Konstantin-Assen, Prince of Vidin

note:
As of August 2020.

See also:


Konstantin-Assen
Prince of Vidin
Born (1967-12-05) 5 December 1967 (age 52)
Spouse
María García de la Rasilla y Gortázar

(m. 1994)

Issue Prince Umberto
Princess Sofia
House Saxe-Coburg and Gotha-Koháry
Father Simeon II of Bulgaria
Mother Margarita Gómez-Acebo y Cejuela

Konstantin-Assen, Prince of Vidin, Duke in Saxony[1] (born 5 December 1967) is the fourth son of Tsar Simeon II of Bulgaria and his wife Doña Margarita Gómez-Acebo y Cejuela. He is known also as Konstantin-Assen of Bulgaria and Konstantin-Assen of Vidin, the latter being the title of the fourth son of Bulgarian kings. He was born in Madrid. Simeon II was exiled as a child when Bulgaria ceased to be a monarchy, so Simeon’s wife and children never received any royal titles from Bulgaria.

Education and career

Konstantin-Assen studied business in Spain before gaining a Masters degree from Columbia University, United States. Currently he is the Country Manager for Barclays Bank in Spain, having previously served at Rothschild Bank in Madrid as Co-Head of their Spanish office.[1]

Marriage and issue

In Madrid on 7 July 1994 Konstantin-Assen married Doña María García de la Rasilla y Gortázar, daughter of Álvaro García de la Rasilla y Pineda and his wife María de Gortázar e Ybarra (daughter of Manuel María de Gortázar y Landecho, 9th Count of Superunda, City Councilor of the Ayuntamiento of Bilbao, and wife María del Rosario de Ybarra y Bergé) and niece of Ignacio de Gortázar e Ybarra, 10th Count of Superunda.[2]

They have twins:

  • Umberto (b. 20 November 1999)
  • Sofia (b. 20 November 1999).[3]

Konstantin-Assen is the godfather of Infanta Sofía of Spain, the younger daughter of King Felipe VI of Spain. The King of Spain is in turn the godfather to Konstantin’s own daughter, Sofia, along with her maternal grandmother María de Gortázar e Ybarra. Prince Umberto’s godparents are Ramon Ros Bigeriego and his grandmother Queen Margarita.[4]

Titles

  • 5 December 1967 – present: His Royal Highness Prince Konstantin-Assen of Bulgaria, The Prince of Vidin, Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Duke of Saxony[citation needed]

Line of succession to the former Iraqi throne : From (deleted) Wikipedia’s articles.

note:
As of July 2020.
That Wikipedia’s article has deleted by Wikipedians.

See also:
Line of succession to the former Monarchical throne and others : From (deleted) Wikipedia’s articles.


The Iraqi monarchy was abolished by the then-ruling Republican regime on 14 July 1958 by Abd al-Karim Qasim in a coup d’état.

The current pretender to the defunct throne of Iraq and Syria is Prince Ra’ad bin Zeid.

Law of succession

According to Articles 19 and 20 to the 1925 Constitution: The sovereignty of the constitutional Kingdom of Iraq resides in the people. It is a trust confided by them to King Faisal I, son of Hussein, and to his heirs after him. The Heir Apparent shall be the eldest son of the King, in direct line, in accordance with the provisions of the law of succession.

The Constitution was amended in 1943 with Article 19 remaining the same and Article 20 stating; The Heir Apparent shall be the eldest son of the King, in direct line, in accordance with the provisions of the law of succession. If there was no Heir Apparent according to the line of succession, the ablest adult male Iraqi of the eldest sons of the King Hussein bin Ali shall be heir until there is an Heir Apparent.

Females were excluded from the line of succession.

Present line of succession

  • King Hussein I of Hejaz (1854–1931)
    • King Ali I of Hejaz (1879–1935)
      • Crown Prince Abdullah (1913–1958)
    • King Abdullah I of Jordan (1882–1951)
      • Jordanian Royal Family
    • King Faisal I (1885–1933)
      • King Ghazi I (1912–1939)
        • King Faisal II (1935–1958)
    • Prince Zeid (1898–1970)
      • Prince Ra’ad (born 1936)
        • (1) Prince Zeid II (b. 1964)
          • (2) Prince Ra’ad II (b. 2001)
        • (3) Prince Mired (b. 1965)
          • (4) Prince Rakan (b. 1995)
          • (5) Prince Jafar (b. 2002)
        • (6) Prince Firas (b. 1969)
          • (7) Prince Hashem (b. 2010)
        • (8) Prince Faisal (b. 1975)
          • (9) Prince bin Faisal (b. 2013)

