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Topic: Wilhelmina of Prussia


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In the News (Fri 17 Feb 12)

  
  PETER ZIEG FAMILY GENEALOGY
Anna Margaretha (Margretha) NEIDHARDT was christened in 1704 of Huttengesass, Hessen-Nassau, Prussia.
Jost Johann REIDEL was christened in 1651 of Neidergrundau, Hessen-Nassau, Prussia.
Johann REIDEL was christened in 1620 in Huttengesass, Hessen-Nassau, Prussia.
www.heritagepursuit.com /ZiegP27.htm   (9015 words)

  
 EIGHTEENTH GENERATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Wilhelmina HOHENZOLLERN was born in 1751 in Hanover?
She died in 1820 in the Netherlands - wife of William V. She was christened in Prussia - aka Wilhelmina of Prussia.
William V of ORANGE Stadholder (son of William IV Frisio of ORANGE Stadholder and Anne of ENGLAND) died in 1802 in Holland - deposed 1802.
home.att.net /~hamiltonclan/hamilton/gilbert/d7040.htm   (67 words)

  
 William V, Prince of Orange - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In 1767 Prince William married Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia, sister of King Frederick William II of Prussia.
This was against the wishes of his energetic wife Wilhelmina who tried to travel to the Hague.
To Wilhelmina and her brother, this was an insult.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/William_V_of_Orange   (495 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Wilhelmina of the Netherlands
Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands (Beatrix Wilhelmina Armgard of Orange-Nassau) (born January 31, 1938), Princess of Orange-Nassau, Princess of Lippe-Biesterfeld, styled HM The Queen is the Queen of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, having acceded to the throne in 1980.
Queen Wilhelmina died at the age of 82 on November 28, 1962 and is buried in the crypt of the Dutch Royal Family in the Nieuwe Kerk (Delft) (New Church) in Delft, the Netherlands.
Wilhelmina Helena Pauline of Orange-Nassau (August 31, 1880 – November 28, 1962) was Queen of the Netherlands from 1890 to 1948 and Queen Mother (with the title of Princess) from 1948 to 1962.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Wilhelmina-of-the-Netherlands   (1114 words)

  
 William I of the Netherlands - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
In 1791, William married (Frederica Louisa) Wilhelmina, born in Potsdam.
She was the daughter of King Frederick William II of Prussia.
After Wilhelmina died in 1837, William was remarried to Countess Henriette d'Oultremont de Wegimont, in 1841 in Berlin.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/William_I_of_the_Netherlands   (1148 words)

  
 PRUSSIA
Prussia remained the dominant military power of Germany until the end of World War I. Thereafter it was largely an administrative unit of Germany.
The union of Brandenburg, with its capital at Berlin, and East Prussia laid the foundation of the Kingdom of Prussia.
Prussia absorbed the state of Waldeck in 1929 and in 1937 was given the state of Lubeck and portions of the states of Hamburg and Oldenburg.
horsecare.stablemade.com /_articles/prussia.htm   (2406 words)

  
 Info and facts on 'House of Orange-Nassau'   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
These daughters were married to important houses such as the house of Hohenzollern (A German noble family that ruled Brandenburg and Prussia), but also to the Frisian Nassaus, who were stadtholders in Friesland (One of the northernmost provinces of the Netherlands).
The King of Prussia, Friedrich I (additional info and facts about Friedrich I) was the rightful heir by blood, grandson to Frederick Henry in the maternal line and appointed successor in the will of Frederick Henry in the case the House would die out.
Wilhelmina ruled the Netherlands for fifty years, from 1898 to 1948.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/h/ho/house_of_orange-nassau1.htm   (2078 words)

  
 My Family
Franz Wilhelm of Prussia (Prince) was born in 1943.
Frederick William III (King of Prussia) was born in 1770 in Potsdam, Germany.
Charlotte of Prussia (Princess), Frederica, Charles, Alexandrine, Ferdinand, Louisa of Prussia, Albert of Prussia (Prince).
sneakers.pair.com /roots/b11.htm   (1233 words)

  
 flag of Princess Marie von Wied (1831-1910) (The Netherlands) flags, Fahnen, Flaggen, FOTW bei Nationalflaggen.de   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Willem Frederik Karel, prince of the Netherlands, was the son of king Willem I and Wilhelmina of Prussia (1797-1881).
He married Louise of Prussia in 1825 (and was colloquially known as "Fritz", because he was born in the room of Frederick the Great of Prussia.) When his father abdicated in 1840 Fritz renounced all public duties.
Wilhelm von Wied was prepared for the position of Consort to the Queen of the Netherlands (or the position of King), as Marie's relatives swiftly disappeared because of incest and a rather licentious lifestyle.
www.nationalflaggen.de /flags-of-the-world/flags/nl_marie.html   (292 words)

