Prince Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine
Prince Ludwig | |
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Prince Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine | |
Prince Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine with his mother, Princess Cecilie of Greece and Denmark, hereditary grand duchess of Hesse, his younger brother Prince Alexander and baby sister Princess Johanna. | |
Born |
Darmstadt, Hesse, Germany | 25 October 1931
Died |
16 November 1937 6) Ostend, Belgium | (aged
Burial | Rosenhöhe, Darmstadt |
House | Hesse-Darmstadt |
Father | Georg Donatus, Hereditary Grand Duke of Hesse |
Mother | Princess Cecilie of Greece and Denmark |
Grand Ducal Family of Hesse and by Rhine |
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Ernest Louis |
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Prince Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine (Ludwig Ernst Andreas), (25 October 1931 – 16 November 1937), was the eldest son of Georg Donatus, Hereditary Grand Duke of Hesse and Princess Cecilie of Greece and Denmark, an older sister of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He was the first great-great-great-grandchild of Queen Victoria.
He was killed at age six in an airplane crash in 1937. He, his parents, younger brother Alexander, and grandmother Grand Duchess Eleonore were flying to London to attend the wedding of his uncle Prince Ludwig to Margaret Geddes. The plane crashed into a factory chimney near Ostend, Belgium.
"Family curse"
Some have considered the Hessian family victims of a family curse because of the number of premature deaths in the family. Following the airplane crash, Ludwig's orphaned sister Johanna was adopted by her uncle Ludwig and his new wife Margaret, but died at age two and a half in June 1939 of meningitis. Ludwig was a great-nephew of Tsarina Alexandra and Grand Duchess Elizabeth Fyodorovna, both of whom were killed with family members during the Russian Revolution of 1917. His paternal great-grandmother Princess Alice of the United Kingdom and a great aunt, Princess Marie of Hesse and by Rhine, both died of diphtheria. An aunt, Princess Elisabeth, died of virulent typhoid at age eight, though she was rumored to have eaten from a poisoned dish meant for Nicholas II of Russia.[1]
Ancestry
Notes
- ↑ Duff (1967)
References
- Duff, David (1967). Hessian Tapestry. London, Frederick Muller.