Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. House of Hohenzollern. Prince Friedrich Karl Nikolaus of Prussia (20 March 1828 – 15 June 1885) was the son of Prince Charles of Prussia (1801–1883) and his wife, Princess Marie of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1808–1877). Prince Friedrich Karl was a grandson of King Frederick William III of Prussia and a nephew of Frederick William IV and William I.

  2. Prince Henry of Prussia ( German: Albert Wilhelm Heinrich; 14 August 1862 – 20 April 1929) was a younger brother of German Emperor Wilhelm II and a Prince of Prussia. He was also a grandson of Queen Victoria. A career naval officer, he held various commands in the Imperial German Navy and eventually rose to the rank of Grand Admiral and ...

  3. Prince Frederick of Prussia (German: Friedrich Georg Wilhelm Christoph von Preußen; 19 December 1911 – 20 April 1966), also known as "Mr. Friedrich von Preussen" in England, was the fourth son of Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany and Duchess Cecilie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin.

  4. Prince Frederick of Prussia. by Bassano Ltd half-plate film negative, 28 February 1938 NPG x155348. Use this image; Prince Frederick of Prussia. by Bassano Ltd

  5. Frederick III (Crown Prince of Prussia, and Emperor of Germany) died of cancer of the larynx in 1888. In Drame Imperial (1888) journalist Jean de Bonnefon asserted that the disease was not cancer but syphilis which the Crown Prince acquired in 1869 in Suez. What de Bonnefon wrote about the prince does not coincide with the prince's itinerary ...

  6. 4 de may. de 2023 · Prince Frederick of Prussia (1911–1966) From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. English: Prince Friedrich Georg Wilhelm Christoph of Prussia (December 19, 1911–April 20, 1966) was the fourth son of Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany and Duchess Cecilie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Kaiserliche Bildersammlung. Prince Frederick of Prussia.

  7. Watching the decades crawl past as he was waiting for the throne, Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia (1831-1888) had to grapple with the same problem. “In order to make people talk about him every now and then,” the socialist weekly Der Sozialdemokrat acidly remarked in 1883, “he has to engage in the silliest nonsense, clearly the ...