CROWN LEGAL SPECIFICS BY CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY
**Crown of Queen Sophie 1965 Bonn Constitution for "World One State Premier " Statute of Emperor Wilhelm I to Berlin Unified Germany.
**Twin Sicily Crown of Queen Mary Von Teck & King George V 1910/1971 Vatican Constitution II King Louis XIII Eddict of The Nantes Umbrella of Faith Statute to Rome Itally. Crown Princes Royal of Rome, Queen of Denmark of June 5th,1953/1972Constitution.
**Crown of Saint Edward Statute to United KIngdom of Great Britain & Spain by absolute will of State Gibraltar, Robert Carringer, Thomas Carringer, Dominium of York, Windsor, Lancaster & Kent 1975 by Danish Court of Appeal Specifically strongly Affirmed.
**Crown of Emperor Henry of Anjou & Navarre 1982 Hapsburg/Frankish Farnese Constitution Statute to France & Russia, Queen of France, Versailles France
TERRESTERIAL CROWN ROYAL TITLES
Queen Margrethe Li of Swiss Nyturv
Queen Margrethe II of Frankland & Denmark
Queen Margrethe Valdemarsdatter II of Shengen Scandinavia Staten & Sultanate of Jolo 1971
Queen Margrethe R of Scotland & United Kingdom of Great Britain
Duchess of Lancaster York Windsor & Kent 1975
Duchess of Anjou & Navarre 1982
Crown Princess Royal of Denmark since 1971
World One State Primier of Bundastag since 1965
Crown Queen Princess Anne Marie Medici Savoy deChantal of Rome 1971
Crown Princess of Wales & Armenia 1963
Duchess of Oslo & Strathmore 1994
Duchess of Stalkholmes Cambridge Oxford & Cornwall 2007
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Crowned Deed of License © iCROWN OF DENMARK AND FRANCE
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MY CONCORDE SUZERAINTY
May 19, 2008


ARMADA
THE STATUTE ORDER OF FARNESE
HOUSE OF YORK
MAGNA GREACEA CHARTA STATE WILLS & DOMINIUM



Dr. AMBROCIO CONCORDIO PEREZ PULMANO
ORDER OF TAMBURLAINE/GLUCKSBORG
"LE GRAND MONARCH LORD BADEN"
"Quoted as The Man from Mars by a famous journalist around the globe. "
Grand Old Emperor of Armada Sommerset Oceanlandia
Ascended Emperor Kaiser William II after Abdication
1493 From Emperor Maximillian of Austria And Empress Mary of Burgundy, Son King Phillip I Married Isabella Daughter of King Ferdinand of Spain and Queen Isabella.
1519AD King Charles V of Spain Has Two Sons Phillip II and Ferdinand of Austria son Emperor Maximillian II. And daughter Anne of Austria of Farnese married King Phillip VI who was willed by King Louis XIV since Charles has no heir to Spainish throne.
From King Phillip VI ascended by King George I who marry a Greacian Queen. They have three sons…

Queen Sophie the only daughter daughter of Emperor Wilhelm 1 of unified Germany maried three times and widowed twice:
Concorde I Perez Pulmano of Greece Switzerland United Kingdom of Great Britain & Spain of Order of Baden
Concorde II Perez Pulmano of Greece Switzerlan United Kingdom of Great Britain & Spain of Order of Baden
Order of Baden Del Capo Dr Ambrocio Concordio Perez Pulmano was her third husband the youngest brother gifted with nine children plus one adopted name Leone. Queen Sophie was baptized in the name of Maria Cepriana Maribuhuk Garcia. Her Mother was Czar Alexander III Daughter sister of Queen Alexandrina of Denmark wife of King Christian X.
Ambrocio Corcordio as Berlin Unified Germany used to know the King of Greece. In Denmark He was King Frederick of Oldenburg. Simply "Concorde" in France and to the Switz. Emperor Constantine II to the citizenry of Greece. King Clement II of Unified Germany. Married to The daughter of Emperor Welhelm I of Unified Germany, Queen Sophie of Spain Gibraltar.
Enthroned through Chancellor Bismarck Emms Despatch Magna Gracea Charta against King Leopold of Spain House of Bourbon. Giving The Treaty of Paris assured absolute biospheric ascendancy.
