Frederick III King Prussia 1831-1888

Paternal Family Tree: Hohenzollern

On 18th October 1831 Frederick III King Prussia was born to William I King Prussia [aged 34] at New Palace, Potsdam.

Around 1842 . John Phillip [aged 24]. Victorias Wedding with [his future wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 1] and Frederick III King Prussia [aged 10]

In 1858 [his future mother-in-law] Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom [aged 38] appointed five Knights of the Garter:

720th Frederick III King Prussia [aged 26].

721st Arthur Wellesley 2nd Duke Wellington [aged 50].

722nd William Cavendish 7th Duke Devonshire [aged 49].

723rd King Pedro V of Portugal [aged 20].

724th The [his future brother-in-law] Prince of Wales [aged 16].

On 25th January 1858 Frederick III King Prussia [aged 26] and Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 17] were married in the Chapel Royal, St James's Palace. She the daughter of Prince Albert Saxe Coburg Gotha [aged 38] and Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom [aged 38]. He the son of William I King Prussia [aged 60]. They were third cousins.

The Diary of George Price Boyce 1858. 8th February 1858. February 8. On the road stopped to see the [his wife] Princess Royal [aged 17] accompanied by her husband, the Prince Frederick of Prussia [aged 26], [his father-in-law] Prince Albert [aged 38] and the [his brother-in-law] Prince of Wales [aged 16] go by on her departure from England. She was flushed, and her eyes swollen and red and she had evidently been crying. The snow, the first this year, was falling and driving into her face. Yet she kept her veil up and bowed to the throng who lined the roads.

On 27th January 1859 [his son] Wilhelm Hohenzollern was born to Frederick III King Prussia [aged 27] and [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 18] at Crown Prince's Palace, Berlin. He a grandson of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. He married 1. 27th February 1881 his fourth cousin Empress Auguste Viktoria Oldenburg, daughter of Frederick Christian Oldenburg II Duke Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Augustenburg and Adelheid Hohenlohe Langenburg Duchess Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Augustenburg, and had issue 2. 9th November 1922 Hermine Reuss.

On 24th July 1860 [his daughter] Charlotte Hohenzollern was born to Frederick III King Prussia [aged 28] and [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 19]. She a granddaughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. She married her third cousin twice removed Bernhard Saxe Meiningen III Duke Saxe Meiningen, son of Georg II Duke of Saxe Meiningen, and had issue.

On 2nd January 1861 [his uncle] Frederick William IV King Prussia [aged 65] died. His brother [his father] William [aged 63] succeeded I King Prussia.

The Times. 24th December 1861. Yesterday, with little of the pomp and pageantry of a State ceremonial, but with every outward mark of respect, and with all the solemnity which befitted his high station and his public virties, the [his father-in-law] mortal remains of the husband [deceased] of our [his mother-in-law] Queen [aged 42] were interred in the last resting-place of England's Sovereigns-the Chapel Royal of St. George's, Windsor [Map]. By the express desire of his Royal Highness the funeral was of the plainest and most private character; but in the Chapel, to do honour to his obsequies, were assembled all the chiefest men of the State, and throughout England, by every sign of sorrow and imourning, the nation manifested its sense of the loss wlhich it has sustaiined. Windsor itself wore an aspect of the most profound gloom. Every shop was closed and every blind drawn down. The streets were silent and almost deserted, and all wvho appeared abroad were dressed in the deepest mourning. The great bell of Windsor Castle [Map] clanged out: its doleful sound at intervals from an early hour, and minute bells were tolled also at St. John's Church. At the parish church of Cleover and at St. John's there were services in the morning and: aternoon, and the day was observed throughout the Royal borough in the strictest manner. The weather was in character with the occasion, a chill, damp air, with a dull leaden sky above, increased the gloom which hung over all. There were but few visitors in the town, for the procession did not pass beyond the immediate precincts of the Chapel and Castle, and none were admitted except those connected with the Castle andi their friends. At 11 o'clock a strong force of the A division took possession of the avenues leading to the Chapel Royal, and from that time only the guests specially invited and those who were to take part in the ceremonial were allowed to pass. Shortly afterwards a of honour of the Grenadier Guards, of which regiment his Royal Highness was Colonel, with the colonrs of the regiment shrouded in crape, marched in and took up its position before the principal entrance to the Chapel Royal. Another guard of honour from the same regiment was also on duty in the Quadrangle at the entrance to the State apartments. They were speedily followed by a squadron of the 2nd Life Guards dismounted, and by two companies of the Fusileer Guards, who were drawn uip in single file along each side of the road by which the procession was to pass, from the Norman gateway to the Chapel door. The officers wore the deepest military mourning-scarves, sword-knots, and rosettes of crape. In the Rome Park was stationed a troop of Horse Artillery, which commenced firing minute guns at the end of the Long Walk, advancing slowly until it reached the Castle gates just at the close of the ceremony. The Ministers, the officers of the Queen's Household, and other distinguished personages who had been honoured with an invitation to attend the ceremonial, reached Windsor a special train from Paddington. They were met by carriages provided for them at the station, and began to arrive at the Chapel Royal soon after 11 o'clock. The Earl of Derby [aged 62], the Archbishop of Canterbury [aged 81], Earl Russell [aged 69], and the Duke of Buccleuch were among the first to make their appearance, and as they alighted at the door of the Chapel they were received by the proper officials and conducted to the seats appointed for them in the Choir. In the Great Quadrangle were drawn up the hearse and the mourning coaches, and, all the preparations having been completed within the Castle, the procession began to be formed shortly before 12 o'clock. It had been originally intended that it should leave the Castle by the St. George's gate, and, proceeding down Castle-hill, approach the Chapel through Henry VII.'s gateway, but at a late hour this arrangement was changed, and the shorter route by the Norman gatewvay was chosen.

