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  1. Prince Reuss Younger Line. At the death of his father on 29 March 1913 he inherited the throne of the Principality. He also continued as regent of Reuss Elder Line, because of a physical and mental disability of Prince Heinrich XXIV due to an accident in his childhood.

  2. The Stadtkirche St. Marien in Greiz, Principality of Reuss-Greiz, now in Thuringia, Germany, was the burial site for the Princes of Reuss-Greiz, Elder Line. There has been a church on this site since around 1225 and it became the nucleus of the emerging medieval town of Greiz. After the Reformation, the church became a Lutheran church.

  3. Reuss Elder Line – Principality of Reuss Elder Line (to July 1, 1867) Reuss Junior Line – Principality of Reuss Junior Line (to July 1, 1867) Romania - United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia Russia – Russian Empire Rwanda – Kingdom of Rwanda Ryukyu – Kingdom of Ryūkyū; S. Samoa – Kingdom of Samoa

  4. The Reuss-Lobenstein line died out in the male line in 1853. Marriage and issue. On 24 October 1647, Henry X married Maria Sibylla (4 August 1625 – 21 May 1675), the daughter of Henry IV of Reuss-Obergreiz from the Elder line. They had 12 children: Henry III (16 December 1648 – 24 May 1710), Count of Reuss-Lobenstein

  5. 13 de feb. de 2019 · The Thuringian states around Reuss Elder Line (highlighted in red) The smallest principality, presently located in Thuringia, was then enclosed by the former states of Prussia, Bavaria, Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt and Saxony. city view of Greiz. The country had a total of 72,600 inhabitants.

  6. Because of Heinrich XXIV's physical and mental disabilities, the result of a childhood accident, Heinrich XIV, Prince Reuss Younger Line served as regent of Reuss Elder Line from 1902 until his death in 1913; the regency continued thereafter under Heinrich XIV's successor, Heinrich XXVII, until the abolition of the German monarchies in 1918.

  7. In 1934 the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Reuss Elder Line with 70,000 parishioners (as of 1922 [1]) merged in the Thuringian Evangelical Church, which thus comprised all the area of the state of Thuringia in its borders of 1920. During the struggle of the churches the official submissive church leadership even further radicalised in its ...