Queen Sophie and King Clement II seventh son Braullo /King Clement III of Switzerland marries 1910-1999 Queen Estefania of France,daughter of King George V 1865-1936 and Queen Mary von Teck 1891/1910-1976.
Princess Benedictes Bryllup The Farnese Queen of Denmark was associated to Prince Eugenio Youngest son of Queen Isabella II and King frederick IX of Denmark in the middle of worldwar2 in Shanghai China. Having lost their foster "comadrona" governess in the middle of war chaos. They mix themselves together with some others europeans POW detained on an evacuation camp. April 28,1963 the two finally exchange vow in King Clement II Royal Homestead.
Eldest daughter Crown Princess Royal of Denmark 1971. March 3,1963 Queen Margrethe Valdemarsdatter II was Crowned in France June 5th 1982 through Prime Minister Mitterand Social Justice Advocasy. The princess has recieved her mother crown of Farnese from Emperor Henry of Anjou-Navarre and Queen Mother Elizabeth Bowes Lyon of United Kingdom. It was also a gift from Denmark Central Command and King Olav and Queen Sonja of Norway.1


ASCENDED BY EMPEROR HENRY OF ANJOU AND NAVARRE 1947 AND QUEEN MARY VON TECK, KING GEORGE V WIDOW 1936AD
THE CROWN OF FARNESE



H.M. MARGRETHE VALDEMARSDATTER ll ASCENDED 1982
In Greece, she was Princess Daphne having visited and lived in the kingdom almost of lifetime from 1965. Attended the wedding of Ms Jacklyn Onassis on 1969 with her causin Hope. Having ramp the street ice cream of Greece, in the middle of the night of toncilities and fever. And spent the whole week on sick room in the palace. –iqueendk 04:54, December 8, 2007 (EST)
[Please Visit Princess Daphne Website http://www.aquirah.co.cc/]
A Historical Glimpse The Spanish Hapsburg Book Review
Philip II
In order to understand properly the position of the Spanish Hapsburgs, one must realise the extent of the lands which Philip II inherited in 1556. In addition to the whole of modern Spain, consisting of the medieval kingdoms of Castille, Aragon, and Navarre, there were the direct holdings of the Spanish crown: Sardinia, Sicily, and the Kingdom of Naples which consisted of the southern half of the Italian peninsula. There were also the overseas Spanish colonies: most of South America, Central America, Mexico, and parts of the African coast. Finally, there was the Seventeen Provinces of the Netherlands, which included the modern nations of the Netherlands and Belgium.
The Netherlands
Philip II was one of the most devout monarchs in the history of Europe. As a powerful Catholic king during the Protestant Reformation, he felt a personal duty to keep the church together. This was the basis of much of his trouble and glory. The first of his many conflicts came in 1568 with the rebellion of the modern Netherlands. The Netherlands had come into the possession of the Hapsburg crown through a marriage alliance with the Counts of Burgundy, who had conquered the region only a few years before. A rough alliance of historically and linguistically disparate political entities, the Netherlands was nonetheless geographically and religiously separated from Spain and revolution was encouraged by the Dutch Stadholder,1 William I, Prince of Orange. The revolution continued sporadically from 1568 - 1648, and Philip, who saw the conflict as an attempt by the Dutch heretics to break up Catholic hegemony, poured many of the resources of the Spanish treasury into repressing the rebellion.
Portugal
In 1580, the death of the last Portuguese king, Cardinal Henry, put Philip in a position to claim inheritance of the Portuguese crown through his marriage to a Portuguese princess, Maria, Henry’s niece. The claim was successful, despite the fact that Maria had been dead for 12 years, largely because the Portuguese court sought the protection of the powerful Spanish navy for its newly-gained colonial possessions: Brazil, Ceylon, parts of Indonesia, and several areas of southern Africa. As a gamble, this move was largely unsuccessful. Philip neglected the Portuguese possessions and they were quickly seized by Dutch traders, ironically allowing the Dutch to have one of the largest colonial empires while not yet independent themselves. At the same time, Spanish colonial holdings were growing with the conquest of the Philippines and the founding of the colony of St Augustine in modern-day Florida.
