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  1. Friedrich Heinrich was the oldest son of Prince Albert of Prussia (1837–1906) and his wife Princess Marie of Saxe-Altenburg (1854–1898). He stood over six feet tall. He studied law at Friedrich-Wilhelms University in Bonn. In 1895, he became a member of the fraternity " Corps Borussia Bonn ," and later became an honorary member of the ...

  2. Lutheranism. Albert Frederick ( German: Albrecht Friedrich; Polish: Albrecht Fryderyk; 7 May 1553 – 27 August 1618) was the Duke of Prussia, from 1568 until his death. He was a son of Albert of Prussia and Anna Marie of Brunswick-Lüneburg. He was the second and last Prussian duke of the Ansbach branch of the Hohenzollern family.

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  4. Princess Elisabeth. Princess Alexandrine. v. t. e. Prince Albert of Prussia ( German: Friedrich Wilhelm Nikolaus Albrecht; 8 May 1837 – 13 September 1906) was a Prussian general field marshal, Herrenmeister (Grand Master) of the Order of Saint John from 1883 until his death, and regent of the Duchy of Brunswick from 1885, also until his death.

    • 13 September 1906 (aged 69), Kamenz
  5. Prince Friedrich Heinrich Albrecht, Prince of Prussia ( German: Wilhelm Ernst Alexander Friedrich Heinrich Albrecht Prinz von Preußen; 15 April 1874 in Hanover – 13 November 1940 in Seidenberg) was a Prussian officer, member of the house of Hohenzollern, and a great-grandson of Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia.

  6. www.napoleon-series.org › AnhaltAlbrechtThe Napoleon Series

    Prince of Anhalt-Dessau and his first wife Johanne Sophie Herre. Albrecht himself married Sophie Henriette von Wedel in June 1764, and they had five children. Two of them, Friedrich Heinrich Leopold Albrecht (1766-1803) and August Gustav (1772-1823), became lower ranking officers in the Prussian army.

  7. Friedrich was unflatteringly memorialized by Karl Kraus in his Last Days of Mankind as the blasé and inane ‘Archduke Bumsti’. Albrecht had two daughters of his own. The elder of the two, Maria Theresia (1845–1927), married Duke Philipp of Württemberg and lived with her family in the Ringstrasse palace today known as the Hotel Imperial.

  8. Chapters 9–10 concern Albrecht von Stosch, especially in his role of confidant of Crown Prince Friedrich Wilhelm from the later 1860s through operations in the Loire Valley in 1870–71. These chapters are particularly valuable for the light they shed on one of Moltke’s most reliable senior officers, too often neglected in the literature.

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