Frederick Adolphus, Count of Lippe-Detmold


Frederick Adolphus of Lippe-Detmold was a German nobleman and the Count of Lippe-Detmold from 1697 to 1718.
Born in Detmold Palace, Frederick Adolphus was the eldest of sixteen children of Simon Henry, Count of Lippe-Detmold and Baroness Amalia of Dohna-Vianen, Burgravine of Utrecht and heiress of Vianen and Ameide.

Life

He broke with the tradition of his predecessors, who had paid a subsidy to the Holy Roman Empire in lieu of their military obligations, by raising his own company of Lippe troops. This was increased to battalion strength as required by the Empire. However, during his rule the troops did not see any operational service. Frederick Adolphus apparently rewarded his followers with generous donations; for example, on 16 June 1699 he enfeoffed Frantz Dietrich Bohsen with the village of Ilendorf between Pömbsen and Nieheim, with the Court of Döringsfelde, and the tithes of Wintrup and Großen Heisten. In 1712, he enfeoffed the sons of his Lieutenant Johann Adolf von Schledorn with the town of Anröchte.
In October 1698, Frederick Adolphus took the Hamburg Baroque artist, Hans Hinrich Rundt, into his service. Rundt painted a number of portraits of the Count's family and also decorated the luxurious renovations of the comital palace, with wall and ceiling paintings.
The Count was a typical Baroque ruler. His building work overburdened the territory's finances. In 1716, the Russian Tsar Peter the Great commented on the occasion of a hunting visit in Bad Pyrmont: "Your Highness is too big for this country". His most famous project, the Friedrichstal Canal is still visible today in Detmold and is a popular Sunday walk for the local population. The Dutch hydraulic engineering specialist Hendrick Kock was responsible for the construction of the canal. His "Favorite Palace" was located on one side of the canal and, since 1954, has been part of the Detmold College of Music. The subsequent landscaped parks made in the English style Palace Garden were opened to the public only in 1919. From the Garden Friedrichstal only remained the Mausoleum at Büchenberg, the Neuer Krug and the Krummes Haus on the site of today's Detmold Open-air Museum. In order to provide the appropriate framework of this project, the Count ordered the construction near the south gate of a cavalier house, now the Hotel Lippischer Hof and a group of new houses, who formed the today's vicinity of Neustadt.
Frederick Adolphus was awarded in 1712 with the Prussian Order of the Black Eagle.

Marriages and Issue

In Schaumburg on 16 June 1692 Frederick Adolphus married firstly with Countess Johanna Elisabeth of Nassau-Dillenburg, the daughter of Adolph, Prince of Nassau-Schaumburg. They had six children:
  1. Simon Henry Adolph, Count and since 27 October 1720 Prince of Lippe-Detmold.
  2. Charles Frederick.
  3. Amalia.
  4. Charlotte Amalie.
  5. Leopold Hermann.
  6. Frederick August.
On 16 June 1700 Frederick Adolphus married secondly with Countess Amalia of Solms-Hohensolms. They had seven children:
  1. Amalie Luise.
  2. Elisabeth Charlotte, Abbess of St.Marien in Lemgo.
  3. Charles Simon Louis.
  4. Franziska Charlotte, married in 1724 to Count Frederick Charles of Bentheim-Steinfurt.
  5. Maximilian Henry.
  6. Charles Joseph.
  7. Fredericka Adolphine, married in 1736 to her first-cousin Count Frederick Alexander of Lippe-Detmold, Lord of Samrodt.