 

 

Line of succession on 14 July 1958

  • King Hussein I of Hejaz (1854-1931)
    • King Ali I of Hejaz (1879–1935)
      • (1) Crown Prince Abdullah (b. 1913)
    • King Abdullah I of Jordan (1882–1951)
      • Jordanian Royal Family
    • King Faisal I (1885–1933)
      • King Ghazi I (1912–1939)
        • King Faisal II (b. 1935)
    • (2) Prince Zeid (b. 1898)
      • (3) Prince Ra’ad (born 1936)

Prince Ferdinand of Hohenzollern

note:
As of August 2020.

See also:


Prince Ferdinand of Hohenzollern
Born (1960-02-14) 14 February 1960 (age 60)
Sigmaringen, Baden-Wurttemberg, West Germany
Spouse
Countess Ilona Kálnoky de Köröspatak

(m. 1996)

Issue Prince Aloys
Prince Fidelis
Princess Victoria
Full name
German: Ferdinand Maria Fidelis Leopold Meinrad Valentin
House Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
Father Friedrich Wilhelm, Prince of Hohenzollern
Mother Princess Margarita of Leiningen

Prince Ferdinand of Hohenzollern (Ferdinand Maria Fidelis Leopold Meinrad Valentin; born 14 February 1960[1]) is the youngest of three children of Friedrich Wilhelm, Prince of Hohenzollern and his wife Princess Margarita of Leiningen.[2]

Early life

Birth

Prince Ferdinand Maria Fidelis Leopold Meinrad Valentin was born at Sigmaringen Castle, on 14 February 1960, the youngest of the three children of Prince Friedrich Wilhelm, Hereditary Prince of Hohenzollern (son of Frederick, Prince of Hohenzollern and his wife Princess Margarete Karola of Saxony) and his wife Princess Margarita of Leiningen (daughter of Karl, 6th Prince of Leiningen and his wife Grand Duchess Maria Kirillovna of Russia).

Marriage and issue

He married Countess Ilona Kálnoky de Köröspatak, daughter of Count Alois Kálnoky de Köröspatak and Baroness Sieglinde von Oer, on 10 May 1996 in Sigmaringen, Baden-Württemberg, civilly and religiously on 3 August 1996 in Csicso, Slovakia.[2] They have three children:[1][2][3]

  • Prince Aloys Maria Friedrich Karl of Hohenzollern (b. 6 April 1999)
  • Prince Fidelis Maria Anton Alexis Hans of Hohenzollern (b. 25 April 2001)
  • Princess Victoria Margarita Sieglinde Johanna Isabella Maria of Hohenzollern (b. 28 January 2004)

Personal life

Ferdinand has a degree in engineering and is an architect;[2] he and his family live in a house in Germany that he built himself. Louis Ferdinand, Prince of Prussia was his godfather, and so he spent a lot of time at Hohenzollern Castle.[4]

Title, style and honour

Titles

  • 14 February 1960 – Present: His Serene Highness Prince Ferdinand of Hohenzollern

Honour

National dynastic honour
  • Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen House of Hohenzollern: Knight Grand Cross with Chain of the Princely House Order of Hohenzollern

Line of succession to the former Bavarian throne

note:
As of July 2020.

See also:
Line of succession to the former Monarchical throne and others : From (deleted) Wikipedia’s articles.


The Kingdom of Bavaria was abolished in 1918. The current head of its formerly ruling House of Wittelsbach is Franz, Duke of Bavaria.

The succession is determined by Article 2 of Title 2 of the 1818 Constitution of the Kingdom of Bavaria, which states, “The crown is hereditary among the male descendants of the royal house according to the law of primogeniture and the agnatic lineal succession.”[1] The succession is further clarified by Title 5 of the Bavarian Royal Family Statute of 1819.[2]

In 1948 and 1949 Crown Prince Rupprecht, with the agreement of the other members of the house, amended the house laws to allow the succession of the sons of princes who had married into comital houses.[3] In 1999 Duke Franz, with the agreement of the other members of the house, amended the house laws further to allow the succession of the sons of any princes who married with the permission of the head of the house.

