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  1. Princess Mafalda of Savoy. Prince Heinrich Wilhelm Konstantin Viktor Franz of Hesse-Kassel (30 October 1927 – 18 November 1999), known as Enrico d'Assia, was the second child of Prince Philipp of Hesse and Princess Mafalda of Savoy. Heinrich became an artist, set designer, and memoirist after World War II .

  2. Prince Philipp of Hesse-Kassel (6 November 1896 – 25 October 1980 Rome), married on 23 September 1925 to Princess Mafalda of Savoy (19 November 1902 Rome – 28 August 1944), had issue. Prince Wolfgang of Hesse-Kassel (6 November 1896 – 12 July 1989), married Princess Marie Alexandra of Baden, no issue.

  3. Prince Wolfgang of Hesse (1896–1989), twin with his brother Philipp. He was the designated Crown Prince of Finland officially until 14 December 1918. He married Princess Marie Alexandra of Baden, no issue; Prince Christoph Ernst August of Hesse (1901–1943), twin with his brother Richard.

  4. Prince Victor Alexander of Isenburg-Büdingen. Mother. Princess Maria of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rosenberg. Karl II, Prince of Isenburg-Büdingen in Birstein (full name: Karl Viktor Amadeus Wolfgang Kasimir Adolf Bodo) (29 July 1838 – 2 April 1899) was head of the mediatised German house of Isenburg and Büdingen .

  5. Landgrave Moritz was born at Racconigi Castle, in Italy. During the Second World War, Moritz's mother, Princess Mafalda of Savoy, was arrested by the Nazis for alleged subversive activities and died in the Buchenwald concentration camp in 1944 as a result of a U.S. bombing raid on the camp. Prince Louis of Hesse and by Rhine, the last head of ...

  6. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Princess Marie Alexandra of Baden (1902-1944) was a daughter of Prince Maximilian of Baden (1867–1929) and Princess Marie Louise of Hanover and Cumberland . On 17 September 1924 she married en:Prince Wolfgang of Hesse (1896–1989), the heir of the would-be en:King of Finland .

  7. 28 de dic. de 2023 · However, according to certain family documents and correspondence, his successor as King of Finland would have been his second surviving son Prince Wolfgang of Hesse (1896–1989), apparently because Wolfgang was with his parents in 1918 and ready to travel to Finland, where a wedding to a Finnish lady was already in preparation for the coming Crown Prince.