Relations with England
The final thread of Philip’s international policy was the famous conflict with Queen Elizabeth I of England. There were three main reasons for this enmity. The first was religious: Elizabeth had displaced her Catholic sister Mary I as sovereign and continued her father Henry VIII’s heretical conceit as head of the Church of England. The second was political: England was providing aid to the Dutch in an attempt to break up Hapsburg power and distract Spain from the race to acquire overseas colonies. Finally, there was a personal element: After the death of Mary I (who had been Philip’s second wife) Philip had proposed to the famously virginal queen and had been soundly rejected, forcing him into a backup marriage with his cousin Maria of Austria, the granddaughter of Emperor Ferdinand. On this, his third marriage, he finally produced a trustworthy heir2.
Philip made several efforts to damage the British monarchy, including secretly supporting Catholic rebels in Ireland which led to the siege of Fort Del Oro in 1580. In desperation, and in retribution for the execution of the Catholic Mary Queen of Scots the year before, Philip assembled the famous Spanish Armada in 1588. The Armada was a conglomeration of all available ships gleaned from Philip’s empire. It sailed up the English Channel with the intent of picking up Spanish soldiers under the command of the Duke of Parma on campaign in the Netherlands and transporting them to the English coast for a full-scale invasion. Given the relative size of the respective armies, it seems clear that a successful landing by Spanish troops would have been devastating to the English state. Due to a combination of luck and the brilliant leadership of Sir Francis Drake, however, the Armada was decimated during its transit of the English Channel and swept into the North Sea. The Spanish Navy rebounded to its former size within a year, but Philip’s confidence was destroyed and he spent the remainder of his reign trying to deal with internal problems and the drain on the Spanish treasury. Philip was widely known as the sort of leader who seemed capable of supporting the whole Spanish state through his own tireless efforts and attention to detail.
Philip III
Philip III of Spain, also Philip II of Portugal, was poorly suited to live up to the precedent set by his father. He was neither as capable nor as hardworking as Philip II. Under his supervision, both the army and navy took great losses at the hands of the Dutch rebels, including a devastating naval loss at Gibraltar in 1607. In 1618, Philip dragged Spain into the Thirty Years War in an attempt to live up to his father’s legacy as a Catholic warrior. This conflict, originally a minor battle between small German states, expanded greatly to engulf much of Europe in a similar way to World War One, except that the alliances in the Thirty Years War were generally religious.
Philip IV
Philip IV continued the downward slide of the Spanish Hapsburgs. He took power in the midst of the war and the still-raging Dutch revolt (sometimes known as the Eighty Years War). Blows continued to rain upon the Spanish crown as Portugal and Catalonia both revolted in 1640 and the Spanish army was badly defeated by France at Rocroi in 16433. The war finally ended in 1648, projecting such fledgling powers as the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia4 and the Electorate of Brandenburg5 onto the European stage. Other measures achieved by the final settlement included the negotiated end to the Dutch rebellion, in which the northern provinces gained their independence and the southern provinces remained under Spanish control. The regions came to be known as the Dutch and Spanish Netherlands, respectively, and later known as The Netherlands and Belgium.
Charles II
The last of the Spanish Hapsburgs, Charles II, took it upon himself to discover a way to restore Spanish power. As the French Bourbons had now, through the Thirty Years War, become the most powerful family in Europe, Charles managed to engineer a marriage and alliance between his sister, Maria Theresa and the French King Louis XIV. In the end, this just muddied the waters upon Charles’s death in 1700. Louis, of course, attempted to place his son, also Louis, on the throne of Spain. This effort was contested by the Austrian Hapsburgs who claimed the throne through their descent from Charles V and also through the marriage of Emperor Ferdinand I’s daughter, Maria, to Philip II. The real reason for their objection was fear that French access to the Spanish new world empire would upset the balance of power in Europe.
What ensued was the clumsy and ultimately indecisive War of Spanish Succession. The resolution, in 1713, established a treaty in which some non-Spanish holdings such as the Netherlands were given to the Austrian Hapsburgs, others such as the Kingdom of Naples were given independence. The Bourbon family gained the right to the throne of Spain so long as it was never combined with the throne of France and their respective colonies remained separate. Although all subsequent kings of Spain, and the Bourbon kings of France were descended from Hapsburg ancestors, this might be considered the end of the Hapsburg control of Spain and of the Spanish line of the Hapsburg family.
