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Eyrie Productions, Unlimited
MoonEyes
Member since Jun-29-03
802 posts |
Mar-28-18, 09:21 AM (EDT) |
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"While this isn't"
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LAST EDITED ON Mar-28-18 AT 09:36 AM (EDT) one of our witches(she would have been far too old), this image does have that war-witch vibe, in my opinion.
Of course, the fact that it's then-Crown Princess, Cecilie( of Mecklenburg), which would make her, if I'm right, the mother of Friedrich IV(well, sorta kinda, the family tree doesn't go that way as we've been told)... well, that's just a bonus. ...! Stoke Mandeville, Esq & The Victorian Ballsmiths "Nobody Want Verdigris-Covered Balls!" |
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Gryphon
Charter Member
19425 posts |
Mar-29-18, 09:01 PM (EDT) |
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3. "RE: While this isn't"
In response to message #0
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>Of course, the fact that it's then-Crown Princess, Cecilie( of >Mecklenburg), >which would make her, if I'm right, the mother of Friedrich IVOh yeah, missed this—she'd be Fritz the Younger's sister-in-law. He's Wilhelm II's youngest son, who didn't really exist. The math suggests that he may be Cecilie's husband's half-brother, since Empress Augusta Victoria would have been 45 when he was born in late 1902, but it's not impossible that he was their eighth child. If he had a different mother, that would mean that Augusta Victoria died no later than around 1901, rather than 1921, but I have no data on that. (If his mother was 45 when he was born, that might have caused him to at least raise an eyebrow at Hannelore's remarks when she agreed to marry him, but then again, he well knows that they are in some ways not the same sort of woman.) Exactly what Wilhelm's seven other sons did to make themselves ineligible to succeed him when he died in 1933 (and not, as in real life, 1941) is not known, but it probably involved some combination of dissipation, wild unpopularity with the nobility, ducking the job, and/or getting killed in the Great War (the youngest of them before Fritz, Prince Joachim, would've been 24 when that one started). Anyway, hence Hannelore's remarks about Fritz's father when she's arguing with him in episode 6—although a loyal subject of Wilhelm II, she never respected him much. Too petty, too insecure, too blustery. She's convinced, though she would never say it out loud, that the Neuroi's timing in 1914 was providential in a sense, in that it precluded Wilhelm from causing the no-aliens-required European war he was obviously spoiling for at around that time. --G. -><- Benjamin D. Hutchins, Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief, & Forum Mod Eyrie Productions, Unlimited http://www.eyrie-productions.com/ zgryphon at that email service Google has Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam. |
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