The engagement of Lucie von Pappenheim and Hermann von Pückler-Muskau took place on November 16, 1816, and their wedding took place on October 9, 1817. The two shared a sharp mind, a sense of humour, and common interests. The union was advantageous for both partners: Pückler was able to realize his dream of transforming his lands around the town of
Muskau into a landscape garden with the help of Lucie's substantial dowry. Marriage to the owner of one of the
largest estates in
Upper Lusatia restored the divorced Lucie to a status commensurate with her origins. Hermann von Pückler and Lucie were elevated to the rank of
prince in 1822. Since their first meeting, the couple maintained a lively correspondence. A large number of Hermann von Pückler's
letters have survived, but Lucie's have not. Whether she or Pückler wished that her letters to him, and even the accompanying copies, be destroyed cannot be determined in retrospect. Often, only from Pückler's replies to Lucie can we guess what she was telling him in her letters. As early as 1820, Pückler considered selling the , as the fortune Lucie had brought with her had been exhausted. Lucie von Pückler made the unusual suggestion to her husband that they dissolve the marriage so that he could once again search for a wealthy wife. In February 1826, the marriage was dissolved. The official reason given was the couple's childlessness. Shortly before, in January 1826, Pückler had transferred the Pückler-Muskau estate to his wife in order to protect his property from possible seizure. In September 1826, Pückler actually went to England to look for a bride. Since word of his intentions quickly spread, the search was unsuccessful and was even ridiculed in the English press. The prince nevertheless stayed in
England for two years. During this time, he gained new inspiration for his park and wrote amusing letters about English society to his ex-wife. Lucie kept all the letters and prepared them for publication. After Pückler's return, the letters appeared in two volumes. During Prince Pückler's several years of traveling to the Orient,
Heinrich Laube was sentenced to seven years'
imprisonment in a fortress. After a plea for clemency, this sentence was reduced to one and a half years. Through her father's contacts, Lucie von Pückler was able to arrange for Laube to serve his sentence in Muskau. There, he lived in the Old Palace and was even able to participate in hunting trips; among other things, he mentioned the in the Tiergarten in the
Muskau Heath in his writings. After his imprisonment, he dedicated a publication to the Princess. == The garden designer ==