The crowd which had gradually collected at the foot of Castle-hill, owing to this change, saw nothing of the procession but the empty carriages as they returned to the Castle after setting down at the Chapel. The few spectators who were fortunate enough to gain admission to the Lower Ward stood in a narrow fringe along the edge of the flags in front of the houses of the Poor Knights, and their presence was the only exception to the strict privacy of the ceremonial. The [his brother-in-law] Prince of Wales [aged 20] and the other Royal mourners assembled in the Oak Room, but did not form part of the procession. They were conveyed to the Chapel in private carriages before the coffin was placed in the hearse, passing through St. George's gatewayinto the Lower Ward. In the first carriage were the Prince of Wales, Prince Arthur [aged 11], and the Duke of Saxe Coburg [aged 8]. The Crown Prince of Prussia [aged 30], the Duke of Brabant [aged 26], and the Count of Flanders [aged 24] followed in the next; and in the others were the Duke de Nemours [aged 47], Prince Louis of Hesse [aged 24], Prince Edward of Saxe-Weimar [aged 38], and the Maharajah Dhuleep Singh, with the gentlemen of their respective suites. Scarcely had they alighted at the door of Wolsey's Chapel, from which they were conducted through the Chapter Room to the door of the Chapel Royal to be in readiness to meet the coffin, when the first minute gun fired in tlhe distance, and the rattle of the troops reversing arms announced that the procession had started, and exactly at 12 o'clock the first mourning coach moved from under the Norman gateway. First came nine mourning coaches, each drawn by four horses, conveying the Physicians, Equerries, and other members of the household of the late Prince. In the last were the Lord Steward [aged 63] (Earl St. Germans), the Lord Chamberlain [aged 56] (Viscount Sidney), and the Master of the Horse [aged 57] (the Marquis of Ailesbury). The carriages and trappings were of the plainest description; the horses had black velvet housings and feathers, but on the carriages there, were no feathers or ornaments of any kind. The mourning coaches were followed by one of the Queen's carriages, drawn by six horses, and attended by servants in State liveries, in which was the Groom of the Stole [aged 26], Earl Spencer, carrying the crown, and a Lord of the Bedchamber, Lord George Lennox, carrying the baton, sword, and hat of his late Royal Highness. Next escorted by a troop of the 2nd Life Guards, came the hearse, drawn by six black horses, which, like the carriages, was quite plain and unornamented. On the housings of the horses and on the sides of the hearse were emblazoned the scutcheons of Her Majesty and of the Prince, each surmounted by a, crown, the Prince's arms being in black and Her Majesty's in white. The procession was closed by four State carriages.

Around 1862. Franz Xaver Winterhalter [aged 56]. [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 21] and Frederick III King Prussia [aged 30] and their chlidren.

On 14th August 1862 [his son] Prince Henry Hohenzollern was born to Frederick III King Prussia [aged 30] and [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 21]. He a grandson of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. He married 24th May 1888 his first cousin Irene Hesse Darmstadt, daughter of Prince Louis Hesse Darmstadt IV Grand Duke and Princess Alice Saxe Coburg Gotha, and had issue.

