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Prince William of Denmark and Norway or Prince Vilhelm (21 February 1687 – 23 November 1705) was the youngest son of Christian V of Denmark and Charlotte Amalie of Hesse-Kassel, and thus a younger brother of Frederick IV. In 1696, Joachim Pritzbuer, who was replaced in 1705 by Martin Balthasar von Waldersee, was appointed Vilhelm's chamberlain.
Crown Prince Frederik: Son 2 October 1671 Born 25 August 1699 Father died, became king Prince Jørgen, 1671–1672, uncle Prince Christian Vilhelm, 1672–1673, brother Prince Jørgen, 1673–1675, uncle Prince Christian, 1675–1695, brother Prince Carl, 1695–1697, brother Prince Christian, 1697–1698, son Prince Carl, 1698–1699, brother
In 1852 Dagmar's father became heir-presumptive to the throne of Denmark, largely due to the succession rights of his wife Louise as niece of King Christian VIII. In 1853, he was given the title Prince of Denmark and he and his family were given an official summer residence, Bernstorff Palace, north of Copenhagen. It quickly became Princess ...
On 10 November 1810, William was married in Amalienborg Palace to Princess Louise Charlotte of Denmark (1789–1864) daughter of Hereditary Prince Frederick of Denmark and Norway (1753–1805) and Sophia Frederica of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (1758–1794). Children of the marriage: Karoline Friederike Marie of Hesse-Kassel (15 August 1811 – 10 ...
On 28 May 1826, she was engaged to her second cousin, Prince Frederick of Denmark, the future King Frederick VII. [1] Prince Frederick was a direct male-line descendant of King Frederick V by his second wife, Queen Juliana Maria of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel , and the engagement was very popular as it united the two lines of the Royal House, which ...
The royals take Manhattan! Earlier today, Kensington Palace announced that Prince William will be making a trip to NYC this September, and now news has surfaced that Denmark's Crown Prince ...
The royal family of Denmark during the Queen Margrethe II's 70th birthday on 16 April 2010. From left to right: Queen Mary of Denmark (then Crown Princess), Count Felix (then Prince Felix), King Frederik X (then Crown Prince), Crown Prince Christian (then Prince Christian), Queen Margrethe II, Count Nikolai (then Prince Nikolai), Prince Henrik, Prince Joachim and Princess Isabella
Christian IX of Denmark with his wife and their six children, 1862. Left to right: Dagmar, Frederick, Valdemar, Christian IX, Queen Louise, Thyra, William, and Alexandra. Prince Christian was given the title Prince of Denmark and his family moved into a new official residence, Bernstorff Palace.