Zachau, Olav. Die Kanzlerschaft des Fürsten Hohenlohe
1894-1900. Politik unter dem "Stempel der Beruhigung" im Zeitalter
der Nervosität. Hamburg 2007. (Studien zur Geschichtsforschung
der Neuzeit, Vol. 48)
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