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| | Friedrich I of Prussia : Frederick I of Prussia |
 | | Friedrich I of Prussia : Frederick I of Prussia |  | | Born in Königsberg, Prussia, he became Kurfürst (Elector) of Brandenburg in 1688 as Friedrich III upon the death of his father Friedrich Wilhelm I. |  | | terms defined : Friedrich I of Prussia : Frederick I of Prussia |
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http://www.termsdefined.net/fr/frederick-i-of-prussia.html
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| | Frederick William II of Prussia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Frederick William was the son of Augustus William (the second son of King Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia) and of Louise Amalie of Brunswick-Lüneburg, sister of the wife of Frederick the Great. |  | | Prussia had paid a heavy price for the territories acquired at the expense of Poland in 1793 and 1795, and when, on 16 November 1797, Frederick William died, he left the state in bankruptcy and confusion, the army decayed and the monarchy discredited. |  | | An attempt to intervene in the war of Russia and Austria against Turkey failed of its object; Prussia did not succeed in obtaining any concessions of territory from the alarms of the Allies, and the dismissal of Hertzberg (5 July 1791) marked the final abandonment of the anti-Austrian tradition of Frederick the Great. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_William_II_of_Prussia
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| | Wilhelm II of Germany - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Wilhelm had married Augusta Viktoria, Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein, in 1881. |  | | On the death of Wilhelm I on March 9 1888, his father was crowned Emperor as Friedrich III but he was dying of throat cancer, and in June that same year Wilhelm II succeeded him as Emperor. |  | | The Dutch Queen Wilhelmina refused to extradite Wilhelm as a war criminal, despite numerous appeals from the Allies. |
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http://www.newlenox.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Wilhelm_II
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| | Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Friedrich Wilhelm (Frederick William) of Brandenburg, Kurfürst of Brandenburg, Duke of Prussia (February 16, 1620 - April 29, 1688) of the House of Hohenzollern, was the Kurfürst (elector) of Brandenburg, from 1640 until his death. |  | | His father Georg Wilhelm had to keep a delicate balancing act between the northern Protestant forces and the Imperial Catholic forces. |  | | He was an advocate of mercantilism, monopolies, subsidies, tariffs, and internal improvements. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Wilhelm_I_of_Brandenburg
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| | Frederick William III of Prussia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The son of King Frederick William II of Prussia, Frederick William was born in Potsdam on August 3, 1770, and became Crown Prince in 1786, when his father ascended the throne. |  | | On October 14, 1806, at the Battle of Jena-Auerstädt, the French defeated the Prussian army led by Frederick William, and the Prussian army collapsed. |  | | At the Congress of Vienna, Frederick William's ministers succeeded in securing important territorial increases for Prussia, although they failed to obtain the annexation of all of Saxony, as they had wished. |
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http://www.bonneylake.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Friedrich_Wilhelm_III_of_Prussia
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| | Prussian (German) Royal Family |
 | | Although Friedrich accepted this at the time of his marriage, both he and his younger brother (who also married unequally) filed a suit in the German Courts claiming discrimination against them on the basis of their marriage was unconstitutional. |  | | This disbarred Friedrich as his marriage was considered unequal. |  | | Clauses in Emperor Wilhelm's will stipulated the successor of Prince Louis Ferdinand must marry equal or be born of an equal marriage. |
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http://www.btinternet.com/~allan_raymond/Prussian_Royal_Family.htm
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| | Karl Wilhelm Ferdinand (1735-1806) |
 | | Friedrich Wilhelm (1711-1815), remained healthy and able to succeed his father in the reign in 1806. |  | | The mother of Karl Wilhelm Friedrich's father was the Prussian princess Philippine Charlotte, who was the daughter of king Friedrich Wilhelm I. Sources |  | | The plan foundered with the bombardment by Valmy, and the duke again resigned his position in 1794. |
