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Confessional policy and the limits of state action: Frederick William III and the Prussian Church Union 1817–40

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Christopher Clark
Affiliation:
St Catharine's College, Cambridge

Abstract

The merging of the Lutheran and Calvinist (Reformed) confessions to form the United Church of Prussia was one of the most controversial policies pursued by Frederick William III after 1815. By the late 1830s it had provoked a large and well-organised movement of opposition, particularly among those ‘Old Lutherans’ in Silesia and neighbouring provinces who refused to abandon their liturgical traditions. This article examines the government's attempts to complete the process of unification through measures designed to atomize and silence Lutheran protest. Neither Prussian law nor Prussian law enforcement agencies, the article suggests, furnished an adequate foundation for Frederick William III's confessional policy. The unsuccessful campaign against Old Lutheranism exacerbated latent tensions between the executive and judicial branches of the administration and revealed the limits of government power and authority in the sensitive area of confessional policy. The aggressive and systematic confessional statism of the administration under Frederick William III was unprecedented in Prussian history; in this as in other areas of policy, the term ‘Restoration’ misrepresents political reality in post-Napoleonic Prussia.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

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References

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13 Cf. ibid. fo. 30: ‘it is not by the introduction of forms, that there can be effected a purification and revival of religion’.

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16 On confusion over the oath of ordination, see Wendland, W., Die Religiosität und die kirchmpolitischen Grundsätze Friedrich Wilhelms des Dritten in ihrer Bedeutung für die Geschichte der kirchlichen Restauration (Gießen, 1909), pp. 92–3Google Scholar. On the debate over Union and liturgy in the 1820s and 1830s see esp. Wangemann, H. T., Die kirchliche Cabinets-Politik des Königs Friedrich Wilhelm III. (Berlin, 1884)Google Scholar; Weichert, F., ‘Die Unionsbestrebungen in Berlin und Brandenburg von 1817 bis 1850. Widerstande und Motive’, Jahrbuch für Brandenburgische Kirchengeschichte, 54 (1983), pp. 97151Google Scholar; Neuser, ‘Agende’ (Neuser also provides an excellent bibliography).

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21 On the official celebrations held on 25 June 1830 in memory of the Confessio Augustana, see esp. Mohr, R., ‘Die Besonderheiten der 300-Jahrfeier der Confessio Augustana im preußischen Rheinland’, Monatshefte für evangelische Kirchengeschichte des Rheinlandes, 26 (1977), pp. 135–65Google Scholar and Mehlhausen, J., ‘Augustana-Jubiläum und Julirevolution’Google Scholar in Goeters, , Die Geschichte, I, 210–20.Google Scholar

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24 The best general outline of these events (with an excellent bibliography) is Nixdorf, W., ‘Die Lutherische Separation. Union und Bekenntnis (1834)’Google Scholar in Goeters, und Mau, , Die Geschichte, II, 220–40Google Scholar. See also Bigler, R. M., The politics of German protestantism (Berkeley, Los Angeles, London, 1971), esp. pp. 100–16Google Scholar; Elliger, W., Delius, W. and Söhngen, O., Die evangelische Kirche der Union. Ihre Vorgeschichte und Geschichte (Witten, 1967), pp. 5465Google Scholar; Eylert, Charakter-Züge, III, pt. 2, 107–235; Klän, W., ‘Die altlutherische Kirchenbildung in Preußen’, in Hauschild, W.-D. (ed.), Das Deutsche Luthertum und die Unionsproblematik im 19. Jahrhundert (Gütersloh, 1991)Google Scholar, Wendland, , Religiosität, pp. 116–24Google Scholar. Informative partisan commentaries can be found in Scheibel, Actenmässige Geschichte, and Kiunke, M., Johann Gottfried Scheibel und sein Ringen urn die Kirche der lutherischen Reformation (Kassel, 1941; repr. Göttingen, 1985), esp. pp. 334–79.Google Scholar

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27 Frederick William to Altenstein and Rochow, Berlin, 2 June 1837, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 3, Bl. 103. Karl Sigmund Franz Freiherr vom Stein zum Altenstein was minister of church, health and educational affairs; Gustav Adolf Count von Rochow was interior minister.

28 Altenstein to Flottwell, Berlin, 7 April, 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 103–4.

29 See, for example, report by Councillor Strauß of the senior consistory on his journey to the separatist congregation in Züllichau, Berlin, 13 May 1837, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 4, Bl. 133–40.

30 Frankfurt/Oder government to Rochow, Frankfurt/Oder, 9 June 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 207–8.

