Peter III, the short-lived Emperor of Russia, faced a tumultuous reign marked by controversy and betrayal. Despite being groomed to take the Swedish throne, fate intervened and he was pronounced the successor to his aunt’s Russian throne. However, his pro-Prussian policies and inability to speak Russian alienated his subjects, leading to his deposition. Surprisingly, it was his own wife, Catherine, who orchestrated the conspiracy to remove him from power, with rumors even suggesting her involvement in his assassination.
Quick Facts
- Also Known As: Charles Peter Ulrich of Schleswig-Holstein-Gottorp
- Died At Age: 44
- Family:
- Spouse/Ex-: Catherine the Great
- Father: Charles Frederick, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp
- Mother: Grand Duchess Anna Petrovna of Russia
- Children: Anna Petrovna, Paul I of Russia
- Born Country: Germany
- Died on: July 17, 1772
- Place of Death: Ropsha, Russia
- Cause of Death: Assassination
- City: Kiel, Germany
Childhood & Early Life
Peter III was born as Karl Peter Ulrich to Charles Frederick, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp and Anna Petrovna on February 21, 1728 in Kiel, Duchy of Holstein-Gottorp. He was the only child born to the couple. While his maternal grandfather was Peter the Great of Russia, his paternal grandfather was Charles XII of Sweden.
Young Peter lost his parents early, his mother having died only three months after his birth and his father passed away in 1739. Upon the death of his father, he became Duke of Holstein-Gottorp as Charles Peter Ulrich.
Orphaned at an early age, Peter was put under the care of marshals and warriors in the court of Holstein. Academically weak, Peter was cruelly raised by his mentors who often punished him for his inept aptitude. Since it was known that Peter would inherit the Swedish throne in future, they trained him accordingly.
Though Peter was not so good in academics, he had an intense passion for arts. He was fond of music and painting and showed an appetite for military parades and uniforms. He longed to become a world-famous military warrior.
In 1742, when his aunt Elizabeth took over as the Empress of Russia, she brought the fourteen-year old Peter to Russia and proclaimed him as the heir presumptive to the Russian throne. Same year, Peter was proclaimed as the King of Finland, a position originally held by Charles XII of Sweden.
Following his baptism in the Russian Orthodox Church, his name was changed to Pyotr Fyodorovich. He came under the guidance of academician Yakob Shtelin. Peter resented living in Russia. A pro-Prussian, he could hardly speak Russian and often complained of being an unacceptable leader of the people.
Unaware that Peter was chosen as the heir presumptive to the Russian throne, the Swedish parliament too announced him as the heir presumptive to the Swedish throne. It was only later that underage Peter’s succession right to Sweden throne were renounced on his behalf.
Accession & Reign
During Empress Elizabeth’s rule, she isolated Peter from government affairs and hardly allowed him to participate in the politics of the country, as she suspected his capabilities as a leader. This led to a growing sense of resentment in Peter against Russian government.
Peter hated being in Russia and continued to show his allegiance towards his homeland and Prussia by criticizing the Russian government and the Empress. His sympathetic attitude towards Prussia gained him negative publicity as he was condemned by the people and became highly unpopular.
Upon the death of Empress Elizabeth on December 25, 1761, Peter succeeded to the Russian throne. Pressed to prove his worth to the Russian people, Peter who was then Peter III brought forth a number of domestic and foreign policies, though none were worthy.
Immediately after taking up the throne, he withdrew the Russian forces from the Seven Years’ War by signing a peace treaty with Prussia. Furthermore, he gave up Russian conquests in Prussia and instead made an alliance with the Prussian King by offering 12000 troops. This alliance made Prussia most powerful in Europe.
During his reign, he planned war against Denmark to regain the native land of Holstein that once belonged to his father. With the help of Frederick of Prussia, he planned war against Denmark. The move was seen as a betrayal of Russian war sacrifices and alienated him politically among the military and powerful court cliques.
Just like his foreign policies which were reverse of Empress Elizabeth’s plans, his domestic policies too were rebellious in nature. In the six months of his reign, he came up with 220 new laws for the Russian people that are today claimed as being democratic.
Peter allowed religious freedom to his subjects, a move unheard of in those times. It was revolutionary and way ahead of times as the then highly advanced Western Europe also did allow spiritual freedom.
To fight corruption within the government, he abolished the secret police and established public litigation. He outlawed the killing of serfs by the landowners and gave state peasants a high social status than estate peasants. He converted peasants under the servitude of the church to economy peasants.
Peter made education obligatory for aristocrats and went ahead to establish technical schools for middle and lower class children. He also began reorganization and modernization of the Russian army.
He established the first state bank in Russia and encouraged mercantilism by increasing grain exports and placing embargos on materials that could be found in Russia, thus rejecting the monopoly of the nobility. Besides, he forbade import of sugar and other materials that were found in Russia.
His most popular reform was releasing the gentry from compulsory state and military service. This gave them the freedom to travel abroad. Furthermore, he issued an edict that the new owner of monastery lands was the state, not the church. The move not just replenished the treasury, but freed the state from the powers of the church.
Peter was condemned by the Russian society as his actions were considered unreasonable for those times. Also, they believed that through his reforms, he alienated the Orthodox Church and the nobility. His policies were considered bizarre by state officials and the aristocrats who turned to his wife Catherine for help.
With the help of nobility and the army, Catherine plotted the dethronement of Peter III as the Emperor. She was the mastermind behind the conspiracy. On June 28, 1762, the army swore allegiance to Catherine, and she was pronounced the new Empress of Russia. The Senate and the Synod also pledged to support her. Thus, Peter III was forced to step down as the emperor.
Major Works
In his short span of service as the Emperor of Russia, Peter carried out several military and domestic reforms. While the former were unpopular for his pro-Prussian ways, the latter seemed way too advanced for the people of those times. He allowed religious freedom to his subjects, abolished the secret police and established public litigation to fight corruption, outlawed the killing of serfs by the landowners, made education obligatory and established the first state bank in Russia. However, his most important contribution came in when he released the gentry from compulsory state and military service. Also, he gave the state greater powers than the church, a move that was highly detested.
Personal Life & Legacy
Immediately following his baptism to the Russian Orthodox Church, his aunt, Empress Elizabeth arranged Peter’s marriage to Sophia Augusta Frederica who later became Catherine the Great. The marriage took place on August 21, 1745. They had two children, a son and daughter.
The marriage of Peter and Catherine was essentially a political alliance and had nothing personal. The two were extremely opposite of each other; she was prodigiously talent while Peter was of low intellect. Catherine is said to have claimed that the marriage between the two never consummated and that Peter did not father her children. Both of them had numerous lovers outside marriage.
Emperor Peter III’s accession to the Russian throne was not welcomed by the society who abhorred his modernized laws and policies. The nobility and the Church feared losing the control and thus turned to his wife, Catherine for help. She, in turn, supported them by becoming the mastermind behind his dethronement. On June 28, 1762 she successfully overthrew him to become the Empress Catherine of Russia.
Following his dethronement, he was sent to a village, Ropsha, near St Petersburg. He breathed his last on July 17, 1762. Though his death was initially seen as an accident, it later became evident that he was assassinated. He was buried in the church of Aleksandr Nevsky Monastery in Saint Petersburg. Posthumously in 1796, his remains were exhumed and reburied with full state honours in Peter and Paul Cathedral by his son, Emperor Paul.