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In 1911 a son of Carl Ludwig II, Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg (nephew of Queen Victoria) had the hereditary title of Prince of Weikersheim but without the property of the Palace. Today the palace is a museum, but also home to the Jeunesses Musicales Germany during the summer and the Weikersheim Think Tank , a conservative think tank .
Count Carl Ludwig of Hohenlohe (1674–1756), who inhabited the palace for over fifty years, gave the palace and garden the form that they have retained to this day. The eye-catching garden was designed on his instructions, receiving a crowning touch: the orangery, which provides a picturesque backdrop.
Baron Carl von Bronn (25 January 1862 – 28 September 1925); in 1911, he was elevated to the title of Prince von Weikersheim by Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria, [1] for civil services rendered to the Austrian empire (All his descendants were made Counts and Countesses von Weikersheim.
- Carl, Prince of Weikersheim, Baroness Victoria of Bronn, Baroness Beatrix of Bronn
- Hohenlohe-Langenburg
El palacio de Weikersheim es un castillo histórico que perteneció a la rama protestante de la familia principesca de Hohenlohe hasta 1967, cuando el príncipe Constantino de Hohenlohe lo vendió al estado federado de Baden-Wurtemberg, Alemania, donde se encuentra.
- Weikersheim
- Alemania
When the last Weikersheim count, Carl Ludwig, died around 1760, his lands were divided between the Langenburg, Neuenstein and Öhringen branches; in 1967, Prince Constantin of Hohenlohe-Langenburg sold Weikersheim Castle, meanwhile a museum, to the state.
- Monarchy
- State of the Holy Roman Empire
Baron Carl von Bronn (25 January 1862 – 28 September 1925); in 1911, he was elevated to the title of Prince von Weikersheim by Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria, for civil services rendered to the Austrian empire. (All his descendants were made Counts and Countesses von Weikersheim.
Baron Carl von Bronn (25 January 1862 – 28 September 1925); in 1911, he was elevated to the title of Prince von Weikersheim by Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria, [1] for civil services rendered to the Austrian empire.