31 ‘Nachweisung der im preußischen Staate im Jahre 1838 sich von der Kirchengemeinschaft entfernt haltenden lutherischen Separatisten zusammengestellt aus den namentlichen Verzeich-nissen der einzelnen betreffenden königlichen Regierungen’, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, vol. 7, Bl. 41. A survey of January 1841 of the 328 separatists who emigrated from the province of Silesia to North America and South Australia between 1836 and 1840 suggests likewise that apprentices, journeymen and artisans were statistically overrepresented in the committed ‘core’ of the movement. Ibid. fos. 195–209.

32 Huschke, Steffens, Grempler, v. Haugwitz, Willisch, Helling, Schleicher, Mühsam, Kaestner, Mage and Borne to Frederick William III, Breslau, 23 June 1830, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 15, Abt. XVII, Nr. 44, vol. 1. References to previous generations of ‘fathers’ are common in the Lutheran petition literature.

33 Ward, W. R., The protestant evangelical awakening (Cambridge, 1992), esp. pp. 6770CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Nixdorf, , Die lutherische Separation, p. 221.Google Scholar

34 See, for example, Revierförster Fiedler, for the Lutheran congregation in Klemzig, to Frederick William, Klemzig, 19 December 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 4, Bl. 146–8.

35 ‘Hamburg, 6 July’, Augsburger Allgemeine Zeitung (supplement), 18 July, 1838.Google Scholar

36 See, for example, Rochow to Altenstein, Berlin, 20 Nov. 1836; GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt., XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 3, Bl. 80.

37 Neue Würzburger Zeitung, 22 June 1838, transcribed in GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XHIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 135.

38 Cited in Birtsch, G., ‘Friedrich der Große und die Aufklärung’, in Hauser, O. (ed.), Friedrich der Groβe in seiner Zeit (Zeue Forschungen zur Brandenburg-Preuβischen Geschichte, 8; Cologne, Vienna, 1987), pp. 3146Google Scholar; here pp. 44–5.

39 Quotation from § 1 of the Edict of 9 July 1788. On the political significance of the edict, see Valjavec, F., ‘Das Woellnersche Religionsedikt und seine geschichtliche Bedeutung’, Historisches Jahrbuch, LXXII (1953), 386400.Google Scholar

40 On the ALR as the ‘posthumous constitutional settlement’ of Frederick the Great and its status as a ‘surrogate constitution’ (Ersatzverfassung), see Koselleck, R., ‘Staat und Gesellschaft in Preußen 1815–1848’, in Conze, W. (ed.), Staat und Gesellschaft im deutschen Vormärz 1815–1848 (Stuttgart, 1962), pp. 7981Google Scholar; idem, Preuβen zwischen Reform und Revolution. Allgemeines Landrecht, Verwaltung und Soziale Bewegung von 1791 bis 1848 (Stuttgart, 1967), pp. 23–5Google Scholar. For criticism of this view, see Birtsch, G., ‘Zum konstitutionellen Charakter des preußischen Allgemeinen Landrechts von 1794’, in Kluxen, K. and Mommsen, W. (eds.), Politische Ideologien undnationalstaatliche Ordnung. Studien zur Geschichte des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts. Festschrift für Theodor Schieder (Munich and Vienna, 1968), pp. 97115.Google Scholar

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44 See also Altenstein to Kleinert, Gustmann, Thomas, Urban, Freitag and Meier (separatists in Berlin), Berlin, 15 Nov. 1837, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. I, Abt. XHIa, Nr. 5, vol. 5, Bl. 50: ‘Da das Bestehen des lutherischen Bekenntisses in der Monarchic ganz ungeschadet ist und die lutherischen Glaubensverwandten nicht die geringste Beeinträchtigung ihrer kirchlichen Verhältnisse und Rechte erfahren, so muß das Vorgeben, das sie und die Anhänger der separatistischen Parthei allein und ausschließend die wahren Lutheraner seyen, als eine leere Erdichtung auch fernerzu aufgewiesen werden.’

45 For examples of Lutheran petitions that cite passages from the General Code, see for example the transcripts in Scheibel, , Actenmässige Geschichte, II, 95104, 106–7, 197200, 208–10, 211–12.Google Scholar

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47 Silesian consistory to Altenstein, Breslau, 15 April 1834, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 15, Abt., XVII, Nr. 44, vol. 4.

48 Altenstein to Frederick William, Berlin, 6 July 1830, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XHIa, Nr. 5, vol. 1, Bl. 123–38; here Bl. 137.

49 Coeslin government to MGUMA, Coeslin, 27 Oct. 1835, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt., XHIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 67–9. The jurisdiction of the Prussian Lokalpolizeibehörden had been redefined and extended by an order of 23 May 1830 from the ministry of the interior.

