Anonymous ID: 5417df June 3, 2019, 9:11 a.m. No.6661295   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1333

Free city of Danzig

now Gdańsk, Poland

 

King Henry IV visited several times with the Teutonic Knights to wage different campaigns. During his time there, he partied and hoisted with the local nobility. Here he fathered four children. Two of whom returned to britain with him. What happened to the other two?

 

https://lostfort.blogspot.com/2019/06/?m=1

 

Check out the flag of the free city of Danzig

>a crown

>two teutonic crosses

>field of red

coincidence?

 

http://www.nobility.org/2013/10/28/dorothea-of-montau/

 

St. Dorethea of the Teutonic order - from Danzig

 

http://www.balfour100.com/biography/dorothy-de-rothschild-pending-approval-from-yh/

 

She was born Dorothy Pinto into an Anglo-Jewish London family on 7 March 1895. On 25 February 1913, just short of her 18th birthday, she married James, then age 35, at Waddesdon Manor. Thus, while still just a teenager she was to play a critical role in introducing Weizmann to the Rothschild family and the broader Jewish and general communities.

 

The family name Pinto is often traced to Sephardi Jews, descendants of the Jews expelled from Portugal during the Inquisition, some of whom moved to the Arab world. Dorothy’s family on her father’s side had roots in Egypt. Her maternal grandfather, Levi Cohen, was a founder of the Liberal Synagogue in London.

 

Following through on a pledge that James had made to Israel’s first Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, Dorothy de Rothschild and her family funded the construction of Israel’s parliament — the Knesset — in Jerusalem. The cornerstone was laid in 1958. The building, dedicated in 1966, marked its 50th anniversary in the summer of 2016.

 

In part to fulfil James’ wishes, as well as to commemorate the approaching centenary of her father-in-law Edmond’s birth, Dorothy endowed and oversaw the construction of Israel’s new Supreme Court building, which serves as both a High Court of Appeals and High Court of Justice. The government granted the Court a site that is adjacent to the Knesset and Government quarter and Dorothy took an active interest in every aspect of the project. The building was designed by brother-and-sister architects Ram Karmi and Ada Karmi-Melamede.

 

The Supreme Court opened in 1992, four years after Dorothy’s death. In line with the philanthropic ethos of the Rothschild family which regards philanthropy as a privilege and responsibility rather than a form of public relations, Dorothy requested that publicity regarding the role of Yad Hanadiv in the project be kept to a minimum.

 

James and Dorothy had no children of their own yet they left a lasting legacy. In effect, they even became the surrogate parents to 30 German-Jewish boys (ages 6 to 14) to whom they gave refuge on the family’s Waddesdon estate for over five years. In 1939, on the eve of the Second World War, Dorothy arranged for the boys who were pupils at a Jewish school in Frankfurt to be granted asylum in Britain. Tragically, most of their families and classmates who remained behind in Europe were engulfed by Hitler’s war against the Jews.

 

When she was 88, some of the ‘old boys’ returned for an emotional reunion with their benefactress. ‘How delighted my husband would have been to see you make your way in life so well. It must have taken courage and resolution’, she said. ‘Although you are very much grown up you will always remain boys to me’, she told them, adding ‘It’s been such a very long time since you’ve been here with me.’

 

http://www.attractions-in-israel.com/jerusalem-area/jerusalem-miscellaneous/israel-supreme-court-building-in-jerusalem-%e2%80%93-supreme-court-architecture/#more-2136

 

Horst Kasner was born as Horst Kaźmierczak in 1926, the son of a policeman in the Pankow suburb of Berlin, where he was brought up. His father Ludwig Kaźmierczak (born 1896 in Posen, German Empire - died 1959 in Berlin) was born out of wedlock to Anna Kazmierczak and Ludwik , Wojciechowski, ethnic Poles and citizens of the German Empire from the Poznań area.[1] Ludwig was mobilised into the German army in 1915 and sent to France, where he was taken prisoner of war and joined the Polish Haller's Army fighting on the side of Entente.[2] Together with the army he returned to Poland to fight in the Polish-Ukrainian war and the Polish-Soviet war.[3] After Posen had become part of Poland, Ludwig moved with his wife in 1923 to Berlin, where he served as a policeman, and changed his family name to Kasner in 1930.

 

Little is known about Horst Kasner's wartime service, and he was held as a prisoner of war at the age of 19. During his high school years he was a member of the Hitler Youth, with the last service position of a troop leader.[citation needed] From 1948 he studied theology, first in Heidelberg then in Hamburg. It was in Hamburg that he got to know and later married Herlinde Jentzsch,[4] an English and Latin teacher, born on 8 July 1928 in Danzig (now Gdańsk, Poland) as the daughter of Danzig politician Willi Jentzsch.

Anonymous ID: 5417df June 3, 2019, 9:16 a.m. No.6661333   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>6661295

Kazmierczak Family History

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Kazmierczak Name Meaning

 

Polish (Kazmierczak): patronymic from the personal name Kazimierz, a compound of Polish kazic ‘to destroy’ + the Old Slavic element mir ‘peace’, ‘quiet’, ‘esteem’.

This was a traditional name of Polish kings in the Middle Ages.