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  2. Frankfurter Kranz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frankfurter_Kranz

    The outside of the cake is then thickly coated with more buttercream and topped with caramel-covered brittle nuts, called Krokant, toasted almond flakes and/or ground hazelnuts. Krokant is a signature ingredient in the dish. The Frankfurter Kranz is considered reminiscent of Frankfurt as the coronation city of the Holy Roman Emperors.

  3. Gerald R. Ford Jr. House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_R._Ford_Jr._House

    The President Gerald R. Ford Jr. House is a historic house at 514 Crown View Drive in Alexandria, Virginia. Built in 1955, it was the home of Gerald Ford from then until his assumption of the United States presidency on August 9, 1974. The house is typical of middle-class housing in the northern Virginia suburbs of Washington from that period. [4]

  4. Wedding cake topper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wedding_cake_topper

    There are specific ones for the style and theme of the wedding, for instance, traditional toppers for a formal wedding, and for less formal ones, there are comical wedding cake toppers or ones depending on the couple's hobbies. [3] In recent times, wedding cake toppers have reflected the growing diversity in marriages.

  5. German State Crown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_State_Crown

    The crown was most used as an heraldic symbol, in the German coat of arms and the Emperor's personal standard. A drawing of the crown is used as an emblem by a German monarchist group called "Tradition und Leben" ("tradition and life"). Crowns for the Empress and Crown Prince were also designed and wooden models made.

  6. Prussian Crown Jewels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prussian_Crown_Jewels

    The regalia includes: . Crown of William II (1889), or the Hohenzollern Crown, is the only piece dating from the imperial period, but is very similar to older crowns.; In the absence of further state regalia for the German Empire (1871–1918), the older royal Prussian Crown Jewels were sometimes also regarded as the German Crown Jewels:

  7. German Crown Jewels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Crown_Jewels

    Formally the German Empire had no physical Crown jewels, though a model of a German State Crown was created and used in emblems. The term may also be used in reference to regalia of the various constitutive German monarchies that sprang from the Holy Roman Empire and later were unified in the German Empire.

  8. Gugelhupf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gugelhupf

    The word's origin is disputed. [2]Glazed earthenware gugelhupf pan made in Rače-Fram around 1900. The old, South German name combines the Middle High German words Gugel (see also gugel, a long-pointed hood) derived from Latin cucullus, meaning hood or bonnet, and Hupf, which literally means "to hop" or "to jump".

  9. Imperial Crown of Austria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Crown_of_Austria

    The Imperial Crown of Austria (German: Österreichische Kaiserkrone) is a crown formerly in use by the monarchs of the Habsburg monarchy.The crown was originally made in 1602 in Prague by Jan Vermeyen as the personal crown of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, and therefore is also known as the Crown of Emperor Rudolf II (German: Rudolfskrone).