Occasional Poetry — Representative Poetry. Poetic Representation of the Wedding of Palatine Joseph and Grand Duchess Alexandra Pavlovna

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31168/2619-0877.2022.5.12

Keywords:

wedding poetry, diplomacy, political celebration, public sphere

Abstract

The 16-year-old Grand Duchess Alexandra Pavlovna married the 23-year-old Austrian Archduke Joseph in St. Petersburg on October 30, 1799. The wedding, of course, had dynastic aims: Habsburgs and Romanovs wanted to strengthen their political alliance against France. The newlyweds arrived in Buda, the capital of Hungary, on February 1, 1800. From then on, they were celebrated for several months in a series of representative events. The Hungarian noble estates and the citizens of Pest and Buda expressed their respect on these occasions, but also communicated their political position: what they expected from the Palatine, what they hoped for in the war against the French, and what the duties of the young wife were. Poems were often recited, often sung, and sometimes handed over in printed form at various celebrations (balls, theatre performances, masquerade balls, etc.). This lecture explores the poetic tradition followed by these poems and the different poetic techniques used to communicate the political positions. 

Author Biographies

  • Gábor Vaderna, Eötwös Loránd University; Eötwös Loránd Research Network, Университет имени Л. Этвеша; Исследовательская сеть имени Л. Этвеша

    PhD, Habil. Associate Professor and Lecturer of the Department of Classical Hungarian Literature at the Faculty of Humanities; Senior Research Fellow of the Institute of Literary Studies at the Research Centre for the Humanities

  • Olga V. Khavanova, Institute of Slavic Studies of the RAS, Институт славяноведения РАН

    DSc, Deputy Director

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Published

2022-12-26

Issue

Section

The Public Space of a Royal Court and Aristocratic Salon