Franz has never married. The heir presumptive to the headship of the House of Wittelsbach is his brother Prince Max, Duke in Bavaria. Because Max has five daughters but no sons, he is followed in the line of succession by his and Franz’s first cousin (and second cousin in the male line) Prince Luitpold.[4]

Line of Succession on 13 November 1918

  • King Ludwig I (1786–1868) (abdicated 1848)
    • King Maximilian II (1811–1864)
      • King Ludwig II (1845–1886)
      • King Otto (1848–1916)
    • King Otto of Greece (1815–1867)
    • Luitpold, Prince Regent (1821–1912)
      • King Ludwig III (b.1845)
        • (1) Crown Prince Rupprecht (b.1869)
          • (2) Prince Albrecht (b.1905)
        • (3) Prince Karl (b.1874)
        • (4) Prince Franz (b.1875)
          • (5) Prince Ludwig (b.1913)
      • (6) Prince Leopold (b.1846)
        • (7) Prince Georg (b.1880)
        • (8) Prince Konrad (b.1883)
    • Prince Adalbert (1828–1875)
      • (9) Prince Ludwig Ferdinand (b.1859)
        • Infante Ferdinand of Spain, former Prince Ferdinand (b.1884) (renounced rights)
          • Infante Luis Alfonso of Spain (b.1906)
          • Infante José Eugenio of Spain (b.1909)
        • (10) Prince Adalbert (b.1886)
      • (11) Prince Alfons (b.1862)
        • (12) Prince Joseph Clemens (b.1902)

Current Line of Succession

  • Ludwig I of Bavaria (1786-1868)
    • Luitpold, Prince Regent of Bavaria (1821-1912)
      • Ludwig III of Bavaria (1845-1921)
        • Rupprecht, Crown Prince of Bavaria (1869-1955)
          • Albrecht, Duke of Bavaria (1905-1996)
            • Franz, The Duke of Bavaria (born 1933)
            • (1) Prince Max of Bavaria, Duke in Bavaria (born 1937)
        • Prince Franz of Bavaria (1875-1957)
          • Prince Ludwig of Bavaria (1913-2008)
            • (2) Prince Luitpold of Bavaria (born 1951)
              • (3) Prince Ludwig of Bavaria (born 1982)
              • (4) Prince Heinrich of Bavaria (born 1986)
              • (5) Prince Karl of Bavaria (born 1987)
          • Prince Rasso of Bavaria (1926-2011)
            • (6) Pater Florian von Bayern, O.S.B. (born 1957)
            • (7) Prince Wolfgang of Bavaria (born 1960)
              • (8) Prince Tassilo of Bavaria (born 1992)
              • (9) Prince Richard of Bavaria (born 1993)
              • (10) Prince Philipp of Bavaria (born 1996)
            • (11) Prince Christoph of Bavaria (born 1962)
              • (12) Prince Corbinian of Bavaria (born 1996)
              • (13) Prince Stanislaus of Bavaria (born 1997)
              • (14) Prince Marcello of Bavaria (born 1998)
    • Prince Adalbert of Bavaria (1828-1875)
      • Prince Ludwig Ferdinand of Bavaria (1859-1949)
        • Prince Adalbert of Bavaria (1886-1970)
          • Prince Konstantin of Bavaria (1920-1969)
            • (15) Prince Leopold of Bavaria (born 1943) – current heir to Otto I, King of Greece (Leopold’s eldest son Prince Manuel of Bavaria was born out of wedlock and is not in the line of succession)
              • (16) Prince Konstantin of Bavaria (born 1986)
            • (17) Prince Adalbert of Bavaria (born 1944)
              • (18) Prince Hubertus of Bavaria (born 1989)

 

 

Line of succession to the former Chinese throne

In Wikipedia, this article’s name is(was) Head of the House of Aisin Gioro.
(Also added from Head of the former Chinese imperial clan.)

note:
As of July 2020.

See also:
Line of succession to the former Monarchical throne and others : From (deleted) Wikipedia’s articles.


The House of Aisin Gioro established two dynastic regimes in Chinese history: the Later Jin (1616–1636) and the Qing dynasty (1636–1912). A Chinese emperor would pick one of his many sons, or another relative, to succeed him. During the Qing dynasty, a succession edict was hidden in the palace and read upon the death of the emperor.

After Puyi, China’s last emperor, was ousted in 1912, the country was declared a republic. Puyi was emperor of Manchukuo, now northeastern China, in 1934–1945. He died without issue in 1967. His brother Prince Pujie was next in line under a 1937 succession law, the most recently published agreed upon succession rule. Stories published in the Chicago Times and The New York Times acknowledge Pujie as heir of Puyi.

Pujie died in 1994. He is survived by a daughter, Princess Husheng, who was born in 1941. However, the law restricts succession to males. Several news stories have suggested that Jin Yuzhang, a nephew of Puyi and Pujie, is the current family head.