On 10th March 1863 [his brother-in-law] King Edward VII of the United Kingdom [aged 21] and Alexandra of Denmark Queen Consort England [aged 18] were married at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle [Map]. She the daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark [aged 44] and Queen Louise Hesse-Kassel of Denmark [aged 45]. He the son of [his father-in-law] Prince Albert Saxe Coburg Gotha and [his mother-in-law] Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom [aged 43]. They were third cousin once removed. She a great x 3 granddaughter of King George II of Great Britain and Ireland.

On 15th September 1864 [his son] Sigismund Hohenzollern was born to Frederick III King Prussia [aged 32] and [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 23]. He a grandson of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. He died aged one in 1866.

On 12th April 1866 [his daughter] Viktoria Hohenzollern was born to Frederick III King Prussia [aged 34] and [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 25]. She a granddaughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom.

On 24th May 1866 [his brother-in-law] Prince Alfred Windsor [aged 21] was created 1st Duke Edinburgh.

The True Chronicles of Jean le Bel Volume 2 Chapters 61-109 1342-1361

The Chronicle of Jean le Bel, Volume 2 continues one of the most important fourteenth-century accounts of the early Hundred Years’ War. Written by the Liège chronicler Jean le Bel, this vivid narrative follows the fortunes of Edward III, Jean II of France, the Black Prince, the great nobles of France and England, and the soldiers, captains and companies who shaped the conflict. This volume covers some of the most dramatic events of the period, including the battles of Crécy and Poitiers, the siege and capture of Calais, the captivity of King John, the rise of the Jacquerie, the turmoil in Paris under Étienne Marcel and Charles of Navarre, the devastation caused by the free companies, Edward III’s great campaign of 1359–1360, and the negotiations leading to the Treaty of Brétigny. Jean le Bel’s chronicle is especially valuable for its lively detail, its interest in chivalry, warfare, politics and reputation, and its influence on later chroniclers, most famously Froissart. This English translation presents the text in clear, readable British English while preserving the force and character of the original narrative. The translation includes extensive notes to help the reader better understand Jean le Bel's text. Volume 2 also includes translated appendices drawn from royal and administrative records, many from the English Record Office, which illuminate Edward III’s campaigns in Brittany, the siege and occupation of Calais, naval preparations, military finance, appointments, safe conducts and related affairs.

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On 18th June 1866 [his son] Sigismund Hohenzollern [aged 1] died.

On 10th February 1868 [his son] Waldemar Hohenzollern was born to Frederick III King Prussia [aged 36] and [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 27]. He a grandson of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. He died aged eleven in 1879.

On 14th June 1870 [his daughter] Sophia Hohenzollern Queen Consort Greece was born to Frederick III King Prussia [aged 38] and [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 29]. She a granddaughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. She married 27th October 1889 her second cousin once removed Constantine I King Greece and had issue.

On 21st May 1871 John Campbell 9th Duke Argyll [aged 25] and [his sister-in-law] Princess Louise Caroline Alberta Windsor Duchess Argyll [aged 23] were married. She the daughter of [his father-in-law] Prince Albert Saxe Coburg Gotha and [his mother-in-law] Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom [aged 51]. He the son of George Douglas Campbell 8th Duke Argyll [aged 48] and Elizabeth Georgiana Leveson-Gower Duchess Argyll.

On 1st December 1871 George Philip Cecil Arthur Stanhope 7th Earl Chesterfield [aged 40] died of typhoid unmarried. His third cousin George [aged 49] succeeded 8th Earl Chesterfield, 8th Baron Stanhope of Shelford in Nottinghamshire. He had been staying at Londesborough Lodge Scarborough with the [his brother-in-law] Prince of Wales [aged 30] who also contracted typhoid but survived.

On 22nd April 1872 [his daughter] Margaret Hohenzollern was born to Frederick III King Prussia [aged 40] and [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 31]. She a granddaughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. She married 25th January 1893 her third cousin twice removed Frederick Charles I King Finland and had issue.

On 23rd January 1874 [his brother-in-law] Prince Alfred Windsor [aged 29] and Maria Holstein Gottorp Romanov [aged 20] were married. He the son of [his father-in-law] Prince Albert Saxe Coburg Gotha and [his mother-in-law] Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom [aged 54]. They were third cousin once removed.

On 18th February 1878 a double Royal Wedding took place at Berlin. The brides were second-cousins.