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http://www.hfac.uh.edu/gbrown/philosophers/leibniz/KarlWilhelmFerdinand/KarlWilhelmFerdinand.html
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| | The Royalty Connection |
 | | Friedrich Wilhelm I "laid down principles which continued to be followed long after his death; he was one of the greatest administrators who have ever worn the Prussia crown." - Encycl. |  | | Friedrich Wilhelm II and Elizabeth divorced in 1769. |  | | Friedrich Wilhelm II also married (1) 14 July 1765 in Charlottenburg Elizabeth Christine of Brunswick (b. |
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http://www.mts.net/~afiebelk/royalty.htm
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| | The March Days of 1848, by Justine Davis Randers-Pehrson |
 | | Friedrich Wilhelm discovered that his brother was needed in England, and hastily sent him away on an unspecified diplomatic mission. |  | | With what looks like supreme effontery, Friedrich Wilhelm then proceeded to ride in a stately progress through the streets, wearing a black-red-gold brassard, accompanied by his generals who also wore the revolutionary tricolor, along with his similarly-decorated ministers. |  | | In spite of the fierce objections of Prince Wilhelm and his militant backers therefore, gradual withdrawal of the troops -- moving from case to case as barricades were leveled -- seemed to be the right and successful move. |
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http://www.cyberpaladin.com/~glennrp/marchrev/marchrvt.html
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| | Prussia |
 | | The March Days of 1848 Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia and his "Dear Berliners" |
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http://idcs0100.lib.iup.edu/modernera/germany.htm
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| | Germany Info: Government&Politics: German-U.S. Relations |
 | | Von Greuhm is the only German diplomatic representative to be buried in the United States, resting in Congressional Cemetery in Washington, DC, where Friedrich Wilhelm had a monument erected in his honor. |  | | Von Greuhm, who served as Minister Resident and Consul-General for King Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia from 1817 to 1823, died in Washington, DC, a little over 180 years ago. |  | | Germany and the United States have a long history of diplomatic relations, and the first German diplomatic representative to the US government, Friedrich von Greuhm, is even buried in Washington, DC. |
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http://www.germany-info.org/relaunch/politics/german_us/g_a1_greuhm.html
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| | Waltraud Maierhofer |
 | | The vice president of the Berlin judicial court noted that Friedrich Wilhelm III later regretted his behavior toward Wilhelmine von Lichtenau and accused himself of not having respected his late father more. |  | | Still, the new kings sentence spoke of her "betrügerischen Mittel[n]" and "ihrem landesverderblichen Einfluß" in all matters of the rule of Friedrich Wilhelm II. |  | | Wilhelmine later bore the prince a son and a daughter whom Friedrich Wilhelm made-- with the approval of Friedrich II-- Graf und Gräfin von der Mark [Brandenburg]. |
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http://www.womeningerman.org/conference/2002/encke.html
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| | Pommerscher Verein Freistadt > Prussia |
 | | It became a duchy in 1525 and was united with the Mark of Brandenburg in 1618. |  | | After World War II, as a result of the Allies (Russia, England, France and United States) at the Yalta Conference, Prussia was abolished as a state. |  | | Wilhelm I began his reign in 1858, became regent in 1861, became king in 1862, and appointed Otto von Bismarck as premier in 1862. |
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http://pommerschervereinfreistadt.org/Prussia/tabid/93/Default.aspx
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| | History of Friedrich II of Prussia V 6 - Chapter VI. |
 | | History of Friedrich II of Prussia V 6 - Chapter VI. |  | | History of Friedrich II of Prussia V 6 |  | | &c.] Sophie Charlotte, "Republican Queen" of Prussia, Friedrich Wilhelm's Mother, whom we knew long since, was the one Daughter. |
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http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/hst/prussia/HistoryofFriedrichIIofPrussiaV6/chap6.html
