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- [royalfam.ged]
Here's how John van der Kiste tells it:
During the night of 1 July 1694, K©œnigsmarck was seen to enter the Leineschloss Palace and g o to
Sophia Dorotheas apartments. He never came out alive. What precisely happened that night wil l
probably never be known, but the traditional version has it that he received a note in penci l left
on a table in the sitting-room of his house in Hanover that afternoon, informing him that h e was
summoned to meet Princess Sophia Dorotha in her private apartment at about 10 oclock that ni ght.
The note purported to be hers but was in fact the work of Countess von Platen. That he did no t
suspect it was a trap designed to lure him could be put down to his ignorance of how much hi s and
the Princesss indiscretions had become the subject of gossip at court during his absence.
Disguising himself in shabby clothes, he gave a prearranged signal under the window of her
apartment, and she let him in. It was the first time she had seen him for three months, and s he told
him that the note was a forgery. He told her that a carriage was ready to take them to safet y at
Wolfenb©ottel, and she would have agreed to join him at once if it was not for the matter of s aying
goodbye to her children. She would do so next morning, and asked him to return with his carri age at
the same time on the evening of 2 July. Nearby Countess von Platen and her courtiers were lyi ng in
wait. Her spies had kept her informed of the intended flight, and as soon as K©œnigsmarck had
arrived, she went to the Electors chamber to inform him. With the assistance of four halberd iers,
she said, she could catch the young lovers red-handed. To the scheme of capturing and arresti ng
them, he gave his approval, and she hid the men in a chimney recess, locked all the doors ou t of the
Princesss gallery except one near the chimney, and hid behind a curtain. When K©œnigsmarck tr ied to
leave and found his way blocked, he realized what had happened. Outnumbered by four to one h e had no
chance, but with the sword which he always carried he wounded three of them. However, they
overpowered him and stabbed him to death, and as he lay dying the Countess, who had been watc hing
with malicious glee, came and kicked him viciously in the mouth. Having witnessed his despatc h, she
realized with dismay that the Elector had merely authorized her to bring the Count to justice , and
she returned to his apartment panic-stricken. Though angry with her he knew that he was also
implicated in the murder, and he authorized her to do what she could to suppress any trace o f the
nights events. The halberiers were ordered to throw the body in the palace latrines, cover i t with
quicklime and brick the wall up. They accomplished their mission silently and by dawn they we re all
in their beds. An alternative reconstruction has the body placed in a sack, weighted with st ones,
and thrown into the river.
About 1/2 of the correspondance between Philip and Sophia survives today, having been sent t o his
sister Aurora, who preserved it.
The European Royal History Journal, Issue XV, February 2000, p. 9.
van der Kiste, John, The Georgian Princesses, Sutton Publishing, Gloucestershire, England, 20 00, p. 23.
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