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  1. Mother. Princess Beatrice. Father. Prince Henry of Battenburg. Grandmother. Queen Victoria. Grandfather. Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Lord Leopold Mountbatten (previously Prince Leopold of Battenburg) was the son of Princess Beatrice and Prince Henry of Battenburg and a grandson of Queen Victoria .

  2. Lord Leopold Mountbatten. kinship to subject. younger brother. ... Prince Alexander Albert of Mountbatten (Battenberg) (23 Nov 1886 - 23 Feb 1960) 0 references .

  3. El príncipe Carlos, que entonces tenía 30 años, pronunció una lectura en la ceremonia, leyendo la lección del Salmo 107. El ex miembro del IRA, Tommy McMahon, fue encarcelado de por vida por el asesinato de Lord Mountbatten. Sin embargo, en agosto de 1998, el Sr. McMahon fue liberado en virtud del Acuerdo del Viernes Santo.

  4. Seu pai era First Sea Lord durante a explosão da Primeira Guerra Mundial, mas o predominante e extremo sentimento antigermânico o obrigaram a renunciar. Em 1917, quando a família real aboliu o uso de nomes e títulos germânicos, o príncipe Louis de Battenberg (seu pai) passou a se chamar Louis Mountbatten, 1.º Marquês de Milford Haven.

  5. Mountbatten was promoted to the rank of Commodore in 1941 and moved to Combined Operations. He was given orders to prepare for a large scale raid and subsequently for an Allied permanent re-entry into the Continent of Europe. In March 1942, Mountbatten was appointed Chief of Combined Operations and a Member of the Chief of Staff's Committee ...

  6. Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom, VA, CI, GCVO, GBE, RRC, GCStJ (Beatrice Mary Victoria Feodore; 14 April 1857 – 26 October 1944), later Princess Henry of Battenberg, was a member of the British Royal Family. She was the youngest child of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and Prince Albert of ...

  7. www.lordmountbattenofburma.com › burma-campaign-1Burma Campaign | mountbatten

    LOUIS, 1st EARL MOUNTBATTEN OF BURMA. The Burma Campaign. By March 1942, Japanese forces swept into British administered Burma from adjacent Siam (now Thailand) and headed onto Rangoon, the capital and large port. It was up to the two British divisions and the poorly trained and ill-equipped Chinese forces to hold open the Burma Road, to fight ...