50 Altenstein to Coeslin government, Berlin, 15 January 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt., XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 67–9, 73. Similar complaint in Merseburg government to MGUMA, Merseburg, 12 July 1835, Bl. 56–9.

51 Liegnitz district government to Altenstein, Liegnitz, 18 Oct. 1835, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt., XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 64.

52 Frederick William to Altenstein, 15 February 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt., XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 73. Less than one month later, on 10 March 1836, this decision was revised. The costs for the punishment of impecunious separatists were to be borne by the ‘state police budget’, since separatist offences were delicta publica under the cabinet order of 9 March 1834. See Alvensleben to Rochow, Berlin, 10 march 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 153.

53 See Meuß(?) Report on separatists in the Züllichau district, 26 Aug. 1836; GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 4, Bl. 41–68, esp. 41–2.

54 See Frederick William to Altenstein and Rochow, Teplitz, 20 July 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIHa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 219.

55 Frankfurt/Oder government to Rochow, Frankfurt/Oder, 9 June 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 207–8.

86 ‘Hamburg, 6 July’, Augsburger Allgemeine (supplement), 18 July 1838Google Scholar. The phrase ‘emigrant protestants from the Tyrol’ refers to the Zillertal exiles from alpine Austria, to whom Frederick William III granted asylum in the 1830s; on the contemporaneity of anti-separatist measures with the admission of the Zillertaler, see Schnabel, , Deutsche Geschichte, IV, 347.Google Scholar

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60 Ancillon to Rochow, Berlin, 17 Aug. 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 268–70.

61 Altenstein to Rochow, Berlin, 3 Oct. 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 3, Bl. 46.

62 Rochow to MGUMA, Berlin, 8 October 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 3, Bl. 73.

63 Silesian consistory to Altenstein, Breslau, 28 Dec. 1831, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 15, Abt. XVII, Nr. 44, vol. 2.

64 Altenstein to Miihler, Berlin, 32 July 1832, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 15, Abt. XVII, Nr. 44, vol. 3.

65 See Koschützky to Rochow, Militsch, 27 Oct. 1835; GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 15, Abt. XVII, Nr. 44, Bd. VIII. Koschützky remained in prison throughout these altercations.

66 Flottwell to Altenstein and Rochow, Posen, 21 Oct. 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt., XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 3, Bl. 97–8.

67 Neue Würzburger Zeitung, 22 June 1838, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt., XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 6, Bl. 135.

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70 Rochow to Altenstein, Berlin, 30 Nov. 1837, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. Xllla, Nr. 5, vol. 5, Bl. 108–10.

71 Koch, Hanke, Fritze, Auersbach, Müller, Hoffmann, and Naumann to Breslau Magistral (City Magistrates' Court), Breslau, 4 Dec. 1830. transcribed in Scheibel, , Actenmässige Geschichte, I, 146–8Google Scholar; here p. 147.

72 See, for example, Frederick William to Altenstein, 15 February 1836, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 75.

73 On the publication of the cabinet order of 9 March 1834, see, for example, Altenstein to Rhenish consistory, Berlin, 12 August 1834; Altenstein to Prussian consistory (Königsberg), Berlin, 17 August 1834. For complaints relating to this policy, see Brandenburg consistory to Altenstein, Berlin, 15 September 1834, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIHa, Nr. 5, vol. 2, Bl. 25, 27, 28–30.

74 Frederick William III to ministers v. Thulemeyer and v. Massow, Charlottenburg, 18 July 1798, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1, Abt. XIV, No. 4a, Bl. 1–2.

75 On the importance of avoiding the appearance of Gewissenszwang, see Altenstein to Frederick William III, Berlin, 6 July 1830, GStA Berlin, HA I, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. I, Abt. XIIIa, Nr. 5, vol. I, Bl. 123–38; here Bl. 128. For public responses to Prussian policy in the other German states, see for example, Neue Würzburger Zeitung, 22 June 1838 and ibid. 10 September 1838; Beilage zur Augsburger Allgemeine Zeitung, No. 199, 18 July 1838; all in Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 1 Abt. XIIIa, vol. 6, Bl. 135, 136, vol. 7, Bl. 8. For the planting of leader articles refuting the claims of critical journalists outside Prussia, see, for example, Altenstein to foreign minister Ancillon, Berlin, 22 Jan. 1835, GStA, Rep. 76 III, Sekt. 15, Abt. XVII, Nr. 44, vol. 5.

76 For Frederick William's views on the relationship between Gewissensfreyheit and the ‘spirit’ of protestantism, see his cabinet order to Massow of 23 February 1802 regarding the necessity of a law to enforce the baptism of Christian children within six weeks of birth. This is transcribed and discussed in Foerster, , Die Entstehung, I, 101–03.Google Scholar

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