  
 Unsolved Mysteries   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Born in 1829, Peter, a tailor, was approaching 51 years of age when he left *Friedrichsberg, Prussia to come to the United States with his wife and three of his four sons.
Valentine Dux, of West Prussia, had married Wilhelmina Bankert in Germany prior to their immigration to the U.S. five years earlier in 1875.
Wilhelmina was born in 1855 but was not a daughter of Peter of Gertrude Bankert.
www.bankert.org /mysteries.htm   (2164 words)

  
 Genealogie Koninklijk huis 06 - parkstad.com
Sophie of Prussia (1719-1765) married 1734 her 2nd cousin Friedrich Wilhelm of Brandenburg-Schwedt (1700-1771) August William of Prussia (1722-1758) married 1742 Luise of Brunswick-Wolffenbüttel (1722-1780).
Luise of Prussia (1808-1870) married 1825 Frederik of The Netherlands (1797-1881) Albrecht of Prussia (1809-1872) married 1st 1830, divorced 1849 Marianne of The Netherlands (1810-1883).
Wilhelmina of Prussia (1774-1837) married 1791 her cousin, king Willem I Frederik of The Netherlands (1772-1843) Heinrich of Prussia (1747-1767) Wilhelmina "Willemijntje" of Prussia (1751-1820) married 1767 Willem V of Orange-Nassau (1748-1806)
www.parkstad.com /nl/genkh06.html   (700 words)

  
 Magazine Antiques: Matthijs Horrix: cabinetmaker in The Hague - German expatriate in the Netherlands
In 1767, at the height of the building campaign of the Neues Palais in Potsdam, for which the Spindlers made many of their most sumptuous pieces of furniture, Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia (Pl. II) was married to Prince William V of Orange and Nassau, the hereditary stadtholder of the Netherlands.
Wilhelmina was the daughter of the eldest of Frederick the Great's two brothers, Prince Augustus William (1722-1758), who died when she was only seven.
From surviving accounts it appears that Princess Wilhelmina in particular was a great admirer of her compatriot's work.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m1026/is_n4_v154/ai_21218084   (1421 words)

  
 NINETEENTH GENERATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Wilhelmina Frederica of PRUSSIA was born in 1774 in Prussia.
She died in 1837 in the Netherlands - wife of William I. William I of NASSAU Duke of Nassau (son of William V of ORANGE Stadholder and Wilhelmina HOHENZOLLERN) was born in 1772 in Nassau - son of William V of Orange.
Wilhelmina Frederica of PRUSSIA and William I of NASSAU Duke of Nassau had the following children:
home.att.net /~hamiltonclan/hamilton/gilbert/d7573.htm   (93 words)

  
 The House of Orange
King Frederick I of Prussia states that the possessions are his because of the last will of his grand-father Frederick Henry, in which is stated that when the male line of William I dies-out, the possessions will be taken over by his eldest daughter, Louise Henriette and her offspring, the mother of the king.
Willem V Batavus of Orange-Nassau (1748-1806), Stadtholder of The Netherlands 1751-1795 (deposed), married 1767 Wilhelmina "Willemijntje" of Prussia (1751-1820).
It is a public "secret" that Wilhelmina was possible NOT the "real" child of Willem III because her "father" was already ill and possibly impotent when he married Adelheid Emma.
www.geerts.com /holland/orange-house.htm   (5235 words)

  
 ipedia.com: William I of the Netherlands Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
His parents were the last stadtholder William V of Orange and his wife Wilhelmina, and until 1814 he was known as Prince William VI of Orange
In 1791, William VI married (Frederica Louisa) Wilhelmina, born in Potsdam.
When Wilhelmina died in 1837, Wilhelm was remarried to Countess Henriette d'Oultremont de Wegimont (1841 in Berlin) and two years later he died there.
www.ipedia.com /william_i_of_the_netherlands.html   (1053 words)

