Sophie Marie von Voß

Sophie Marie von Voss, by Antoine Pesne
Sophie Marie von Voss

Sophie Marie von Voß (1729-1814), was a German lady in waiting and memoirist. She was the influential confidant and Oberhofmeisterin (mistress of the Robes) for many decades at the Prussian royal court. Her memoirs have also been published.

Life

Sophie Marie was the daughter of Wolf Adolf von Pannwitz (1679–1750) and Johanna Maria Auguste von Jasmund. From 1743 until 1751, she served as maid of honor to queen Sophia Dorothea. Prince August William of Prussia fell in love with her, and to discontinue what could have developed in to a socially unacceptable affair, and end the difficult situation created when the prince reacted with jealous fits, she was married to her cousin, Johann Ernst Graf von Voss (1726-1793), in 1751. Her spouse was also a courtier with an office at the court of queen Elisabeth Christine at Schönhausen, so she stayed at court after her marriage. In 1787, the crown prince committed bigamy with the daughter of her brother-in-law, Julie von Voss.

After the death of her spouse in 1793, she temporarily retired to her estates in Mecklenburg. From 1793 until 1810, she served as mistress of the robes to the new crown princess, Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. She accompanied the Prussian royal family to East Prussia during the invasion of Napoleon in 1806 to 1807.

In 1811, after the death of queen Louise, she returned to her residence in Berlin. She died in Berlin in 1814.

References

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