Present line of succession

  • Min-ning, the Daoguang Emperor of China (1782-1850)
    • Yizhu, the Xianfeng Emperor of China (1831-1861)
      • Zaichun, the Tongzhi Emperor of China (1856-1875)
    • Yichong (1831-1889[6])
      • Zailian (1854-1917[7])
        • Pucheng (1873-1932[8])
          • Yuyan (1918-1999[9])
            • (?) Hengzhen (b. 1944[10])
    • Yixuan, 1st Prince Chun (1840-1891)
      • Zaitian, the Guangxu Emperor of China (1871-1908)
      • Zaifeng, The Prince-Regent (1883-1951)
        • Puyi, the Xuantong Emperor of China, Emperor of Manchukuo (1906-1967)
        • Pujie, Head of the House of Aisin-Gioro (1907-1994)
        • Puren, Head of the House of Aisin-Gioro (1918-2015)
          • Jin Yuzhang, Head of the House of Aisin-Gioro (born 1942)[5]
          • (1) Jin Yuquan (金毓峑, born 1946)[11]
          • (2) Jin Yulan (金毓岚, born 1948)[12]
      • Zaixun, Prince Rui (1885-1949)
        • Pugong (1904-1960s)
          • (3) Huang Shixiang (born 1934)

 

 

The Manchukuo order of succession provided for inheritance by Puyi’s brothers and their male descendants. However, none of Puyi’s three living nephews has any male offspring, so under a strict interpretation the “Manchukuo branch” will go extinct upon the deaths of the current generation.

However, if allowing for inheritance by primogeniture via emperors prior to Puyi, Peking Opera singer Huang Shixiang would also join the line of succession. It is unclear if he has any sons, and therefore the exact ranking of rival pretenders like Hengzhen is also unknown.

Alternative proposals

In The Empty Throne (1993), Tony Scotland tells how he found Prince Yuyan, who lived in a mud floor hovel near the imperial palace. Yuyan, a distant cousin of Puyi, told Scotland that the former emperor made him heir to the throne in a ceremony performed while they were imprisoned in Russia together in 1950. This claim is not supported by any official document, although it was customary in the Qing dynasty that an emperor name his successor in a will or edict. Puyi’s autobiography confirms merely that the idea was discussed. Yuyan died in 1997. His eldest son is Prince Hengzhen, who was born in 1944. There is no indication that Yuyan designated him heir to the throne, or that he claims this status.

The Yuyan-Hengzhen lineage descends from prince Yicong, fifth son of the Daoguang Emperor. During the succession of 1875, Yicong’s descendants were passed over in favor of those of the Daoguang Emperor’s seventh son Yuxuan, who became father of the Guangxu Emperor, grandfather of the Xuantong Emperor Puyi, and great-grandfather of the pretender Jin Yuzhang. It could therefore be argued that Hengzhen, under a principle of strict primogeniture, has a stronger claim to the throne than Jin Yuzhang. However, imperial China did not consistently practice primogeniture. The emperor could in principle appoint any male relative he wanted as his heir. A hypothetical adoption of Yuyan by Puyi would in any event have “returned” the throne to the more senior lineage. Regardless of which branch has the better claim, the shortage of male heirs in Jin Yuzhang’s branch could eventually see the pretendership return to Hengzhen’s branch through the natural extinction of the competing branch.

During the 1911 Revolution some minorities suggested that the Manchu emperor be replaced by an ethnic Chinese. Both Duke Yansheng, a descendant of Confucius, and the Marquis of Extended Grace, a descendant of the imperial family of the Ming dynasty, were proposed and rejected.

Empire of China (1915–1916)

In 1915, Yuan Shikai attempted to reinstate monarchy in China; he proclaimed the Empire of China with himself as the Hongxian Emperor. However, due to massive objection across provinces of China, Yuan needed to withdraw his attempt and died on June 6, 1916 as the President of the Republic of China. During the preparation of the empire, Yuan planned to make Yuan Keding, his eldest son, the crown prince of the Empire of China. Yuan Keding still retained the courtesy of a “crown prince” for decades later even though the empire never existed.

Yuan Keding had a son and two daughters with modern descendants, although he had the other 31 siblings:

  • Hongxian Emperor of China (1859-1916)
    • Yuan Keding (1878-1958)
      • Yuan Jiarong (袁家融, 1904-1996)
        • Yuan Monglin (袁萌臨, 1933-2009)
          • (1) Yuan Qihe (袁啟和)