BODA DEL PRINCIPE FERNANDO DE LEINNINGEN Y VICTORIA DE PRUSIA

¡Jajajaja! Todos estos destronados que se creen alguien por tener antepasados coronados! Y a diferencia de los coronados, se casan entre ellos para mantener el pedigrí azul. Son patéticos.

Además es que ni me atrevo a juzgar a los novios porque me da la sensación de que son como los muñecos de las tartas,que los van colocando en todas estas bodas de segunda categoría royal que se han "perpetrado" este verano.
Es que me parecen todos iguales,no se distinguir quién es quién entre tanta cara de reprimida e intenso a partes iguales.
Hasta creo que utilizan los mismos vestidos y trajes porque no encuentro nada destacable en los looks nupciales ni para bien ni para mal:sleep:una mezcla de "quiero y no puedo"
Me aburren ......sólo me divierten los invitados :dead::p
 
Y éste señor?? es que no he podido buscar quién era después de ver las fotos.Subo la noticia que he encontrada ,siento la traducción


http://www.bunte.de/royals/royals-w...liebt-sie-ist-die-neue-frau-seiner-seite.html

Alexander Fürst zu Schaumburg-Lippe siempre es visto nuevamente acompañado por una hermosa pianista ...

Mano a mano Alexander va a Schaumburg-Lippe (58) con una mujer bonita por el Corviglia hacia St. Moritz. Los tiempos de la ocultación han terminado, porque poco después los dos pueden ser fotografiados juntos en un vernissage. La Sociedad había estado retumbando durante meses que el príncipe, que a principios de 2015 anunció la separación de su segunda esposa Nadja Anna a Schaumburg-Lippe, y el pianista eran una pareja. Hasta ahora, el propietario del castillo de Bückeburg no quería comentar. Pero la renovada demanda de BUNTE lo llevó a decir: "Este es Mahkameh Navabi, a quien desde hace tiempo me he acercado".

Tan cerca que los dos son casi sólo avistados juntos. En noviembre dio un concierto de piano junto con Erik Berchot en Bückeburg. Incluso cuando el noble abrió su nuevo parque-cafetería "Lilly's" en mayo de 2016, el 35-year-old estaba allí. Práctica: Mahkameh entiende bien con Lilly a Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg, la ex esposa de Alexander a Schaumburg-Lippe, con quien tiene un hijo y una relación muy estrecha. También es con amigos en las vacaciones de esquí en St. Moritz.
PPE17091631.jpg
PPE17091642.jpg
PPE17091648.jpg

PPE17091691.jpg
PPE170916101.jpg
Horrenda esa mujer con ese vestido mal cortado y peor hecho de satin negro, que le marca todos los rollos y le hace frunces por todos lados
Parece una morcilla
 
La wiki informa de quien es este principe heredero de nada

Prince of Leiningen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
40px-Text_document_with_red_question_mark.svg.png

This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (July 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)


Arms of the Princes of Leiningen
The title of Prince of Leiningen (German: Fürst zu Leiningen) was created by the Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II, who elevated Carl Friedrich Wilhelm, Count of Leiningen-Dagsburg-Hardenburg (a younger branch of the House of Leiningen) to the rank of Reichsfürst (Prince of the Holy Roman Empire) on 3 July 1779.

Contents
Principality of Leiningen at Amorbach
From 1560 until 1725 Hardenburg Castle was the main seat of the branch. After its partial destruction during the Nine Years' War the residence was moved to Bad Durkheim.

In 1801, this line was deprived of its lands on the left bank of the Rhine, namely Hardenburg, Dagsburg and Durkheim, by France, but in 1803 it received the secularized Amorbach Abbey as an ample compensation for these losses. The complete titles of Carl Friedrich Wilhelm, 1st Prince of Leiningen were Imperial Prince of Leiningen, Count palatine of Mosbach, Count of Düren, Lord of Miltenberg, Amorbach, Bischofsheim, Boxberg, Schüpf and Lauda.

A few years later, the short-lived Principality of Leiningen at Amorbach was mediatized, and its territory is now included mainly in Baden, but partly in Bavaria and in Hesse. Amorbach Abbey is still today the seat of the Prince of Leiningen. The former hunting lodge Waldleiningen Castle at Mudau is now run as a hospital by the family.

