Prince Heinrich of Bavaria (1922–1958)

Prince Heinrich of Bavaria (German: Heinrich Franz Wilhelm Prinz von Bayern) (28 March 1922 – 14 February 1958) was a member of the Bavarian royal House of Wittelsbach.

Prince Heinrich
Born(1922-03-28)28 March 1922
Schloss Hohenburg near Lenggries, Bavaria, Weimar Republic
Died14 February 1958(1958-02-14) (aged 35)
San Carlos de Bariloche, Argentina
Burial
Spouse
Anne Marie de Lustrac
(
m. 1951)
Full name
Heinrich Franz Wilhelm
HouseWittelsbach
FatherRupprecht, Crown Prince of Bavaria
MotherPrincess Antonia of Luxembourg

Prince Heinrich was born at Schloss Hohenburg in Bavaria and was the eldest child and only son (the next five children were all daughters, and there were no more children after that) from the marriage of Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria and his second wife, Princess Antonia of Luxembourg.

On 31 July 1951, Prince Heinrich married Anne Marie de Lustrac (27 September 1927 in Neuilly-sur-Seine – 16 August 1999 in Milan), daughter of Baron Jean de Lustrac, French Army officer and decorated World War I veteran, and his wife, Helen Reid, daughter of Fergus Reid of Norfolk, Virginia.[1][2][3][4] The ceremony took place in Saint-Jean-de-Luz on the Basque coast in France. The couple did not have any children together.

The prince was a Knight of the Order of Saint Hubert. He died in a car accident in San Carlos de Bariloche, Argentina in the Andes on 14 February 1958. He is buried at the Andechs Abbey church in Bavaria. Prince Heinrich's widow, Anne Marie de Lustrac, died also in a car crash in Milan, Italy on 16 August 1999.

Ancestry

gollark: I mean, there's the issue of... their disregard for human rights? I care about that even if they don't affect other countries too badly directly.
gollark: It works better on philosophers, since you can steal their wallet while they're distracted thinking about it.
gollark: They probably can't/won't eternally torture you, but there's a *possibility* of that infinite harm which is reduced by giving them £100, and if you accept the Pascal's Wager logic you should do that.
gollark: There's actually another similar thing, Pascal's *Mugging*, in which someone comes up to you and says "give me £100 or I will eternally torture you after you die".
gollark: But there are an infinitely large number of possible gods, and some do weirder things like "punish/reward entirely at random", "have no interest whatsoever in humanity", "punish people who believe in other gods", and all that, and Pascal's Wager just *ignores* those.

References

  1. Baron Jean de Lustrac- Elmwood Cemetery (5th Alley East, Lot 44), historicforrest.com, Sargeant Memorial Room, Norfolk Public Library. Biographical information provided by Norfolk Bureau of Cemeteries.
  2. "anne of bavaria's father dies - French cultural leader dies", The News Leader (Staunton, Virginia), Mon 02 April 1973, Page 5 (on newspapers.com)
  3. , An American Family: The Buckleys, Reid Buckley, Simon & Schuster, 13 May 2008 - 464 pages (Great Elm, 1923-1939: The Desperate Years, page 251). ISBN 1416588167.
  4. "Heinrich marries Anne de lustrac - Baron's Daughter Weds Bavaria's Prince Henry" (on newspapers.com)

Sources

  • Die Wittelsbacher. Geschichte unserer Familie. Adalbert, Prinz von Bayern. Prestel Verlag, München, 1979
  • The Book of Kings: A Royal Genealogy. C. Arnold McNaughton, in 3 volumes. London, U.K. Garnstone Press, 1973, volume 1


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.