[his son-in-law] Bernhard Saxe Meiningen III Duke Saxe Meiningen [aged 26] and Charlotte Hohenzollern [aged 17] were married. She the daughter of Frederick III King Prussia [aged 46] and Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 37]. He the son of Georg II Duke of Saxe Meiningen [aged 51]. They were third cousin twice removed. She a granddaughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom.

Frederick Augustus II Grand Duke of Oldenburg [aged 25] and Elisabeth Anna Hohenzollern [aged 21] were married. They were fifth cousins.

The event was attended by King Leopold II of Belgium [aged 42] and his wife Marie Henriette of Austria, and the Prince of Wales [aged 36] and his brother Prince Arthur Windsor 1st Duke Connaught and Strathearn [aged 27].

On 13th March 1879 [his brother-in-law] Prince Arthur Windsor 1st Duke Connaught and Strathearn [aged 28] and Luise Margarete Hohenzollern Duchess Connaught [aged 18] were married at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle [Map]. He the son of [his father-in-law] Prince Albert Saxe Coburg Gotha and [his mother-in-law] Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom [aged 59]. They were third cousin once removed.

On 27th March 1879 [his son] Waldemar Hohenzollern [aged 11] died.

On 27th February 1881 Wilhelm Hohenzollern [aged 22] and Empress Auguste Viktoria Oldenburg [aged 22] were married. She the daughter of Frederick Christian Oldenburg II Duke Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Augustenburg and Adelheid Hohenlohe Langenburg Duchess Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Augustenburg. He the son of Frederick III King Prussia [aged 49] and Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 40]. They were fourth cousins. He a grandson of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. She a great x 4 granddaughter of King George II of Great Britain and Ireland.

On 24th May 1881 [his brother-in-law] Leopold Saxe Coburg Gotha 1st Duke Albany [aged 28] was created 1st Duke Albany.

On 27th April 1882 [his brother-in-law] Leopold Saxe Coburg Gotha 1st Duke Albany [aged 29] and Helena Waldeck Duchess Albany were married at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle [Map]. She by marriage Duchess Albany. He the son of [his father-in-law] Prince Albert Saxe Coburg Gotha and [his mother-in-law] Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom [aged 62].

William of Worcester's Chronicle of England

William of Worcester, born around 1415, and died around 1482 was secretary to John Fastolf, the renowned soldier of the Hundred Years War, during which time he collected documents, letters, and wrote a record of events. Following their return to England in 1440 William was witness to major events. Twice in his chronicle he uses the first person: 1. when writing about the murder of Thomas, 7th Baron Scales, in 1460, he writes '… and I saw him lying naked in the cemetery near the porch of the church of St. Mary Overie in Southwark …' and 2. describing King Edward IV's entry into London in 1461 he writes '… proclaimed that all the people themselves were to recognize and acknowledge Edward as king. I was present and heard this, and immediately went down with them into the city'. William’s Chronicle is rich in detail. It is the source of much information about the Wars of the Roses, including the term 'Diabolical Marriage' to describe the marriage of Queen Elizabeth Woodville’s brother John’s marriage to Katherine, Dowager Duchess of Norfolk, he aged twenty, she sixty-five or more, and the story about a paper crown being placed in mockery on the severed head of Richard, 3rd Duke of York.

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On 28th March 1884 [his brother-in-law] Leopold Saxe Coburg Gotha 1st Duke Albany [aged 30] died at the Villa Nevada, Cannes.

On 9th March 1888 [his father] William I King Prussia [aged 90] died. His son Frederick [aged 56] succeeded III Emperor aka Kaiser, III King Prussia. [his wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 47] by marriage Empress aka Kaiser, Queen Prussia.

On 24th May 1888 Prince Henry Hohenzollern [aged 25] and Irene Hesse Darmstadt [aged 21] were married. She the daughter of Prince Louis Hesse Darmstadt IV Grand Duke [aged 50] and Princess Alice Saxe Coburg Gotha. He the son of Frederick III King Prussia [aged 56] and Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 47]. They were first cousins. He a grandson of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. She a granddaughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom.

On 15th June 1888 Frederick III King Prussia [aged 56] died at New Palace, Potsdam. His son Wilhelm [aged 29] succeeded II Emperor aka Kaiser. Hermine Reuss by marriage Empress aka Kaiser.

On 5th August 1901 [his former wife] Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [aged 60] died.

