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Friedrich II Eugen, Duke of Württemberg

Frederick II Eugene
Duke of Württemberg
Friedrich Eugen of Württemberg.jpg
Frederick II Eugene, Duke of Württemberg
Spouse(s) Friederike Dorothea of Brandenburg-Schwedt
Noble family House of Württemberg
Father Karl Alexander, Duke of Württemberg
Mother Princess Maria Augusta of Thurn and Taxis
Born (1732-01-21)21 January 1732
Stuttgart
Died 23 December 1797(1797-12-23) (aged 65)
Hohenheim

Friedrich Eugen, Duke of Württemberg (21 January 1732, Stuttgart – 23 December 1797, Hohenheim), the fourth son of Duke Karl Alexander, Duke of Württemberg and Princess Maria Augusta of Thurn and Taxis (11 August 1706 – 1 February 1756).

After serving with Frederick the Great during the Seven Years' War, he took up residence in 1769 at his family's exclave, the County of Montbéliard, of which he was also made lieutenant-general in March 1786 by his eldest brother, Charles Eugene, Duke of Württemberg, who had begun to come into the inheritance of portions of the County of Limpurg in the 1780s. He bought the castle and lordship of Hochberg in 1779, but re-sold it in 1791 to his brother. The next year he was named governor of the margraviate of Ansbach-Bayreuth by King Frederick William II of Prussia, to whom it had been sold by the last prince of that branch of the House of Hohenzollern. Montbéliard was taken over by the short-lived Rauracian Republic in 1792, then annexed by the French Republic in 1793.

His elder brothers had only daughters, so following Charles Eugene's death in 1793 and then that of their brother Duke Ludwig Eugen (1731–1795), Frederick Eugene became reigning duke until his own death two years later. He acquiesced to the 1796 Treaty of Paris with revolutionary France in which his claims to Montbéliard (which had only been restored to Wüttemberg in 1738 by the Peace of Vienna: its attached lordships were returned by France in 1748, but under the condition of the substitution of French for Württemberger vassalage) and all other territories on the left bank of the Rhine River were renounced. Frederick Eugene thereby retained, however, France's recognition of the integrity of the duchy of Württemberg itself.


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