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| | Friedrich Wilhelm II King of Prussia |
 | | Friedrich married Elisabeth Christina of Brunswick-Wol, daughter of Karl I Duke of Brunswic and Philippine Charlotte of Prussia, on 14 Jul 1765 in Charlottenburg. |  | | Friedrich next married Fredericke Luise of Hesse-Darmsta on 14 Jul 1769 in Charlottenburg. |  | | Died: 16 Dec 1797, Marmorpalais, Potsdam at age 53 |
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http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~humefamily/354.htm
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| | Friedrich III of Germany |
 | | In 1861, Friedrich's father became King Wilhelm I of Prussia, and Friedrich himself became Crown Prince. |  | | He ruled for only 99 days before his death. |  | | By the time his father died in 1888, Friedrich had incurable cancer of the larynx, which had been misdiagnosed leading to cancellation of a necessary surgery in 1887. |
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http://www.sciencedaily.com/encyclopedia/friedrich_iii_of_germany
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| | Preussen.de - 1713 Frederick Wilhelm I. |
 | | / I. 1713 Frederick Wilhelm I. Leopold I. von Anhalt-Dessau |  | | Preussen.de - 1713 Frederick Wilhelm I. King Frederick Wilhelm I. in Prussia, the Soldier King“ (in German) |  | | Friedrich Wilhelm war sich wohl bewusst, dass sich Preussen auf dem Kontinent nur behaupten würde, wenn es sich auf seine militärische Stärke verlassen konnte. |
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http://www.preussen.de/en/history/1713_frederick_wilhelm_i..html
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| | Articles - Frederica of Mecklenburg-Strelitz |
 | | Princess Frederica of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (3 March 1778-29 June 1841), Duchess of Cumberland and later Queen of Hanover, was the consort of Prince Ernest Augustus, 1st Duke of Cumberland (later King Ernst August I of Hanover), the fifth son and eighth child of King George III of the United Kingdom and Queen Charlotte. |  | | Her Highness Princess Frederica Louisa Carolina Sophia Alexandra was born at Hanover, the fifth daughter of Duke Karl II of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1741-1816) and his first wife, Frederica (1752-1782), the daughter of Georg Wilhelm, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt. |  | | Prince Friedrich of Prussia (1794-1863); married Princess Louise of Anhalt-Bernburg (1799-1882). |
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http://lastring.com/articles/Frederica_of_Mecklenburg-Strelitz?...
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| | prussia |
 | | From Memel (Klaipeda) down to Goldap and as far west as Labiau/Labguva (Polessk) was once Prussia's "Province of Lithuania Minor". |  | | The rest, being the far northern 'Department of Lithuania-Minor' with the port Memel (Klaipeda), was ceded again to Lithuania as part then of the USSR. |  | | Present-day Poland's Mazury was South Prussia's provinces of Masurland and Sudovia, which included the Galindans and western Suduvians to the south and south-east. |
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http://www.fact-library.com/prussia.html
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| | DHM, Art II, Numismatics, "Schraubmedaille" |
 | | King Friedrich Wilhelm I. of Prussia agreed to settle the refugees in Prussia and Lithuania. |  | | Due to the Salzburg emigration edict of 1731, all protestant families had to leave their homeland. |  | | The shown medal was made by Daniel Hvckhinger. |
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http://www.dhm.de/ENGLISH/sammlungen/kunst2/numismatik/6.html
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| | Frederick William IV of Prussia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | King Frederick William IV of Prussia (October 15, 1795 - January 2, 1861), the eldest son and successor of Frederick William III of Prussia, reigned as King of Prussia from 1840 to 1861. |  | | He also gained military experience by serving in the army during the War of Liberation against Napoleon in 1814, though he was an indifferent soldier. |  | | When revolution broke out in Prussia in March 1848, part of the larger Revolutions of 1848, the king initially moved to repress it with the army, but later decided to recall the troops and place himself at the head of the movement on March 19. |
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http://www.lexington-fayette.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Friedrich_Wilhelm_IV_of_Prussia
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| | Frederick Guillermo I del prussia |
