Louis Ferdinand, Prince of Prussia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pretender
Louis Ferdinand
Born November 9, 1907(1907-11-09)
Potsdam
Died September 26, 1994 (aged 86)
Bremen
Title(s) Prince of Prussia
Throne(s) claimed Germany, Prussia
Pretend from July 20, 1951September 26, 1994
Monarchy abolished 1918
Last monarch William II
Connection with grandson
Royal House Hohenzollern
Father William, German Crown Prince
Mother Cecilie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
Spouse Kira Kirillovna of Russia
Children Friedrich Wilhelm, Michael, Marie Cécile, Kira, Louis Ferdinand, Christian-Sigismund, Xenia
Predecessor Crown Prince Wilhelm
Successor Prince Georg Friedrich
Styles of
Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia
Reference style His Imperial and Royal Highness
Spoken style Your Imperial and Royal Highness
Alternative style His Royal Highness
Prince Louis Ferdinand, in the carriage, and his elder brother, Wilhelm.
Prince Louis Ferdinand, in the carriage, and his elder brother, Wilhelm.

Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia (German: Louis Ferdinand Viktor Eduard Albert Michael Hubertus Prinz von Preussen) (November 9, 1907 - September 26, 1994), a member of the Hohenzollern family, was the pretender to the abolished German monarchy, staunch opponent of the National Socialist German Workers Party in Germany, a business man, and patron of the arts.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Louis Ferdinand was born in Potsdam as the third in succession to the throne of the German Empire, after his father, German Crown Prince William and elder brother Prince Wilhelm of Prussia. The monarchy was abolished after Germany's revolution in 1918. When Louis Ferdinand's older brother Prince Wilhelm renounced his succession rights to marry a commoner in 1933 (he was later to be killed in action in France in 1940 fighting in the German army), Louis Ferdinand took his place in line for the throne following the deaths of the Kaiser and the Crown Prince.

Louis Ferdinand was educated in Berlin and deviated from his family's tradition by not pursuing a military career. Instead, he travelled extensively and settled for some time in Detroit, where he befriended Henry Ford and became acquainted with Franklin Delano Roosevelt, among others. He held a great interest in engineering. Recalled from the United States upon his brother's renunciation of the throne, he got involved in the German aviation industry, but was barred by Hitler from taking any active part in German military activities.

Louis Ferdinand disassociated himself from the Nazis after this. He was not involved in the July 20 Plot against Hitler in 1944 but was interrogated by the Gestapo immediately afterwards.[1]

He married the Grand Duchess Kira Kirillovna of Russia in 1938 in first a Russian Orthodox in Potsdam and then Lutheran ceremony in Huis ten Doorn, Netherlands. Kira was the second daughter of Grand Duke Kyril Vladimirovich and Princess Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. They had four sons and three daughters. His two eldest sons both renounced their succession rights in order to marry commoners. His third son, and heir, Prince Louis Ferdinand II died in 1977 during military maneuvers, and thus his eighteen-year-old grandson Georg Friedrich, Prince of Prussia became heir to the Prussian and Imperial throne and head of the Hohenzollern family upon Louis Ferdinand's death in 1994.

After the reunification of Germany, Louis Ferdinand arranged to have the remains of several Hohenzollern members reinterred at the imperial vault in Potsdam.

Louis Ferdinand was on friendly terms with the Pulitzer Prize winning American journalist Louis P. Lochner.

[edit] Children

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Louis Ferdinand, Prince of Prussia, The Rebel Prince (Chicago: Henry Reegnery, 1952): 306-324.

[edit] External links

[edit] Ancestry


Louis Ferdinand, Prince of Prussia
Born: 9 November 1907 Died: 26 September 1994
Titles in pretence
Preceded by
Crown Prince William
— TITULAR —
German Emperor
King of Prussia

July 20, 1951September 26, 1994
Reason for succession failure:
Empire and Kingdom abolished in 1918
Succeeded by
Prince Georg Friedrich
Imperial coat of Arms of Germany
Pretenders to the German
and Prussian thrones since 1918

Emperor William II (1918-1941)
Crown Prince William (1941-1951)
Prince Louis Ferdinand (1951-1994)
Prince Georg Friedrich (1994-)

See also House of Hohenzollern