Royals and the Reich

Royals and the Reich
Title Royals and the Reich PDF eBook
Author Jonathan Petropoulos
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages 546
Release 2008-08-12
Genre History
ISBN 0199796076

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Princes Philipp and Christoph von Hessen-Kassel, great-grandsons of Queen Victoria of England, had been humiliated by defeat in World War I and, like much of the German aristocracy, feared the social unrest wrought by the ineffectual Weimar Republic. Jonathan Petropoulos shows how the princes, lured by prominent positions in the Nazi regime and highly susceptible to nationalist appeals, became enthusiastic supporters of Hitler. Prince Philipp, son-in-law to the King of Italy, became the highest-ranking prince in the Nazi state and developed a close personal relationship with Hitler and Hermann Göering. Prince Christoph was a prominent SS officer and head of the most important intelligence agency in the Third Reich. In return, the princes made the Nazis socially acceptable to wealthy, high-society patrons. Prince Philipp even introduced Göering to Mussolini at a critical stage in the Nazi Party's development and later served as a liaison between Hitler and the Italian dictator. Permitted access to Hessen family private papers and the Royal Archives at Windsor Castle, Petropoulos follows the story of the House of Hesse through to its tragic denouement--the princes' betrayal and persecution by an increasingly paranoid Hitler and prosecution and denazification by the Allies.

Royals and the Reich

Royals and the Reich
Title Royals and the Reich PDF eBook
Author Jonathan Petropoulos
Publisher Oxford University Press
Pages 545
Release 2008-08-12
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0195339274

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The link between Hitler's Third Reich and European royalty has gone largely unexplored due to the secrecy surrounding royal families. Jonathan Petropoulos uses unprecedented access to royal archives to tell the fascinating story of the Princes of Hesse and the important role they played in the Nazi regime.

Royal Kinship. Anglo-German Family Networks 1815-1918

Royal Kinship. Anglo-German Family Networks 1815-1918
Title Royal Kinship. Anglo-German Family Networks 1815-1918 PDF eBook
Author Karina Urbach
Publisher Walter de Gruyter
Pages 177
Release 2008-12-18
Genre History
ISBN 3598441231

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Whenever the British Press wants to attack the Royal Family, they make a jibe about “their foreign roots”. The Royals – as they say – are simply a posh version of German invaders. But did German relatives really influence decisions made by any British monarchs or are they just an “imagined community”, invented by journalists and historians? The Royal Archives at Windsor gave the authors – among others John Röhl, doyen of 19th century monarchical history – open access to Royal correspondences with six German houses: Hanover, Prussia, Mecklenburg, Coburg, Hesse and Battenberg.

The End of the German Monarchy

The End of the German Monarchy
Title The End of the German Monarchy PDF eBook
Author John Van der Kiste
Publisher Fonthill Media
Pages 358
Release 2017-11-07
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN

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Royal Heirs in Imperial Germany

Royal Heirs in Imperial Germany
Title Royal Heirs in Imperial Germany PDF eBook
Author Frank Lorenz Müller
Publisher Springer
Pages 266
Release 2017-03-24
Genre History
ISBN 1137551275

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This book explores the development and viability of Germany’s sub-national monarchies in the decades before their sudden demise in 1918. It does so by focusing on the men who turned out to be the last ones to inherit the crowns of the country’s three smaller kingdoms: Prince Ludwig of Bavaria, Prince Friedrich August of Saxony and Prince Wilhelm of Württemberg. Imperial Germany was not a monolithic block, but a motley federation of more than twenty allied regional monarchies, headed by the Kaiser. When the German Reich became a republic at the end of the First World War, all of these kings, grand dukes, dukes and princes were swept away within a fortnight. By examining the lives, experiences and functions of these three men as heirs to the throne during the decades when they prepared themselves for their predestined role as king, this study investigates what the future of the German model of constitutional monarchy looked like before it was so abruptly discarded.

The Pity of War

The Pity of War
Title The Pity of War PDF eBook
Author Miranda Seymour
Publisher Rowman & Littlefield
Pages 529
Release 2014-10-30
Genre History
ISBN 1442241756

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In 1613, a beautiful Stuart princess married a handsome young German prince. This was a love match, but it was also an alliance that aimed to meld Europe's two great Protestant powers. Before Elizabeth and Frederick left London for the court in Heidelberg, they watched a performance of The Winter's Tale. In 1943, a group of British POWs gave a performance of that same play to a group of enthusiastic Nazi guards in Bavaria. Nothing about the story of England and Germany, as this remarkable book demonstrates, is as simple as we might expect. Miranda Seymour tells the forgotten story of England’s centuries of profound connection and increasingly rivalrous friendship with Germany, linked by a shared faith, a shared hunger for power, a shared culture (Germany never doubted that Shakespeare belonged to them, as much as to England), and a shared leadership. German monarchs ruled over England for three hundred years—and only ceased to do so through a change of name. This extraordinary and heart-breaking history—told through the lives of princes and painters, soldiers and sailors, bakers and bankers, charlatans and saints—traces two countries so entwined that one German living in England in 1915 refused to choose where his allegiance lay. It was, he said, as if his parents had quarreled. Germany’s connection to the island it loved, patronized, influenced, and fought was unique. Indeed, British soldiers went to war in 1914 against a country to which many of them—as one freely confessed the week before his death on the battlefront—felt more closely connected than to their own. Drawing on a wealth of unpublished papers and personal interviews, the author has uncovered stories that remind us—poignantly, wittily, and tragically—of the powerful bonds many have chosen to forget.

Nazi Empire

Nazi Empire
Title Nazi Empire PDF eBook
Author Shelley Baranowski
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 381
Release 2011
Genre History
ISBN 0521857392

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Examines the history of Germany from 1871 to 1945 as an expression of the 'tension of empire'.