 | | English version: Frederick William I of Prussia Next: Felsic Up |  | | Músicos, científicos e intelectuales desdeñados Guillermo de Frederick, tan bien como todas las cosas francesas (en contraste imponente con su hijo Fritz). |  | | Durante su reinado, Frederick Guillermo hice mucho para centralizar y para mejorar el prussia. |
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http://www.yotor.net/wiki/es/fr/Frederick%20Guillermo%20I%20del%20prussia.htm
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| | 22ND GENERATION |
 | | Kaiser Wilhelm II of PRUSSIA was born in 1859 in Berlin, Prussia - son of Frederick III. |  | | Oscar of HOHENZOLLERN was born in Prussia - son of William II. |  | | Kaiser Wilhelm II of PRUSSIA and Augusta Victoria of SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN had the following children: |
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http://home.att.net/~hamiltonclan/hamilton/gilbert/d7026.htm
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| | Sights of St. Petersburg. Amber Room |
 | | King Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia presented the room as a diplomatic gift to Peter the Great in 1717. |  | | No wonder that the Amber Room at Tsarskoe Selo was considered to be the Eighth Wonder of the World- imagine an entire room covered with panels of amber, glowing and catching the light. |
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http://www.tour-to-stpetersburg.com/sights/amber_room.htm
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| | Friedrich Wilhelm I de Brandenburg |
 | | English version: Friedrich Wilhelm I of Brandenburg Next: Frederick V Up |  | | Friedrich Wilhelm (Frederick Guillermo) de Brandenburg, Kurfürst de Brandenburg, duque del prussia (de febrero el 16 de 1620 - de abril el 29 de 1688) de la casa de Hohenzollern, era el Kurfürst (elector) de Brandenburg, a partir de 1640 hasta su muerte. |  | | Wilhelm es notable para levantar a un ejército de 40.000 soldados, antes de 1678. |
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http://www.yotor.net/wiki/es/fr/Friedrich%20Wilhelm%20I%20de%20Brandenburg.htm
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| | www.quondam.com/02/0129.htm |
 | | "Ludwig Friedrich Wilhelm was born on Monday 25 August [1845] at 12.30 a.m. |  | | For the first few days the boy was called Otto; then the grandfather asked that the name might be changed to Ludwig, because he was born on his birthday. |  | | The following day the child was baptized with great ceremony by Archbishop Gebsattel. |
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http://www.quondam.com/02/0129.htm
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| | WILHELM II |
 | | 15 Jun 1888, succeeded his father, Friedrich III; not crowned |  | | Wilhelm remained a nominal commander-in-chief of the German army throughout the war. |  | | WILHELM II Home: Nations: Germany: Heads of State: WILHELM II Home |
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http://www.archontology.org/nations/german/germ_state1/wilhelm2.php
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| | 1861 |
 | | January 3 - American Civil War: Delaware votes not to secede from the United States |  | | January 2 - Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia dies and is succeeded by Wilhelm I |  | | January 2 - Friedrich Wilhelm IV, king of Prussia |
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http://www.bidprobe.com/en/wikipedia/1/18/1861.html
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| | Prussia |
 | | 1k) Philipp Kirill Friedrich Wilhelm Moritz Boris Tanko (b.Eutin 23 Apr 1968); m.Plön-Dörnick 2 Jul 1994 Anna Christine Soltau (b.Preetz 2 Apr 1968) |  | | 6d) Auguste Christine Friederike (Potsdam 1 May 1780-Kassel 19 Feb 1841); m.Berlin 13 Feb 1797 Wilhelm II, Elector of Hesse (Hanau 28 Jul 1777-Frankfurt 20 Nov 1847) |  | | The present members of this family bear the title Prince[ss] of Prussia (Royal Highness). |
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http://pages.prodigy.net/ptheroff/gotha/prussia.html
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| | Austro-Hungarian Army |
 | | congress with Tsar Alexander III and Kaiser Wilhelm I ("Drei-Kaiser-Treffen") |  | | congress with Tsar Alexander II of Russia and Prince Regent Wilhelm of Prussia |  | | congress with Kaiser Wilhelm I and Tsar Alexander II ("Drei-Kaiser-Treffen") including the visit to the German manoeuvres at Staaken west of Berlin |
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http://www.austro-hungarian-army.co.uk/Kaiser.htm
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| | My Family |
