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Leibniz's Endgame and the Ladies of the Courts
- Journal of the History of Ideas
- Johns Hopkins University Press
- Volume 65, Number 1, January 2004
- pp. 75-100
- 10.1353/jhi.2004.0013
- Article
- Additional Information
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In 1676 Leibniz reluctantly left Paris, headed for Hanover, to take up the position of counselor and librarian to Johann Friedrich, duke of Brunswick—Lüneburg—Calenberg. He was to remain in the employ of a succession of dukes and electors of Hanover—the last being Georg Ludwig, who became George I of England in 1714—until his death in November 1716. During this time he also became a familiar at the court in Berlin of the elector of Brandenburg (later King of Prussia) and at the imperial court in Vienna. This paper traces the important relationships that developed between Leibniz and a number of the ladies of these courts.