Titles
The family is extant, and all male-line descendants of the grantee bear the title of Prince(ss) of Leiningen (Prinz(essin) zu Leiningen) with the style of Serene Highness. The head of the house is styled The Prince of Leiningen (Fürst zu Leiningen: see the article Fürst for the difference between it and the other princely title, Prinz).

Family connections and events


Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Princess of Leiningen, Duchess of Kent
The second prince, Emich Carl, was the first husband of Queen Victoria's mother Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, and his children Prince Carl and Princess Feodora remained close to their half-sister.

The fourth prince, Ernst, pursued a career in the British Royal Navy; his marriage to Princess Marie of Baden, a descendant of the Electress Sophia of Hanover, meant that their children were in the line of succession to the British throne, though rather far down the list.

The sixth prince, Karl, married Grand Duchess Maria Kirillovna of Russia, daughter of Princess Victoria Melita who was in turn daughter of Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Queen Victoria's second son. As a result, their descendants today occupy places higher up the British line of succession, in the early hundreds.

In 1991, the seventh prince, Emich, disinherited his eldest son, the Hereditary Prince Karl Emich, after he married his second wife, Dr Gabriele Thyssen, on May 24 of that same year. The disinheritance was upheld by the German courts, and so on Emich's death later that year, he was succeeded by his second son, Andreas, who has been the eighth prince from that time.

Princes of Leiningen (from 1779)


The princely arms in the mid 19th century
See also
 
No alcanzo a encontrar a esta Victoria de Prusia en la genealogia Hozzenlloler. Solo una que es discapacitada mental, hermana del actual principe heredero de Prusia. Aparece en la Wiki del padre de ambos.


Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia (1944–1977)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)
Prince Louis Ferdinand

Grave of Louis Ferdinand, Fischerhude graveyard, Ottersberg
Born 25 August 1944
Golzow, Neumark, Province of Brandenburg
Died 11 July 1977 (aged 32)
Bremen
Burial 14 July 1977
Fischerhude graveyard, Ottersberg
Spouse Countess Donata of Castell-Rüdenhausen
Issue Georg Friedrich, Prince of Prussia
Princess Cornelie-Cécile
House Hohenzollern
Father Louis Ferdinand, Prince of Prussia
Mother Grand Duchess Kira Kirillovna of Russia
Prince Louis Ferdinand Oskar Christian of Prussia (German: Louis Ferdinand Oskar Christian Prinz von Preußen; 25 August 1944 – 11 July 1977),[1] also called Louis Ferdinand II or Louis Ferdinand Jr., nicknamed "Lulu", was a member of the House of Hohenzollern and the fifth of seven children of Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia and his wife, Grand Duchess Kira of Russia.

Contents
Life
Louis Ferdinand was born in 1944 in Golzow, Neumark, Province of Brandenburg. In 1967, he volunteered to serve in the West German army (Bundeswehr), with the goal of becoming a reserve officer. In 1972, he started an apprenticeship at a bank and continued to perform military service on a regular basis.

In 1977, he was involved in a severe accident during military maneuvers, when he was pinned between two vehicles. Although his leg was amputated, he succumbed several weeks later to the trauma and died on 11 July 1977 in Bremen.

Marriage and issue
On 24 May 1975, Louis Ferdinand married Countess Donata of Castell-Rüdenhausen (21 June 1950 - 5 September 2015).[1] They had two children: Prince Georg Friedrich Ferdinand of Prussia (born 10 June 1976) and Princess Cornelie-Cécile Viktoria Luise of Prussia (born posthumously on 30 January 1978); she was born developmentally disabled.

In 1991, Louis Ferdinand's widow married Duke Friedrich August of Oldenburg. He had divorced two years before from Princess Marie Cécile of Prussia, a sister of Louis Ferdinand.
 
La historia de la familia de Sophie, princesa heredera consorte de Prusia, los Isembourg, es graciosisima, porque su familia solo tuvo el titulo durante la epoca de Napoleon pero tras el Congreso de Viena sus tierras fueron divididas entre los Hesse-Damstad y los Elektores Hessel - hoy dia también destronados, y aun asi, siguen manteniendo una linea de principes. Esta gente pierde aceite, vive en otro planeta.