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The family, which can be traced to the 10th cent., originally held lands in Alsace and in NW Switzerland. Otto (d. 1111) took the name Hapsburg from a castle near Aargau, Switzerland, when he was designated count. Vast estates in Upper Alsace, Baden, and Switzerland were inherited (1173) by his grandson Count Albert III (d. 1199) and passed to Rudolf II (d. 1232) and Albert IV (d. c.1240). The extinction of the houses of Lenzburg, Zähringen, and Kyburg facilitated family acquisitions.
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| The election (1273) of Count Rudolf IV as Rudolf I, king of the Germans, provoked war with King Ottocar II of Bohemia. Ottocar’s defeat and death at the Marchfeld (1278) confirmed Hapsburg possession of Austria, Carniola, and Styria; these lands and the Austrian ducal title were declared hereditary by Rudolf in 1282. In 1335 Carinthia too was claimed. Possession of these dominions marked the rise of the Hapsburgs to European significance. Held in common by the sons of Albert I and of Albert II, the many lands were divided, after the death (1365) of Duke Rudolf IV, between the Albertine and Leopoldine lines (named for his brothers). | |
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The Hapsburg lands were reunited under Maximilian I at the end of the 15th cent. In the meantime, Tyrol (1363), NE Istria (1374), and Trieste (1382) were added to the Hapsburg domain. Albert V of Austria, married to a daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund, succeeded him as king of Bohemia and Hungary and was chosen (1438) German king as Albert II. Henceforth, with one exception, the head of the house of Hapsburg was elected German king and Holy Roman emperor (see Holy Roman Empire for a complete list of emperors).
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Though Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III raised (1453) Austria to an archduchy and acquired (1471) Fiume, he had to struggle to maintain the Hapsburg realms during his constant warfare against Matthias Corvinus, king of Hungary and Bohemia. Under Frederick and his son, Maximilian I, a series of marriages greatly increased the hereditary holdings of the dynasty and gave rise to the saying “Let others wage war; thou, happy Austria, marry.”
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Most of the Low Countries (see Netherlands, Austrian and Spanish) were acquired by the marriage of Maximilian to Mary of Burgundy. The marriage of their son, Philip I, to Joanna of Castile, brought Philip’s elder son, Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, to the throne of Spain. The marriage of Charles’s younger brother, Ferdinand, to Anna, daughter of Louis II of Bohemia and Hungary, strengthened the Hapsburg claim to these possessions after the death (1526) of Louis at Mohács. Hapsburg power reached its zenith under Charles V.
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The reigns of Maximilian I and Charles V, while encompassing the height of Hapsburg power, also witnessed the emergence of the enduring struggles that eventually sapped Hapsburg strength. These included the defense of Central Europe against the Turks; the support of the Catholic Church against the Protestant Reformation; and the defense of the dynastic position against the rise of France.
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Charles V divided his dominions between his son, Philip II of Spain, and his brother, Ferdinand of Austria, Bohemia, and Hungary, who succeeded Charles as Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand I. The Spanish and Austrian branches of the dynasty cooperated in the Thirty Years War (1618–48) and opposed the French in the Third Dutch War (1672–78) and in the War of the Grand Alliance (1688–97). The division of the family holdings, the acquisition of the royal crowns of Bohemia and Hungary, and the wars against the Turks in the 17th cent.—these factors transformed the dynasty into a polyglot monarchy, interested more in extending the family power in the Balkans than in purely German affairs.
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The Hapsburgs lost Alsace, Franche-Comté, Artois, and part of Flanders and Hainaut during the wars against Louis XIV. In the War of the Spanish Succession, caused by the extinction of the Spanish Hapsburgs at the death (1700) of King Charles II, the family lost their claim to Spain. However, they retained the Austrian Netherlands and Lombardy and reconquered Hungary from the Turks. By the pragmatic sanction (1713), Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI guaranteed the indivisibility of the Hapsburg domains and the succession of his daughter, Maria Theresa.
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In the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–48) and in the Seven Years War (1756–63), Maria Theresa lost Silesia to Prussia but successfully defended the rest of her inheritance. On the death of Charles Albert of Bavaria, Holy Roman emperor as Charles VII (1742–45), the imperial title was bestowed on Archduchess Maria Theresa’s husband, Francis, grand duke of Tuscany and former duke of Lorraine, who became Francis I.
