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Daughter of Prussia: Louise, Grand Duchess of Baden and her family

door John Van der Kiste

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Princess Louise of Prussia, later Grand Duchess of Baden (1838-1923) was the daughter of William I, King of Prussia and German Emperor. Her long life spanned the year of revolutions in 1848 and the immediate aftermath of the First World War. She took little interest in the political matters of the day and, apart from being an ardent supporter of Roman Catholics in Germany, rarely made her views known. Yet for several decades she played a supportive role where her family was concerned, particularly involving herself in charitable works during the Franco-Prussian war of 1870. She and her husband Frederick, Grand Duke of Baden (1826-1907), had three children and it is from their daughter Victoria, consort of King Gustav V, that the Swedish royal family are descended. This concise account examines her life and times.… (meer)
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Van der Kiste writes "Princess Louise Marie Elizabeth of Prussia, later Grand Duchess of Baden, is a somewhat shadowy figure in the annals of the house of Hohenzollern. . . she had little impact on the age in which she lived. . . She made no effort to involve herself with issues of the day. . . " Kudos to the author for being honest. I was hoping that there was going to be something a little more here, but there's not really.

Van der Kiste relies exclusively on published sources in English, which might be a problem.

One thing which I did think was interesting - and which could have been expanded upon - was that at the conclusion of World War I, Louise - then the Dowager Duchess - and her son Frederick, the last Grand Duke - were allowed to stay in Baden after the Revolution that toppled the monarchy there. The new republican government made a generous financial "settlement" to the royal family, providing them with property and money, and the legislature even adopted "a resolution expressing warm recognition and gratitude. . ." for their services before the war. When Louise died in 1923, aged 84, she did so "at home" in one of the family castles - albeit "a small one" - in relative comfort (considerable, really, compared to the lives of most Germans in the year of hyperinflation). ( )
  yooperprof | May 3, 2020 |
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Princess Louise of Prussia, later Grand Duchess of Baden (1838-1923) was the daughter of William I, King of Prussia and German Emperor. Her long life spanned the year of revolutions in 1848 and the immediate aftermath of the First World War. She took little interest in the political matters of the day and, apart from being an ardent supporter of Roman Catholics in Germany, rarely made her views known. Yet for several decades she played a supportive role where her family was concerned, particularly involving herself in charitable works during the Franco-Prussian war of 1870. She and her husband Frederick, Grand Duke of Baden (1826-1907), had three children and it is from their daughter Victoria, consort of King Gustav V, that the Swedish royal family are descended. This concise account examines her life and times.

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