Principality of Isenburg
It was not until 1806 that there was a state called simply "Isenburg". When the Holy Roman Empire was defeated by Napoleon I of France in that year, the empire was abolished and the Confederation of the Rhine was established amongst the various German states. As an incentive to join the Confederation, it was stated that any state which joined could mediatise their neighbours. Prince Charles of Isenburg-Birstein joined the Confederation and was granted the mediatized Isenburgian Countships of Isenburg-Büdingen, Isenburg-Meerholz, Isenburg-Philippseich, and Isenburg-Wächtersbach. His Principality was renamed to Isenburg.

The Principality continued under the rule of Prince Charles through the Napoleonic era, but was mediatised by the Congress of Vienna for being too keen an ally of Napoleon. The lands of the principality were divided between the Grand Duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt and the Electorate of Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel).

Princes of Isenburg (1806–1814/5)
Mediatized (1815)[1]
  • Charles, 1st Prince 1803-1820 (1766-1820)
    • Wolfgang Ernst, 2nd Prince 1820-1866 (1798-1866)
    • Prince Victor (1802-1843)
      • Karl, 3rd Prince 1866-1899 (1838-1899)
        • Prince Leopold (1866-1933) -renounced his rights in 1898
        • Franz Joseph, 4th Prince 1899-1939 (1869-1939)
          • Franz Ferdinand, 5th Prince 1939-1956 (1901-1956)
            • Franz Alexander, 6th Prince 1956–present (1943)
              • Alexander, Hereditary Prince of Isenburg (1969)
                • Princess Alix (2015)
                • Princess Zita (2017)
              • Princess Sophie (1978)
              • Prince Viktor (1979)
 
Aquí tenéis
Louis Ferdinand, Prince of Prussia
Page issues
Louis Ferdinand Victor Edward Albert Michael Hubert, Prince of Prussia (German: Louis Ferdinand Viktor Eduard Albert Michael Hubertus Prinz von Preußen; 9 November 1907 – 26 September 1994) was a member of the royal House of Hohenzollern and pretender to the abolished German throne. He was also noteworthy as a staunch opponent of the Nazi Party, a businessman, and a patron of the arts.

Prince Louis Ferdinand
Prince of Prussia

Prince Louis Ferdinand in about 1930
Head of the House of Hohenzollern
Period
20 July 1951 – 26 September 1994
Predecessor Crown Prince Wilhelm
Successor Prince Georg Friedrich

Born
9 November 1907
Marble Palace, Potsdam, German Empire
Died 26 September 1994 (aged 86)
Bremen, Germany
Burial 1 October 1994
Hohenzollern Castle, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany
Spouse Grand Duchess Kira Kirillovna of Russia
Issue Prince Friedrich Wilhelm
Prince Michael
Princess Marie Cécile
Princess Kira
Prince Louis Ferdinand
Prince Christian-Sigismund
Princess Xenia
Full name
Louis Ferdinand Victor Edward Albert Michael Hubert
House Hohenzollern
Father Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany
Mother Duchess Cecilie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin

Children[2]Edit

  • Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia (9 February 1939 - 29 September 2015), married firstly Waltraud Freytag (14 April 1940 - 2010) on 22 August 1967 in Plön, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; secondly Ehrengard von Reden (born 7 June 1943) on 23 April 1976; thirdly Sibylle Kretschmer (born 23 March 1952) on 23 March 2004. He renounced his succession rights on 18 September 1967. His son Philip is from his first marriage, and his other children from his second.
    • Philip Kirill Prinz von Preußen (born 23 April 1968); married Anna Christine Soltau (born 2 April 1968) on 28 June 1994, and they have six children:
      • Paul Wilhelm Philipp Friedrich Alois Johannes Mose (born 10 April 1995)
      • Maria Luise Anna Philippa Helene Julie Margarethe Elisabeth (born 12 March 1997)
      • Elisabeth Christine Philine Cécilie Annegret Salome Maria (born 16 December 1998)
      • Anna Sophie Phila Wilhelmine Amelie Elisabeth Maria (born 26 March 2001)
      • Johanna Amalie Kira Philippa Rose Elisabeth Maria (born 19 September 2002)
      • Timotheus Friedrich (born 9 June 2005)
    • Friedrich Wilhelm Ludwig Ferdinand Kirill (born 16 August 1979); married Anna Catharina von Salza (born 17 August 1981) on 30 April 2009, they have one child:
      • Friedrich Wilhelm (born 2012)
    • Viktoria-Luise Kira Ehrengard (2 May 1982) married Hereditary Prince Ferdinand of Leiningen (son of Andreas, Prince of Leiningen) on 29 April 2017 (civil wedding).
    • Joachim Albrecht Bernhard Christian Ernst (26 June 1984)
 
