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  1. Frederick William I (German: Friedrich Wilhelm I.; 14 August 1688 – 31 May 1740), known as the Soldier King (German: Soldatenkönig), was King in Prussia and Elector of Brandenburg from 1713 till his death in 1740, as well as Prince of Neuchâtel.

  2. 30 de dic. de 2020 · Georg Friedrich, Prince of Prussia, is locked in a legal battle for more than 10,000 family artifacts seized or lost after World War II. The case rests on one question: Did his ancestors help the ...

  3. 13 de oct. de 2010 · His Highness Prince Friedrich Wilhelm, who died on September 16 aged 86, was head of the princely house of Hohenzollern, one of the most important German houses alongside the Habsburgs.

  4. Brief Life History of Friedrich Wilhelm. When Prinz Friedrich Wilhelm von Preußen was born on 9 February 1939, in Berlin, Germany, his father, Prinz Louis Ferdinand von Preußen, was 31 and his mother, Grand Duchess Kira Kirillovna of Russia, was 29. He married Waltraud Freydag on 22 August 1967, in Plön Gemeindefreies Gebiet, Plön ...

  5. Frederick III (born Oct. 18, 1831, Potsdam, Prussia—died June 15, 1888, Potsdam) was the king of Prussia and German emperor for 99 days in 1888, during which time he was a voiceless invalid. Although influenced by liberal, constitutional, and middle-class ideas, he retained a strong sense of the Hohenzollern royal and imperial dignity.

  6. Prince Wilhelm of Prussia (Wilhelm Friedrich Franz Joseph Christian Olaf, in English, William Frederick Francis Joseph Christian Olaf; 4 July 1906 – 26 May 1940) was the eldest child and son of Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany and Duchess Cecilie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. At his birth, he was second in line to the German throne, and was expected to one day succeed to the throne after the ...

  7. 16 de oct. de 2016 · This adds to Winfried Baumgart’s argument that Wilhelm as heir in his correspondence with his brother King Wilhelm Friedrich IV sought to influence the decision making process of Prussia’s government in the 1840s and 1850s. 77 It makes clear that Wilhelm was capable—not only in private correspondence, but also for a wider public—of drawing on particular tropes variously to distance ...