Hohenzollern

From Freepedia

The Hohenzollerns are a European royal family which came to rule Brandenburg, in 1415. They ruled the Duchy of Prussia from 15251701; and the Kingdom of Prussia from 17011918. They ruled the German Empire from 18711918. They were dethroned following World War I. The Hohenzollern family came originally from south-west Germany; their name derives from their 13th-century castle of Zollern, near Stuttgart, Germany. Later, they became rulers of Nuremberg and other territories in Franconia and Swabia. Nonetheless, the real importance of the Hohenzollerns began with their being raised to the rank of Elector for the Holy Roman Empire in 1415 upon the acquisition of Brandenburg by the first Hohenzollern Elector, Friedrich I; the Brandenburg lands would form the core of the family's power for the next five hundred years.

The Order of the House of Hohenzollern was a chivalric order of the family during their tenure in Prussia.

In chronological order, and grouped according to their most important title, the Hohenzollern rulers were:

Contents

Electors of Brandenburg

Margraves of Brandenburg-Ansbach

Margraves of Brandenburg-Bayreuth

  • Johann the Alchemist (1440–1457)
  • Albrecht Achilles (1457–1486)
  • Siegmund (1486–1495)
  • Friedrich V. (Brandenburg-Bayreuth) (1495–1521)
  • Georg Friedrich (1557–1603)
  • Christian (1603–1655) Margrave of Brandenburg-Prussia
  • Christian Ernst (1655–1712)
  • Georg Wilhelm (1712–1726)
  • Georg Friedrich Karl (1726–1735)
  • Friedrich (1735–1763)
  • Friedrich Christian (1763–1769)

There were also Margraves of Brandenburg-Culmbach, Brandenburg-Kuestrin, Brandenburg-Ansbach-Bayreuth and many more.

Dukes of Prussia

Kings of Prussia

German Emperors

The Hohenzollern family continues to exist, and since Einrich's death the scions have been:

Another branch of the Hohenzollerns, actually the dynastically senior line, the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringens, were also important landowners in pre-German Empire Germany, and later were the princes (1866–1881) and kings (1881–1947) of Romania. French opposition to their candidacy for the throne of Spain led to the Franco-Prussian War (1870–1871) and the founding (January 1871) of the German Empire.

Kings of Romania (Princes to 1881)

See Also



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