  
 Page3.html
of Anna Amelia [House of von Hohenzollern], Princess of Prussia and Baron Fredrick von der Trenck.
Louis Ferdinand [House of von Hohenzollern] of Prussia, Prince of Prussia
Marie Hedwig [House of von Hohenzollern] of Prussia, Princess of Prussia
www.remmick.org /Hohenzollern.Royal/Page3.html   (1688 words)

  
 WPRURL - Westpreussen (West Prussia) Research List -- WPRURL - START HERE
Gustav and his second wife, Wilhelmina nee GARSKE (along with the six children) immigrated to the United States before 1883 and settled at Maple Creek, Outagamie county, Wisconsin.
Michael KRUEGER was born in 1785 at Eichenberg, Prussia and his brother, Martin was born 3 November 1782 at Eichenberg.
Flotholland, Prussia was approximately 100 kilometers south of Eichenberg.
feefhs.org /DE/WPRU/WPRURL/WPRURL.HTML   (2077 words)

  
 The Dutch Patriot Movement of the 1780s
The French could not afford it, and Prussia was unwilling to risk it even if it meant the elimination of French influence in the Netherlands.
As serious as it was, capturing Wilhelmina was not a fateful mistake for the Patriots since Prussia still had no intention of aiding the incompetent Stadholder.
This, combined with Wilhelmina's capture, convinced Prussia that the Patriot movement had to be crushed.
www.loyno.edu /~history/journal/1986-7/botticelli.htm   (4955 words)

  
 Prussian Invasion of the Netherlands, 1787
Prince WILLEM V. of Orange, Stadholder of Holland etc., was married to Princess WILHELMINA OF PRUSSIA.
In 1781, with the publication of the pamphlet "Aan het Volk van Nederland" the PATRIOT movement began which pushed for a thorough reform of state and society in the Netherlands.
When Princess Wilhelmina was stopped by patriot free corps near Goejanverwellesluis on June 28th 1787, she applied to her brother King Frederick William of Prussia for help.
www.zum.de /whkmla/military/18cen/patriotcrushing.html   (509 words)

  
 Worldroots.com
(dghtr of Prince Frederick of The Netherlands (1797-1881) and Princess Louise of Prussia)
-spouse of Prince Albrecht of Prussia and Prince Hendrik of The Netherlands-
(dghtr of Willem I Frederik King of the Netherlands+Friederike Luise Wilhelmine, Princess of Prussia - spouse of Friedrich Heinrich Albrecht Prince of Prussia 1809-1872)
worldroots.com /brigitte/royal/royal16b.htm   (519 words)

  
 family   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
His wife Margaret married in Prussia in 1769 and their son Johnathan GRUBAUGH was born 1780 in Prussia.
Johann was born 1828, christened in the Evangelisch Lutheran Church, Roedinghausen, Westfalen, Prussia, and emigrated from Prussia to Iowa ~1855.
Otto KLAFFKE and Wilhelmina LUDWIG from Altfalm bei der Walde, Pommern.
members.aol.com /pommern1/family.htm   (11637 words)

  
 ISTG Vol 4 - Barque Kammonham Roy
Witkop 6 female Prussia USA 6 Carl August Witkop 6m male Prussia USA 7 Martin Behm 55 male labourer Prussia USA 2 cases & bedding 8 Sophia Behm 60 female Prussia USA 9* Wilh.
Viehstenz 38 farmer Prussia USA 3 cases & bedding 108 Dorothea Viehstenz 41 Prussia USA 109 Carl Viehstenz 14 Prussia USA 110 Gottfried Viehstenz 8 Prussia USA 111 Caroline Viehstenz 3 Prussia USA 112 Chr.
Moll 36 carpenter Prussia USA 2 cases & bedding 141 Bernhard Moll 7 Prussia USA 142 Rudolph Moll 5 Prussia USA Transcriber's Notes: * An asterisk is used to call attention to additional information in the Transcriber's notes.
www.immigrantships.net /v4/1800v4/kammonhamroy18430818.html   (787 words)

