, 1685. Painting by
Hugo Vogel, 1885After the victory at Fehrbellin he was an established name. His great grandson,
Frederick II, later said of him with regard to the battle: ”He was praised by his enemies, blessed by his people; and posterity dates from that famous day the subsequent elevation of the house of Brandenburg”. In his half-century reign, 1640–1688, the Great Elector transformed the small remote state of Prussia into a great power by augmenting and integrating the Hohenzollern family possessions in northern Germany and Prussia. When he became elector (ruler) of Brandenburg in 1640, the country was in ruins from the Thirty Years' War; it had lost half its population from war, disease and emigration. The capital Berlin had only 6,000 people left when the wars ended in 1648. He united the multiple separate domains that his family had acquired primarily by marriage over the decades, and built the powerful unified state of Prussia out of them. His success in rebuilding the lands and his astute military and diplomatic leadership propelled him into the ranks of the prominent rulers in an era of "absolutism". Historians compare him to his contemporaries such as Louis XIV of France (1643–1715),
Peter the Great (1682–1725) of Russia, and
Charles XI of Sweden (1660–1697). Although a strict Calvinist who stood ready to form alliances against the Catholic states led by France's Louis XIV, he was tolerant of Catholics and Jews. He settled some 20,000
Huguenot refugees from France in his domains, which helped establish industry and trade, as did the foreign craftsmen he brought in. He established local governments in each province, headed by a governor and a chancellor, but they reported to his central government in Berlin. The Great Elector is most famous for building a strong standing army, with an elite officer corps. In 1668 he introduced the Prussian General Staff; it became the model in controlling an army for other European powers. Funding the military through heavy taxes required building up new industry, such as wool, cotton, linen,
lace, soap, paper, and iron. He paid attention to infrastructure, especially building the Frederick William Canal through Berlin, linking his capital city to ocean traffic. He was frustrated in building up naval power, lacking ports and sailors. In 1682, at the suggestion of the Dutch merchant and privateer
Benjamin Raule, he granted a charter to the
Brandenburg Africa Company (BAC), marking the first organised and sustained attempt by a German state to take part in the
Atlantic slave trade. As Brandenburg-Prussia remained economically impoverished after the Thirty Years War, he hoped to replicate the mercantile successes of the
Dutch East India Company. The charter he granted to the BAC stipulated that they could establish a colony in
West Africa, which was subsequently named the
Brandenburger Gold Coast. Between 17,000 and 30,000 enslaved Africans were transported by the BAC to the
Americas before the colony was sold to the Dutch in 1721. Significant ships named after Frederick William include two
Imperial Navy ships of Germany named
Grosser Kurfürst:
one built in 1875 and
the other built in 1913. Shipping company
Norddeutscher Lloyd (aka North German Lloyd) also built a cargo and passenger liner for North Atlantic service
with the same name that was later taken into a US navy warship ==Marriages and children==