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The Correspondence of PrIncess ElIsabeth and Descartes: A ReadIng<br />

from the PoInt of VIew of ElIsabeth<br />

Aliye KARABÜK KOVANLIKAYA *<br />

One of the more helpful sources for an insight into Descartes’ principal works is his<br />

correspondence. His correspondents –sometimes mediated by a third person‐ typically included<br />

leading scientists, thinkers and theologians of the time. The points that remain obscure in his<br />

principal works, problematical subjects and at least seeming inconsistencies between different texts<br />

are fully or partially explained through Descartes’ <strong>writing</strong>s in response to the questions directed at<br />

him. At times, it becomes clear that the problem cannot be solved through subsequent additions.<br />

His letters to Princess Elisabeth have frequently been a reference for similar purposes for thinkers<br />

who work on Descartes. In these letters, he occasionally employed a more explanatory style possibly<br />

because he was addressing an unprofessional interlocutor. Having built his entire system of thought<br />

with the motive of making it comprehensible by everyone “including Turks” 1 , provided that sufficient<br />

time and attention are devoted, he might have found the subject by which to verify his undertaking<br />

in the personality of Princess Elisabeth.<br />

The correspondences of Descartes and Elisabeth, just like their whole <strong>lives</strong>, bear the mark of the<br />

Thirty Years’ War. It was the Thirty Years’ War climate of Europe that crossed the paths of Descartes 2 ,<br />

a Jesuit college graduate who was born on 31 March 1596 in La Haye in Touraine as the youngest of<br />

the three surviving children to a family that mostly served as tax collector for the king, and of<br />

Elisabeth 3 , who was born 22 years later on 26 December 1618 to a noble family. 4 The war, starting<br />

from 1618, continued until 1648 when the Peace of Westphalia was signed, hence named as Thirty<br />

Years’ War. It is generally regarded as a war between Catholics and Protestants since it involved the<br />

Catholic Spain and the Holy Roman Empire on one side and the Protestant European states on the<br />

other. In fact, the war took place before and after these dates; Catholic France supported the<br />

Protestants, whereas some Catholics fought some other Catholics and the Lutherans fought<br />

Calvinists. 5 It was this complicated network of alliances that crossed Descartes’ and Elisabeth’s paths.<br />

Having received his degree in law from Poitiers in 1616, Descartes did not follow the family<br />

tradition. He refused to be a lawyer and chose the other way available to him, which was to be<br />

enlisted in the army as an officer. Apparently, his real motivation was to make up for the lacking<br />

aspects of his education. Against the Catholic Spain, France supported the Calvinist states that united<br />

together under the name “Republic of the Seven United Provinces” led by the Netherlands, the<br />

strongest member of the union. In 1618, Descartes joined to the army of protestant Prince Maurice<br />

de Nassou of Orange dynasty. Prince Maurice and Elisabeth’s paternal grandmother were paternal<br />

half‐siblings. In 1619, Descartes left the Netherlands, going first to Denmark and then to Germany. 6<br />

He travelled through Germany until his return to France in 1622. In particular, he wanted to visit<br />

Austria and Bohemia because Prague, home to Brahe and Kepler, was religiously tolerant, and<br />

opened up to scientific studies and scientists. In 1619, he attended, this time on the side of Catholics,<br />

the coronation of Ferdinand II as the Holy Roman Emperor, who had become the King of Bohemia in<br />

1617. The Protestant German states united and rebelled against the Catholic hegemony. They<br />

renounced Ferdinand II and crowned Friedrich V, Elector Palatine, as the King of Bohemia. This event<br />

is usually taken to have precipitated the Thirty Years’ War. Often nicknamed the “Winter King”<br />

because of his short reign that lasted for just one winter season as the King of Bohemia, Friedrich V is<br />

the father of Elisabeth, who was one year old at the time. Descartes, on the other hand, was on the<br />

army of the catholic Duke of Bavaria, which was among the forces that won the Battle of White<br />

Mountain on 8 November 1620, ending the reign of Friedrich V and totally changing the course of the<br />

<strong>lives</strong> of Elisabeth and her family. 7<br />

*<br />

Galatasaray University, Philosophy Department.<br />

183

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