Royal Ancestors of Frederick III King Prussia 1831-1888

Kings Wessex: Great x 23 Grand Son of King Edmund "Ironside" I of England

Kings Gwynedd: Great x 21 Grand Son of Owain "Great" King Gwynedd

Kings Seisyllwg: Great x 27 Grand Son of Hywel "Dda aka Good" King Seisyllwg King Deheubarth

Kings Powys: Great x 22 Grand Son of Maredudd ap Bleddyn King Powys

Kings Godwinson: Great x 22 Grand Son of King Harold II of England

Kings England: Great x 7 Grand Son of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Kings Scotland: Great x 7 Grand Son of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Kings France: Great x 14 Grand Son of King Charles V of France

Kings Duke Aquitaine: Great x 27 Grand Son of Ranulf I Duke Aquitaine

Kings Spain: Great x 13 Grand Son of John II King Aragon

Royal Descendants of Frederick III King Prussia 1831-1888
Number after indicates the number of unique routes of descent. Descendants of Kings and Queens not included.

Wilhelm Hohenzollern [1]

George II King Hellenes [1]

Alexander I King Greece [1]

Paul I King Greece [1]

Ancestors of Frederick III King Prussia 1831-1888

Great x 4 Grandfather: Frederick I King Prussia 7 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 3 Grandfather: Frederick William "Soldier King" I King Prussia 2 x Great Grandson of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Great x 4 Grandmother: Sophia Charlotte Hanover Queen Consort Prussia Great Granddaughter of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Great x 2 Grandfather: Augustus William Hohenzollern 3 x Great Grandson of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Great x 4 Grandfather: King George I Great Grandson of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Great x 3 Grandmother: Sophia Dorothea Hanover Queen Consort Prussia 2 x Great Granddaughter of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Great x 4 Grandmother: Sophia Dorothea of Celle 12 x Great Granddaughter of King Philip III of France

Great x 1 Grandfather: Frederick William II King Prussia 4 x Great Grandson of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Grandfather: Frederick William III King Prussia 5 x Great Grandson of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Great x 4 Grandfather: Landgrave Ernest Louis of Hesse-Darmstadt 7 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 3 Grandfather: Landgrave Louis VIII of Hesse-Darmstadt 8 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 2 Grandfather: Landgrave Louis IX of Hesse-Darmstadt 9 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 1 Grandmother: Queen Frederica Louisa of Prussia 10 x Great Granddaughter of John II King Aragon

Great x 3 Grandfather: Count Palatine Christian III of Zweibrücken

Great x 2 Grandmother: Countess Palatine Caroline of Zweibrücken

father: William I King Prussia 6 x Great Grandson of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland

Great x 4 Grandfather: Duke Adolphus Frederick I of Mecklenburg-Schwerin 10 x Great Grandson of King Philip III of France

Great x 3 Grandfather: Duke Adolphus Frederick II of Mecklenburg-Strelitz 11 x Great Grandson of King Philip III of France

Great x 4 Grandmother: Maria Katharina 13 x Great Granddaughter of King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England

Great x 2 Grandfather: Charles Louis Frederick Duke of Mecklenburg 12 x Great Grandson of King Philip III of France

Great x 4 Grandfather: Christian William I Prince of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen

Great x 3 Grandmother: Christiane Emilie of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen

Great x 1 Grandfather: Grand Duke Charles II of Mecklenburg Strelitz 10 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 4 Grandfather: Ernest Saxe Gotha 7 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 3 Grandfather: Ernest Frederick Duke of Saxe-Hildburghausen 8 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 2 Grandmother: Princess Elisabeth Albertine of Saxe-Hildburghausen 9 x Great Granddaughter of John II King Aragon

Great x 4 Grandfather: George Louis I Count of Erbach-Erbach

Great x 3 Grandmother: Countess Sophia Albertine of Erbach-Erbach

Grandmother: Queen Louise of Prussia 11 x Great Granddaughter of John II King Aragon

Great x 4 Grandfather: Landgrave Ernest Louis of Hesse-Darmstadt 7 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 3 Grandfather: Landgrave Louis VIII of Hesse-Darmstadt 8 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 2 Grandfather: Prince George William of Hesse-Darmstadt 9 x Great Grandson of John II King Aragon

Great x 1 Grandmother: Princess Friederike of Hesse-Darmstadt 10 x Great Granddaughter of John II King Aragon

Great x 2 Grandmother: Countess Maria Louise Albertine of Leiningen-Dagsburg-Falkenburg

Frederick III King Prussia 7 x Great Grandson of King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland