Altaris wrote:I'm going to guess the Portugese king, since you're from Portugal and it became a Republic in late 1910. I don't know which one is the Portugese king though!
Franciscus wrote:Indeed, poor portuguese King Manuel II (third from left, standing) would be overthrown in October 1910, a mere 5 months after this picture. He had succeded his father, Carlos, assassinated together with his older son Luis Filipe in 1908.
And, do you know how many of these monarchs survived WW1 ?
Kensai wrote:Why did Portugal overthrow its King?
(heading to Wikipedia, but if anyone knows more anecdotal details...)
Metatron wrote:Technically there are not 9 kings on that picture but 8 kings and an emperor(who was also king of prussia so not that wrong...)(the king of bulgaria was technically a Tsar so more of an emperor in translation than king but don't think the other kings on that picture would have agreed on that interpretation lol)
More interestingly the weird fact is that 8 out of 9 on this picture are technically from German nobility houses:
House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (part of the House of Wettin):
- King Ferdinand of Bulgaria
- Manuel II of Portugal
- Albert I of Belgium
- King George V of Britain
House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg:
- Haakon VII of Norway
- George I of Greece
- Frederick VIII of Denmark
House of Hohenzollern:
- Wilhelm II, German Emperor
Leaving only King Alfonso XIII of Spain, from the House of Bourbon.
Leibstandarte wrote:take a look a this strange machine and guess what is it.
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Ironclad61 wrote:Well, i refer that much better than try crack ottomans in an area you know they are going to defend to the last man (they do their best here) try something in Palestine... you know, you cut-off the troops in Sinai, secure a good base for future operations and you can force them send troops to a distant area... maybe if they do this ottomans can crack earlier... at same time than russians... and you open the Balkans, something like in WW2 BUT in WW1 with the intention and necesity to exploit this weak area in central powers.
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