  
 Bach Festivel_E
Wilhelmina, Frederick’s favorite sister, moved to Bayreuth in 1731, where she had a beautiful opera theater built that a century later attracted the attention of Richard Wagner.
Another woman composer active at Wilhelmina’s court was Anna Bon di Venezia.
The younger sister of Frederick, Anna Amalia of Prussia, also composed, but is especially known for her extensive music library, which included many manuscripts and published music by J.S. Bach, such as the six
www.vrouwenmuziek.nl /bach_festivel_E.htm   (222 words)

  
 Welcome to Adobe GoLive 5
Married firstly in 1791 in Berlin Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia (*1774 Potsdam,†1837 The Hague).
Buried with his consort Grand Duchess Wilhelmina at the New Church in Delft (the Netherlands).
He was reigning Duke of Nassau deposed in 1866 when Nassau was annexed to Prussia.
homepage.mac.com /crowns/l/avtxt.html   (870 words)

  
 prussia - Results By Free Genealogy Search
Migration of Mennonites from West Prussia to Russia, 1820-1841
Migration of Mennonites from West Prussia to Russia, 1820-1841 Migration of Mennonites from West Prussia to Russia 1820 - 1841 Compiled by Adalbert Goertz Rep.77,Min.d.Innern,Tit.31,Mennonitensachen,Nr.2 vol.4, 1838 - 1841, 216...
The Family of Petri Zeimet 1757-1839 and Magdalena Eva Loch 1759-1830 Zerf Prussia The Family of Petri Zeimet (1757-1839) and Magdalena Eva Loch (1759-1830) From Zerf Prussia to Wisconsin USA This photo was taken by Phyllis Zeimet Brown in 1989, during her visit to Germany.
www.genealogylocator.com /results/prussia.html   (1072 words)

  
 WHKMLA : History of the Netherlands : The Patriots and Late Republic, 1787-1795
In 1788, Britain and Prussia signed a treaty, guaranteeing the Dutch constitution.
Dutch officials in the communities were required to swear an oath to the (old) constitution.
De aanhouding van Wilhelmina van Pruisen door de Commissie van Defensie te Woerden in 1787 (The stoppage of Wilhelmina of Prussia by the Defense Commission at Woerden, 1787), by A.
www.zum.de /whkmla/region/lowcountries/patriots.html   (366 words)

  
 von Behren Genealogy
He was married to Caroline Wilhelmina Friedricke Korte in Prussia.
Caroline Wilhelmina Friedricke Korte was born on 25 Jun 1835 possibly in
She died on 19 Mar 1910 in Vincennes, Knox County, IN.
web.qx.net /toddvb/vbknox.html   (377 words)

  
 Timeline of the Dutch Royal Family
24 - Born: King Willem I, son of Stadhouder Willem V and Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia
01 - Married: Willem I and Princess Wilhelmina
30 - Born: Queen Juliana Louise Emma Marie Wilhelmina (Juliana), daughter of Queen Wilhelmina and Prince Heinrich of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (d.
www.etoile.co.uk /TheNetherlands/Timeline.html   (1412 words)

  
 Genealogie Koninklijk huis 10 - parkstad.com
Willem Frederik Karel (1797-1881) married 1825 his cousin, Louise Augusta of Prussia (1808-1870).
Children: Charlotte of Prussia (1831-1855) married 1850 Georg II of Saxe-Meiningen (1826-1914) Albrecht of Prussia (1837-1906) married 1873 Marie of Saxe-Altenburg (1854-1898).
Elisabeth of Prussia (b+1840) Alexandrine of Prussia (1842-1906) married 1865 Wilhelm of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (1827-1879), a son of Paul Friedrich of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (1800-1892), see above.
www.parkstad.com /nl/genkh10.html   (248 words)

  
 ART / 4 / 2DAY
The map refers to the destination of the state portrait: Batavia in the Dutch East Indies.
William I was the eldest son of Stadholder William V [08 Mar 1748 – 09 Apr 1806] and Princess Wilhelmina of Prussia.
In 1791 the 19-year-old prince married his cousin, also called Wilhelmina of Prussia [1774-1837], two years his junior.
www.safran-arts.com /42day/art/art4jun/art0619.html   (4078 words)

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