La madre del novio es una Hannover, hermana de Ernesto, el marido (todavía) de Carolina. La novia lleva la misma tiara que Sophie llevó el día de su boda con el "heredero" de Prusia. Se la puso en la cena, porque en la boda (que por cierto, pocas veces he visto un traje de novia tan horrible) llevaba la familiar de Ysemburg.
 
Aquí tenéis
Louis Ferdinand, Prince of Prussia
Page issues
Louis Ferdinand Victor Edward Albert Michael Hubert, Prince of Prussia (German: Louis Ferdinand Viktor Eduard Albert Michael Hubertus Prinz von Preußen; 9 November 1907 – 26 September 1994) was a member of the royal House of Hohenzollern and pretender to the abolished German throne. He was also noteworthy as a staunch opponent of the Nazi Party, a businessman, and a patron of the arts.

Prince Louis Ferdinand
Prince of Prussia

Prince Louis Ferdinand in about 1930
Head of the House of Hohenzollern
Period
20 July 1951 – 26 September 1994
Predecessor Crown Prince Wilhelm
Successor Prince Georg Friedrich

Born
9 November 1907
Marble Palace, Potsdam, German Empire
Died 26 September 1994 (aged 86)
Bremen, Germany
Burial 1 October 1994
Hohenzollern Castle, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany
Spouse Grand Duchess Kira Kirillovna of Russia
Issue Prince Friedrich Wilhelm
Prince Michael
Princess Marie Cécile
Princess Kira
Prince Louis Ferdinand
Prince Christian-Sigismund
Princess Xenia
Full name
Louis Ferdinand Victor Edward Albert Michael Hubert
House Hohenzollern
Father Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany
Mother Duchess Cecilie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin

Children[2]Edit

  • Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia (9 February 1939 - 29 September 2015), married firstly Waltraud Freytag (14 April 1940 - 2010) on 22 August 1967 in Plön, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany; secondly Ehrengard von Reden (born 7 June 1943) on 23 April 1976; thirdly Sibylle Kretschmer (born 23 March 1952) on 23 March 2004. He renounced his succession rights on 18 September 1967. His son Philip is from his first marriage, and his other children from his second.
    • Philip Kirill Prinz von Preußen (born 23 April 1968); married Anna Christine Soltau (born 2 April 1968) on 28 June 1994, and they have six children:
      • Paul Wilhelm Philipp Friedrich Alois Johannes Mose (born 10 April 1995)
      • Maria Luise Anna Philippa Helene Julie Margarethe Elisabeth (born 12 March 1997)
      • Elisabeth Christine Philine Cécilie Annegret Salome Maria (born 16 December 1998)
      • Anna Sophie Phila Wilhelmine Amelie Elisabeth Maria (born 26 March 2001)
      • Johanna Amalie Kira Philippa Rose Elisabeth Maria (born 19 September 2002)
      • Timotheus Friedrich (born 9 June 2005)
    • Friedrich Wilhelm Ludwig Ferdinand Kirill (born 16 August 1979); married Anna Catharina von Salza (born 17 August 1981) on 30 April 2009, they have one child:
      • Friedrich Wilhelm (born 2012)
    • Viktoria-Luise Kira Ehrengard (2 May 1982) married Hereditary Prince Ferdinand of Leiningen (son of Andreas, Prince of Leiningen) on 29 April 2017 (civil wedding).
    • Joachim Albrecht Bernhard Christian Ernst (26 June 1984)

Ay, claro, tendria que haber mirado también las ramas segundonas de estos don nadies, pero como la chica se hace llamar princesa Victoria de Prusia, como si fuese la hija del Kaiser...
 
Back