 | | Friedrich Wilhelm of Prussia (Prince) was born in 1939. |  | | Friedrich of Leiningen (Prince) was born in 1938. |  | | George William of Hanover (Prince) was born in 1915. |
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http://sneakers.pair.com/roots/b12.htm
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| | Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia |
 | | He was succeeded as king of Prussia by his son, Friedrich II, known as Frederick the Great. |  | | Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia, of the House of Hohenzollern (August 14, 1688 - May 31, 1740), was often known as 'the Soldier-King'. |  | | His father, Friedrich I of Prussia, had successfully acquired the title King for the margraves of Brandenburg. |
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http://www.city-search.org/fr/friedrich-wilhelm-i-of-prussia.html
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| | Genealogy: Brandenburg |
 | | - Abdication of the Hohenzollerns; Prussia is a free state |  | | Contains documents and records of the Brandenburg State Government Depts., cities, political parties, associations, justice system, land records, the DDR, and historical records. |  | | Contains the records of the former Central Administration of Prussia and its provinces. |
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http://www.genealogienetz.de/reg/BRG/bb.html
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| | 1740 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | May 31 - Friedrich II comes to power in Prussia upon the death of his father, Friedrich Wilhelm I. |  | | December 16 - Friedrich II of Prussia invades the Habsburg possession of Silesia, starting the War of the Austrian Succession. |  | | By the act of English parliament, alien immigrants (including Huguenots and Jews) in the colonies receive British nationality |
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http://www.bexley.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/1740
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| | Hohenzollern - Wikipedia |
 | | Wilhelm II (1888-1914), abdicated in 1918, died 1941 |  | | This page was last modified 16:27, 3 November 2001. |  | | Frederick I William of Prussia(1688-1701), Friedrich III, promoted to King in Prussia (1701-1713) |
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http://nostalgia.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hohenzollern
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| | WHKMLA : History of Prussia 1807-1815 - Intellectual Life |
 | | The reforms of 1807-1815, as much as the rule of the Soldier King Friedrich Wilhelm I. (1713-1740) and his son Friedrich II. |  | | Reform, Liberation and Romanticism in Prussia, by G. |  | | The Friedrich Wilhelm University in Berlin, founded 1810 (now the Humboldt-Univ.) was to become the model university (herself modelled after the Univ. of Göttingen). |
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http://www.zum.de/whkmla/region/germany/preu18071815int.html
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| | Friedrich Nietzsche |
 | | Friedrich Nietzsche was born on October 15, 1844 in the small town of Röcken bei Lützen, near Leipzig, Saxony. |  | | In 1879, Nietzsche retired from his position at Basel due to his continued poor health. |  | | He was born on the 49th birthday of King Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia and was thus named after him. |
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http://www.worldhistory.com/wiki/F/Friedrich-Nietzsche.htm
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| | King Ludwig II of Bavaria |
 | | Bavaria was compelled by the treaty that had ended the Seven Weeks' War to support Prussia in this conflict. |  | | His father, Maximilian II, became king of Bavaria when Ludwig was two years old-Maximilian's own father, Ludwig I, had been forced to abdicate due to his involvement with a notorious Irish beauty who styled herself Lola Montez. |  | | Another quick victory by Prussia, in a war lasting just over a month, made it clear that the crown of a united Germany, if there was to be a united Germany, would be in the hands of the Prussians. |
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http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/dadd/1258/LudwigII.html
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| | King in Prussia Friedrich Wilhelm I |
 | | Under his supervision the number of soldiers in the army was increased from about 38,000 to some 83,500 and Prussia became the third ranking military power in Europe. |  | | Contemptuous of the luxury of his father's reign, he instituted a system of rigid and efficient economy at court and transferred public financial administration from local governments to the central royal authority. |  | | He was thus able to repay the debts incurred by his father and greatly improve the financial condition of Prussia. |
