Willem Mons

Willem Mons (1688 in Russia - 1724) was the brother of Peter the Great's long-time mistress Anna Mons, who later served as private secretary to his wife Catherine.

After his sister's fall from favour, Willem joined the Russian army and took part in the Battle of Poltava. In 1711, he was appointed personal adjutant to the tsar. His other sister Matryona Balk had in the meantime become the closest friend of Catherine, whom Peter married in 1712.

In 1716, at Catherine's behest, Peter entrusted Willem with administering her estates. After Catherine's coronation as consort in 1724, he was promoted to the rank of imperial chamberlain. A few months later, however, Willem Mons was arrested on charges of peculation (embezzlement) and breach of trust and, after a brief and brutal inquiry by Pyotr Tolstoy, he was publicly beheaded on November 27. His head was preserved in alcohol and is still kept in the Kunstkamera. There is a legend that Peter forced his wife to contemplate this gruesome exhibit for hours.

The true causes of Willem's downfall are obscure. It was rumoured that Peter was enraged by his intimacy with the Empress. Many courtiers regarded Mons as Catherine's lover and his sister Matryona as their matchmaker. The affair did not affect Catherine's position as empress, however.

Just months after his execution, she succeeded to the throne and lavished honours on Matryona (who had been publicly flogged during her brother's trial) and her Lutheran daughter, Natalia Lopukhina, who would later give her name to the Lopukhina Conspiracy (1742–43).

Mistresses and minions of Russian Emperors and Empresses
1700–1762
  • Anna Mons
  • Willem Mons
  • Avdotya Chernysheva
  • Mary Hamilton
  • Maria Cantemir
  • Catherine Dolgorukova
  • Ernst Johann von Biron
  • Aleksey Razumovsky
  • Ivan Shuvalov
  • Elizaveta Vorontsova
1762–1796
  • Grigory Orlov (1762–72)
  • Alexander Vasilchikov (1772–74)
  • Grigory Potemkin (1774–76)
  • Pyotr Zavadovsky (1776–77)
  • Semyon Zorich (1777–78)
  • Ivan Rimsky-Korsakov (1778–80)
  • Alexander Lanskoy (1780–84)
  • Alexander Yermolov (1784–85)
  • Alexander Dmitriev-Mamonov (1785–89)
  • Platon Zubov (1789–96)
1796–1917
  • Anna Lopukhina
  • Maria Naryshkina
  • Varvara Nelidova
  • Catherine Dolgorukova
  • Mathilde Kschessinska
  • Natalia Brasova
Persondata
Name Mons, Willem
Alternative names
Short description
Date of birth 1688
Place of birth
Date of death 1724
Place of death