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  1. (Prince Wolfgang of Hesse から転送) 出典: フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 (2023/11/06 05:02 UTC 版) ヴォルフガング・フォン・ヘッセン(ドイツ語: Wolfgang von Hessen, 1896年 11月6日 - 1989年 7月12日)は、ドイツのヘッセン=カッセル家の公子。

  2. 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.

  3. 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 ...

  4. Wolfgang adopted his nephew, Prince Karl Adolf of Hesse (born 1937), elder son of his younger brother Christoph who was killed in action in 1943. At the time of his death at the age of 92, Wolfgang was the only surviving great-grandchild of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom who had been born in her lifetime.

  5. Le déclenchement de la Seconde Guerre mondiale prive le prince de son père, qui s'engage dans l'armée allemande dans les premiers mois du conflit [6] et qui disparaît dans un accident aérien en 1943 [7]. Orphelin de père, le prince est adopté par l'un de ses oncles paternels, Wolfgang de Hesse-Cassel, en 1952 [2].

  6. Prince Wolfgang of Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel) (Wolfgang Moritz; 6 November 1896 – 12 July 1989) was the designated Hereditary Prince of the monarchy of Finland (with the irredentist pretension to Estonia), and as such, already called the Crown Prince of Finland officially until 14 December 1918, and also afterwards by some monarchists. 51 relations.

  7. 28 de mar. de 2012 · As the Allies moved into Germany toward the end of World War II, Prince Wolfgang of Hesse abandoned his family’s castle in Kronberg, north of Frankfurt, Germany. Before leaving, he placed family heirlooms and jewels in a zinc-lined box, buried it in a hole in the castle basement, and covered it with concrete, hoping it would be safely hidden until the end of the war.