Recent content by SusanE


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  1. SusanE

    Royal Cousins

    This may be the site you have in mind: http://www.btinternet.com/~allan_raymond/QV_Descendants_Statistics.htm
  2. SusanE

    Haemophilia In European Royalty

    Hemophilia in royal families appears to have died out. Queen Victoria's youngest son Leopold was a hemophiliac. He had 2 children: a daughter Alice, who had to be a carrier and a son Charles who had to be unaffected as I have explained in previous posts. Alice had a son and a daughter...
  3. SusanE

    Royal Names

    According to the following Wikipedia article, your legal name is what appears on your birth certificate or marriage license. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_name
  4. SusanE

    Porphyria in European Royalty

    It was porphyria which is very different than hemophilia. Porphyria is a metabolic disease with many symptoms and most sufferers do not exhibit the severe behavioral symptoms that George III exhibited. If you have seen the file "The Madness of King George," you will be aware of the...
  5. SusanE

    Haemophilia In European Royalty

    My high school and college German has not been used for many years and I'm not able to completely understand those links. I used Babel Fish to translate and the only reference to hemophilia in nobles of the middle ages was in the Wikipedia article and in the last article listed which appears to...
  6. SusanE

    Haemophilia In European Royalty

    I've never read anything about hemophilia being prevalent in European nobles in medieval times. Can you post a source so others can read about it? When I Google "disease of kings," pages of references to gout come up. The only hemophilia in the Prussian royal family were the two sons of...
  7. SusanE

    Haemophilia In European Royalty

    No, I don't mean Albert was lucky not to have hemophilia. There is no way he could have gotten hemophilia from that side of the family. Hemophilia is passed on by the mother who gives her sons one of her X genes. If that X gene carries the hemophilia gene, then the son will be a hemophiliac...
  8. SusanE

    Haemophilia In European Royalty

    There were nine siblings altogether. Sophie (1778-1835), married Count Emanuel of Mensdorff-Pouilly. Antoinette (1779-1824), married Alexander of Wurttemberg Juliane (1781-1860), married Grand Duke Constantine Pavlovich of Russia Duke Ernst I of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (1784-1844), Albert's father...
  9. SusanE

    Haemophilia In European Royalty

    Yes, they were; I did not say they weren't. You refer to diseases Victoria and Albert's children could not avoid because their parents were cousins. Which diseases? The fact that Victoria and Albert were cousins has nothing to do with hemophilia. If Albert had the hemophilia gene, he would...
  10. SusanE

    Haemophilia In European Royalty

    Victoria and Albert being first cousins has nothing to do with hemophilia. Victoria would have passed on the hemophilia gene no matter whom she married. If Albert had the hemophilia gene, he would have been a hemophiliac. Victoria's children except for Leopold who had hemophilia were quite...
  11. SusanE

    Exposing Imposters

    I compiled this list of Kaiser Wilhelm II’s great grandchildren from http://www3.dcs.hull.ac.uk/genealogy/royal/. He had a lot of great grandchildren but I don't see Carlo Von Zeitschel among them. Also see this link which lists the descendants of Wilhelm. Those with a 4 next to their names...
  12. SusanE

    Royal Medical Conditions

    Emperor Akihito of Japan had prostate cancer. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/2611161.stm
  13. SusanE

    Royals Born By Caesarean

    This is an old wives' tale. Edward was born on October 12 and his mother Jane Seymour died on October 24. Women who had caesareans at this time did not survive, let alone survive for 12 days. Jane died of puerperal fever also called childbed fever. There are various dates given for the first...
  14. SusanE

    General Things About Royals

    Diana would have been Queen because she would have been married to the King. No background would have caused her to be Queen. If any of us had married Prince Charles, we'd be Queen when he was King. However, if Diana had lived, Diana would not have been Queen because she was divorced from...
  15. SusanE

    Haemophilia In European Royalty

    There is a 50% chance that daughters of a mother that is a hemophilia carrier will be carriers so we can assume that two of the daughters were carriers. In actuality, it could be more or it could be less. Women have two X chromosomes and pass one to their daughters. A female hemophilia...
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