Royal Genes


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H.M. The King of Prussia



31 Oct 2006 21:23:27 -0800 alt.talk.royalty
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kingfernidad...
As my family ARE the Prussian Royal Family longsiding the direct
decendants, as their are no current King of Prussia I am trying to
restore our family as the current Head of the House of Hohenzollern and
King of Prussia, I may not be wealthy but it is my own family indeed
which I have rights too. the rest is as follows...

mjcar...
In case anyone wonders what prompts this stuff:

mjcar...
And here's His Majesty's Blog, which shows us that "his" Prussia is
actually in the New World (Ungava in the far north of Quebec, and a
chunk of South America too):

"Fernidad" was apparently born Ken Steven Pochinko. As George Lucki
has pointed out here, His Majesty is attempting to raise money for "the
purchase of uniforms".

CJ Buyers...
Isn't there a town in the US called "King of Prussia"?

Perhaps they could rename their local "secure unit" as "Sans Souci" and
invite a new resident to make himself at home?

Frank R.A.J. Maloney...
King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, was named for a colonial-era inn, originally
called Berry's, located a day's ride from Philadelphia and so an important
stop.

The local residents in 1786 petitioned to change the name. One theory as to
why was to entice Prussian and other German soldiers to settle there. The
inn's sign at some point featured a portrait of Frederick the Great.

CJ Buyers...
Thanks, that is very ineteresting to see.

Any idea when the inn was so named?

Joseph McMillan...
An account on the US National Park Service website (but not written by
the NPS)
says that the inn was established in 1769 as was known as "the Sign of
Charles Frederick Augustus, King of Prussia" by the following year.

The history given doesn't quite match that offered by Frank Maloney,
but the article acknowledges that the facts are somewhat murky.

My understanding was that the name of the town (originally Reesville,
presumably named for one of the many Welsh families that settled the
area) wasn't changed until the mid-1850s.

Joseph McMillan


Courtesy of the internet, the insane are truly integrated into society.

jlkenney...
He's also trying to get into wikipedia. See
the whole thing, as the guy seems to be mentally ill.

kingfernidad...
Your Right! Check this out..

Frederick the Great: "The Frenchman"
Taulemeier as signed at the bottom. (DIFFERENT REAL SURNAME FROM
FREDERICK) My argument is that we are the original Prussian Royal
Family. Does it not seem odd that we keep changing names none the less
their is no other "King of Prussia" than "King Fernidad Frederick of
Prussia" enough said.

If you were to ask the "Queen of England" her representation for the
Kingdom of England She could not produce any Hence: She is of the
GERMAN HOUSE OF SAXE COBURG-GOTHA of Germany UNDER PRUSSIA.

My bottom line is this: Silly we Monarchs are all related in Eurpoe we
do question those one another for legistisimal purposes which are 99%
correct.

KING FERNIDAD FREDERICK OF PRUSSIA HENCE: IS The TRUE Current related
King of Prussia Heriditary wise none the less of Prussia.


Prince Augustus William Frederick of Prussia (1722-1758)

Because his older brother had no children, his oldest son inherited the
throne as King Frederick William II of Prussia.

"Prince Augustus William of Prussia had a first born missing son
William. This is the Current line for the Kings of Prussia."

Prince Augustus William Frederick of Prussia 1722-1758

William Augustus Theodore I Frederick of Prussia

Theodore Augustus William I Frederick of Prussia

William Theodore Alexander II Frederick of Prussia

Alexander Theodore William I Frederick of Prussia

William Alexander Theodore III Frederick of Prussia

Stephen William Alexander Theodore Frederick I of Prussia

Donello Stephen William Alexander Theodore I Frederick of Prussia
(Abdicated)

King Fernidad Frederick I of Prussia (Current King of Prussia) 1977-

Prince Ferdinand Frederick I of Prussia 1996-

Is there a way for someone to help in a Wikipedia Article Creation?
Some information about Jerome Bonaparte and myself is as following..

King Fernidad Frederick of Prussia was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Canada, on December 20th 1977, to the House of Hohenzollern of Prussia.
He is the current head of the House of Hohenzollern and King of
Prussia. He succeeded the throne upon his birth in 1977 from abdication
by his father Donello Frederick.

King Fernidad Frederick is the only son of Donello Frederick and
Marie-Jean Lea Gervais (decendant of the great Jerome Bonaparte,
younger brother of Napoleon Bonaparte.) King Fernidad attended grammar
schools in Winnipeg and completed his education in California, USA.

King Fernidad Frederick is considered by some people to be the lost
Frederick family of Prussia prior to the reign of Friedrich of Prussia
being closely related to Frederick the Great. External Links The House

Frank R.A.J. Maloney...
No, that part of the story seems very confused. I've been able to sort out
the chronology in any sure and logical way.

CJ Buyers...
Indeed it seems so. If 1770 is true, then the name can have little to
do with Frederick the Great supporting Washington in the revolution.

Mike Stone...
It would stem from the previous war.

FtG was Britain's (and hence America's) ally in
the Seven Years War, and quite a few pubs and inns
were named after him on both sides of the
Atlantic.

Most of the Britiish ones got renamed in 1914
(some after "The King of the Belgians") but I
don't know whatv happened in the Staes.

Frank R.A.J. Maloney...
Thanks for that interesting bit of history. We Americans indulged humanity's
natural capacity to hate the Other once we entered WW I. German immigrants
and their children were suspected of disloyalty and persecuted in various
ways; one man, a miner in Illinois, was actually lynched by his co-workers
because he was German and therefore a spy, ipso facto. (Presumably, no one
stopped to ask what strategic information could be gathered in the wilds of
Illinois.)

I've always been told that hamburger patties became Salisbury steaks to
purge this all-American dish of its German moniker. However, looking at
Wikipedia, I read: "According to the Oxford English Dictionary (Second
Edition), Salisbury steak was invented by an American physician, Dr. J. H.
Salisbury (1823-1905) and named for him. The OED gives an 1897 citation.
H.L. Mencken reported (in 1945) that the name was used to replace "hamburger
steak" during World War I as a political euphemism."

I'm not all that smart but if I have to choose between the OED and Mencken
as my authority, I'll go with the OED.

It would be interesting know how the good people of King of Prussia, PA,
reacted to the anti-German hysteria in the 1917-1919 period, especially
since the current King of Prussia was also the much reviled Kaiser Bill.


Frank R.A.J. Maloney...
Whenever the evidence is sparse in a situation like this one, it seems to
prudent to suspect at least possibility that the forces of backward
formation and folk etymology have been at play.


As I said... I may not be wealthy but is my own family indeed which I
have rights too.

Thank You - King Fernidad "The Last King of Prussia".
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