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  1. The end of the struggle against Prussia allowed a renewal of democratic agitation in Württemberg, but this had achieved no tangible results when the war broke out in 1870. Although Württemberg had continued to be antagonistic to Prussia, the kingdom shared in the national enthusiasm that swept over Germany.

  2. www.wikipedia.orgWikipedia

    Wikipedia is a free online encyclopedia, created and edited by volunteers around the world and hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation.

  3. The Monarchs of Prussia were members of the House of Hohenzollern who were the hereditary rulers of the former German state of Prussia from its founding in 1525 as the Duchy of Prussia. The Duchy had evolved out of the Teutonic Order , a Roman Catholic crusader state and theocracy located along the eastern coast of the Baltic Sea .

  4. Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia (German: Viktoria Luise Adelheid Mathilde Charlotte; 13 September 1892 – 11 December 1980) was the only daughter and the last child of Wilhelm II, German Emperor, and Augusta Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein. Through her father, Victoria Louise was a great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom.

  5. Films set in the Kingdom of Prussia. Films set in the Kingdom of Prussia (1701–1918). During the 19th century, it was part of first the German Confederation (1815-1848, 1850-1866), secondly the North German Confederation (1867-1871), and lastly the German Empire (1871–1918).

  6. Prussian State Council. The Prussian House of Lords ( German: Preußisches Herrenhaus) in Berlin was the upper house of the Landtag of Prussia ( German: Preußischer Landtag ), the parliament of Prussia from 1850 to 1918. Together with the lower house, the House of Representatives ( Abgeordnetenhaus ), it formed the Prussian bicameral legislature.

  7. Prussia, in European history, any of three historical areas of eastern and central Europe. It is most often associated with the kingdom ruled by the German Hohenzollern dynasty, which claimed much of northern Germany and western Poland in the 18th and 19th centuries and united Germany under its leadership in 1871.