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Maria Theresa inaugurated the bureaucratic centralization that was carried forward by her son Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II. With him began the line of Hapsburg-Lorraine. An enlightened despot, Joseph II instituted reforms that included abolition of serfdom, revision of the penal code, religious toleration, and reduction of the power of the church. Leadership in the Hapsburg empire was given to the Germans. Tuscany, separated (1790) from the main family holding, was held until 1860 by a junior branch of the dynasty (except during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic eras). The duchy of Modena, acquired (1806) by marriage, was also possessed until 1859 by a junior branch.
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The senior line was continued by the brother of Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II, who repealed many of the reforms of Joseph II. Leopold’s son, Francis II, assumed (1804) the title Francis I, emperor of Austria, and abdicated as Holy Roman emperor in 1806. Though repeatedly humbled by Napoleon I, Francis emerged at the Congress of Vienna (1815) as one of the most powerful European monarchs. Giving up the Austrian Netherlands, the Hapsburgs regained Dalmatia, Istria, and Tyrol. They were compensated with Salzburg and in N Italy with Lombardy and Venetia, which, with Tuscany, Modena, and Parma, made the Italian peninsula virtually a Hapsburg appendage.
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| Final Decline | |
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In the 19th cent. the Hapsburg position was challenged in Germany by Prussia, in Italy by Sardinia, and in the Balkans by Russia. During the revolutions of 1848, Francis’s son Ferdinand abdicated in favor of his nephew Francis Joseph, whose long rule (1848–1916) saw Austria lose (1859) its dominance in Italy and surrender (1866) leadership in Germany to Prussia.
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In 1867 the Hapsburg lands were reorganized as the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy. Buffeted by the twin forces of liberalism and nationalism and torn by the fratricidal hostilities of the polyglot national groups, the Hapsburg monarchy failed to create any ideological basis for its existence, failed to curb the domineering national groups (Hungarians, Germans, and Poles), and failed to satisfy the demands of the rising middle and industrial classes.
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The assassination of heir apparent Francis Ferdinand precipitated World War I; the death (1916) of Francis Joseph left his grandnephew, Emperor Charles I, to witness the defeat of Austria-Hungary, which was dissolved immediately after Charles’s abdication in 1918. |
Aftermath
- WAR IN ALSACE & LORRAINE 1916AD -UNIFIED GERMANY OVER ARMTICE IN ALSACE & LORAINE
- 1905 TREATY OF PARIS-SPAIN CEDED PHILIPPINES TO USA
- RESIGNATION OF BISMARCK AS CHANCELLOR OF GERMANY
- ABDDICATION OF EMPEROR KAISER WILLIAM II FLED TO HOLLAND FOR COVER & PROTECTION
- 1858 ASCENSION OF QUEEN SOPHIE AS SOVEREIGN AT WILL FOR THE FAMOUS ROCK OF GIBRALTAR HAPSBURG DARDANILLAS ABSOLUTE WILL OF QUEEN ANNE 1704 -1714
- 1971 AMERICA CEDED PHILIPPINES & SULTANATE OF JOLO TO DENMARK-UK-PARIS-GERMANY
- 1972 PHILIPPINES WAS UNDER THREAT BY MARCOS DICTATORSHIP
- 1975 QUEEN SOPHIE OF UNIFIED GERMANY GREATGRAND DAUGHTER QUEEN MARGRETHE VALDEMARSDATTER II INHERIT FAMOUS ROCK OF GIBRALTAR AT 10 YEARS OLD.
- 1982 CROWNING OF QUEEN SOPHIE & KING CLEMENT EMPEROR OF GERMANY & ROME- GREAT GRANDAUGHTER MARGRETHE VALDEMARSDATTER ll IN VERSAILLES PARIS ABSOLUTELY WILLED BY EMPEROR HENRY OF ANJOU & NAVARRE, LAST EMPEROR OF CHINA, EMPEROR OF RUSSIA
- 1986AD EDSA PEOPLE POWER - 1989AD BERLIN AND RUSSIA PEOPLE POWER.
Hapsburg Le Grand Monarch In Versailles Best Remembered…

King Louis XIV and His Heirs- Behind his chair is his eldest son, The Grand Dauphin, and to his right his eldest grandson King Phillip V the Duke of burgundy, The child on the leftled by a governess, is his eldest great grandson. Painting by Nicholas
TRUTH IN ASCENDANCY CASTED AT
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Signed: iqueendk


