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The title "Princess of Poland" was never used. King’s daughter or royal daughter was called królewna. Princesses, in Polish księżniczka, ksiėżna were mainly used in Princely and ducal families of Poland. However, legitimate daughters of the kings and royals of Poland are also referred to and translates as Polish princesses in English ...
Some believe that she married the King of Poland in 1783, but their marriage was morganatic, so she wasn't Queen of Poland. However, there is no known reason for the marriage to have been morganatic, as Poniatowski's Pacta conventa required him to marry a Polish noblewoman, a requirement she satisfied, and there is no evidence that the marriage ...
Following the Napoleonic Wars, many sovereigns claimed the title of Polish king, duke or ruler, notably German (the King of Prussia was also the sovereign of the Grand Duchy of Posen 1815-1918), Russian (the Congress Kingdom of Poland was founded in 1815 with the widely unrecognized title of King of Poland to the Emperor of Russia until 1915 ...
of Poland: Vsevolod IV of Kiev r. 1203, 1206, 1207, 1208–1212: Roman the Great of Halych 1152–1205 r. 1189, 1198–1205: Władysław Odonic 1190–1239: Henry II the Pious 1196–1238–1241: Bolesław V the Chaste 1226–1243–1279: Michael of Chernigov r. 1223–1235, 1242–1246: Daniel of Galicia 1201–1264 r. 1213–1264: Bolesław ...
This list is not complete because in the 19th century Poland was a divided kingdom, between the Russian, the Austrian and the German Empires. Polish-Lithuanian magnates 1576-1586 Princes
Princesses of Poland (66 P) Pages in category "Polish royalty" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Princesses of Poland (66 P) Princesses of Serbia (2 C, 4 P) Princesses of the Netherlands (2 C, 10 P) R. Romanian princesses (18 P) Russian princesses (6 C, 1 P) S.
created at the Congress of Vienna and therefore dubbed "Congress Poland" Charlotte of Prussia: Nicholas I: Hohenzollern: 1825–1855 husband deposed by Sejm during uprising of 1831, autonomy abolished in 1832 Marie of Hesse and by Rhine: Alexander II: Hesse: 1855–1880 annexed into Russia after uprising in 1863: Dagmar of Denmark: Alexander III