The article focuses on the Prussian king Frederick II and analyzes his “emotional policies”. Although, like most of his contemporaries, he considered himself to be an homme sensible, in direct reference to the Age of Sensibility, his policies spoke a different language: he acted ruthlessly by embarking on war whenever it suited his interests while his people felt the ensuing financial squeeze. Why, then, did he write so fervently about political emotions in his manifestos and testaments? Why did he praise monarchs whose aim was to be loved rather than feared by their subjects? What did the fact that he spoke of his own love for his people mean? How did this love materialize, and how did the people receive it? The article argues that Frederi...