Frederick the Winter King

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Frederick the Winter King

Frederick the Winter King, 1596–1632, king of Bohemia (1619–20), elector palatine (1610–20) as Frederick V. The Protestant diet of Bohemia deposed the Roman Catholic King Ferdinand (Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand II) and chose Frederick as king. Influenced by his minister Christian of Anhalt, Frederick accepted but did not receive the aid expected from his father-in-law, James I of England, and from the Protestant Union against Ferdinand. After initial success, his supporters were routed at White Mt. (1620). Frederick thus lost Bohemia; from his short tenure came the derisive name, the Winter King. He was put under imperial ban and was stripped of all his remaining territories. The electorate was transferred to Maximilian I of Bavaria (see electors). These struggles were the first campaigns of the Thirty Years War. The Hanoverian kings of England were descended from Frederick and his wife, Elizabeth, through their daughter Sophia, who was the mother of George I of England.
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References in periodicals archive ?
Where Taylor gloats over the stunning victories of Gustavus Adolphus over the Imperial and Catholic forces, The Popes Complaint celebrates the confusion of the same forces by the initial successes of the armies of James I's son-in-law, Frederick V, Elector Palatine and embattled claimant for the Bohemian crown.
The work formed a part of the extensive celebrations for the ill-fated marriage of James I's daughter Elizabeth to Frederick V, Elector Palatine, and featured scenes and costumes by Inigo Jones and music by some of the great musical figures of the age, including Coprario, Johnson, Taylor, Campion himself, and, perhaps, a number of others.