
In the early 1400s Brandenburg lay in the grip of lawlessness, its towns battered by raids and its countryside ruled by feuding noble “robber‑lords” who levied their own tolls and seized any passing convoy. Into this turmoil arrives Burggraf Friedrich, a newly appointed statthalter tasked with restoring order and asserting the authority of the crown. The narrative paints his early attempts at conciliation—lavish dinners and patient negotiations—against a backdrop of stubborn resistance from powerful families such as the Quitzows, who regard him as nothing more than a wooden puppet.
When diplomacy stalls, Friedrich turns to force, securing a massive twenty‑four‑pound cannon—affectionately called “Heavy Peg”—borrowed from the Landgrave of Thuringen. The book vividly recounts the siege of the fortified Friesack strong‑hold, where the thunder of artillery finally breaks the impasse and signals a new era of centralized rule. This richly detailed account offers listeners a glimpse into the gritty foundations of the state that would later produce Frederick the Great, blending military drama with the everyday struggles of a region on the cusp of transformation.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (319K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by D.R. Thompson and David Widger
Release date
2008-06-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1795–1881
A powerful Scottish essayist, historian, and social critic, he became one of the most influential Victorian writers. Best known for vivid, forceful books like Sartor Resartus and The French Revolution, he wrote with urgency about history, work, leadership, and the crises of modern life.
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