Luise von Mecklenburg-Strelitz
Queen consort of Prussia (1776–1810)
(Redirected from Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz)
Luise Auguste Wilhelmine Amalie zu Mecklenburg-Strelitz (English: Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, 1776-1810) was the wife of king Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia, and as such queen of Prussia. In Germany she is best known as Königin Luise.
Portraits and Portrayals by Contemporaries
edit-
Crown Princess Luise with her son Friedrich Wilhelm (1796, A. H. Schröder)
-
Princess Louise with sister Friederike. A famous sculpture by Johann Gottfried Schadow, 1797, marble
-
(2) "Prinzessinnengruppe", model, 1797
-
(3) Louise (left) and Friederike - detail
-
Portrait by Henriette-Felicité Tassaert, 1797
-
Portrait by Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein, 1798
-
Portrait by Nikolaus Lauer, 1798
-
Plaster relief by J.C.L. Bettkober, 1798
-
Portrait by Nikolaus Lauer, 1799
-
Portrait by Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun, 1801
-
Double portrait with Friedrich Wilhelm III
-
Portrait by Josef Grassi, 1802
-
With her family, by Heinrich Anton Dähling, 1806
-
Louise, Frederick William III, and Czar Alexander I at the sarcophagus of Frederick the Great, by Friedrich Georg Weitsch, 1806
-
Louise, Frederick William III, and Czar Alexander I at the sarcophagus of Frederick the Great, by Franz Catel, ca. 1806
-
Portrait by Marie-Guillemine Benoist, 1806
-
Königin Luise im Damensitz, c. 1806
-
Portrait in a riding habit by Friedrich Wilhelm Ternite, 1809
-
Portrait in a riding habit by Friedrich Wilhelm Ternite, 1810
Posthumous Portraits
edit-
Portrait by Karl Wilhelm Wach, 1812
-
Louise with her two eldest sons, the later King Friedrich Wilhelm IV and the later Kaiser Wilhelm I, by Carl Steffeck, 1886
-
Louise in the park of Charlottenburg Palace, anonymous chromolithograph, 19th century
-
Louise flees Napoleon by traversing the Curonian Spit
Monuments, Memorials, Statues
edit-
Study for a neo-Gothic mausoleum for Louise by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, 1810
-
Mausoleum in the garden of Charlottenburg Palace by Karl Friedrich Schinkel, 1811
-
Sarcophagus in Berlin, sculpted by Christian Daniel Rauch, 1812–14
-
(2)
-
Sarcophagus copy in Neustrelitz by Albert Wolff, 1892
-
Iron statue of Louise by Christian Daniel Rauch in the Nationaldenkmal auf dem Kreuzberg, 1820
-
Memorial on the Pfaueninsel, with original facade of the mausoleum at Charlottenburg Palace
-
Bust of Queen Sophie Charlotte von Prussia by Daniel Rauch at Charlottenburg Palace
-
Bust of Queen Sophie Charlotte von Prussia by Daniel Rauch at Charlottenburg Palace
-
Statuette von Aurelio Micheli nach dem Gemälde von Gustav Richter
-
Statue by Erdmann Encke in the Großer Tiergarten (Berlin) (still there, as replica)
-
Monument in Tilsit by Gustav Eberlein
-
Memorial in Gransee-Seilershof
-
Commemorative stone at lime tree in Babitz
-
Commemorative lime tree in Babitz
-
Steles in Berlin-Französisch Buchholz, 2018
Illustrations from a patriotic youth book
editExamples from: Die Königin Luise in 50 Bildern für Jung und Alt, Berlin [1896]
-
Princess Louise and sister Friederike as children in the shade of old trees of the castle Broich
-
Little Louise reads a fairy tale for an ill youngster
-
The bride Louise kisses a young admirer. Her lady-in-waiting Sophie Marie Gräfin von Voss is shocked.
-
An afternoon with her family at the Pfaueninsel
-
Louise allows Colonel Köckeritz to smoke after the meal, because he is a very good friend of her husband.
-
Louise, the mother and musician
-
Louise receives Napoleon in Tilsit.
-
Queen Louise dies at Hohenzieritz Castle, 1810