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http://worldroots.com/cgi-bin/gasteldb?@I10759@
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| | Wilhelm II, King of Prussia, German Emperor (1859-1941) |
 | | The Kaiser’s wife, Hermine (his second wife, whom he married in exile after the death of his first wife, the Empress Auguste Viktoria), was extremely pro-Nazi and even arranged for Göring to visit the Kaiser several times before the war. |  | | Before the war, he allowed one of his sons, Prince August Wilhelm, to join the SA, but he was angry at how involved the Prince became in Nazi politics and eventually all but disowned him. |  | | This secret protocol affected one of the Kaiser’s sons (Major-General Prince Oskar of Prussia) and several of his grandsons (including Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia, Prince Georg Wilhelm of Hanover, and Prince Burkhard of Prussia), and even distant cousins (including Prince Franz Joseph of Hohenzollern-Emden). |
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http://gsteinbe.intrasun.tcnj.edu/royalty/biographies/WilhelmII.html
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| | Potsdam Giants - definition of Potsdam Giants in Encyclopedia |
 | | When Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia ascended to the throne in 1713 he proceeded to decrease expenses of the court and strengthen his military. |  | | The Potsdam Giants was a Prussian infantry regiment composed of taller-than-average soldiers. |  | | He let Prince Leopold of Anhalt-Dessau improve the drill and weapons of his army and hired 40,000 foreign mercenaries. |
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http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/Potsdam_Giants
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| | The early years (from Nietzsche, Friedrich) -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | More from Britannica on "The early years (from Nietzsche, Friedrich)"... |  | | The early years (from Nietzsche, Friedrich) -- Encyclopædia Britannica |  | | As president of the German Republic, Friedrich Ebert attempted to unite his country after its defeat in World War I. Sammy Sosa: The Early Years |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-23654?tocId=23654
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| | NietzscheBritannicaEntry in SocialThoughtWiki |
 | | His father died in 1849, before Nietzsche's fifth birthday, and he spent most of his early life in a household consisting of five women: his mother Franziska, his younger sister Elisabeth, his maternal grandmother, and two maiden aunts. |  | | His paternal grandfather had published books defending Protestantism and had achieved the ecclesiastical position of superintendent; his maternal grandfather was a country parson; his father, Carl Ludwig Nietzsche, was appointed pastor at Roken by order of King Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia, after whom Friedrich Nietzsche was named. |  | | Despite efforts to take part in the university's social life, the two semesters at Bonn were a failure, owing chiefly to acrimonious quarrels between his two leading classics professors, Otto Jahn and Friedrich Wilhelm Ritschl. |
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http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/classes/cluster21/wiki/index.pl?NietzscheBritannicaEntry
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| | The State Hermitage Museum: Hermitage News |
 | | Friedrich and his contemporaries are hardly at all represented in European collections. |  | | The exhibition shows twelve masterpieces of Caspar David Friedrich from the collection of the State Hermitage Museum and a few works of his contemporaries. |  | | Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840), the leader of the German romantic painting, is especially known for his symbolic and dream-like landscapes. |
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http://www.hermitagemuseum.org/html_En/11/b2003/hm11_4_78.html
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| | Friedrich Wilhelm I King of Prussia |
 | | Friedrich married Sophie Dorothea of Gb and Ireland, daughter of George I King of Gb and Sophia Dorothea of Brunswick and C, on 28 Nov 1706 in Berlin. |  | | Died: 31 May 1740, Berlin at age 51 |
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http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~humefamily/379.htm
(84 words)
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