Difference between revisions of "Jonas I of Lauwiner"

From NSWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Blanked the page)
 
(22 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox
 
| title  = ''His Royal Highness''
 
| above = Jonas I of Lauwiner
 
| image1  = [[Image:King Emperor of the Lauwiner Empire - Jonas I Portrait Bern.jpg|250px]]
 
| caption1= Jonas I just ascended to the throne
 
| headerstyle  = background:#b0c4de;
 
| header1 = [[House of Lauwiner|House of Lauwiner]]
 
| image2  = [[Image:Lauwiner Family Coat of Arms House Of Lauwiner.jpg|75px]]
 
|  label2 = Reign      |  data2 = 15 april 2017 - present
 
|  label3 = Coronation              |  data3 = 22 april 2017
 
|  label4 = Predecessor      |  data4 = -
 
|  label5 = Heir Apparent      |  data5 = -
 
|  label6 = Prime Minister      |  data6 = Lord Alfred Delmore
 
| header7 = Personal informations
 
| label8 = Born      |  data8 = 15 september 1994
 
| label9 = Spouse            |  data9 = Yulija duchess of Imperia
 
| label10 = Issue      |  data10 =
 
| label11 = Full name      |  data11 = Jonas I of Lauwiner
 
| label12 = House          |  data12 = [[House of Lauwiner]]
 
|  label13 = Father      |  data13 =
 
|  label14 = Mother        |  data14 = [[Marie Louise Coulomb de Neuchâtel]]
 
| label15 = Religion      |  data15 = [[Church of Ludovicia]]
 
| label16 = Signature          |  data16 = ---
 
}}
 
'''Jonas I''' (Jonas of the House of Lauwiner; born 15 September 1994) in Bern, Switzerland) is the current King-Emperor of the [[Lauwiner Empire|Lauwiner Empire]].
 
  
==Biography==
 
===First years===
 
Louis was born in the [[Royal Palace of Ludovicia]] on 11 November 1968 by [[Louis VII of Ludovicia|Louis VII]], king of Ludovicia, and his wife, the duchess [[Marie Louise Coulomb de Neuchâtel]]. He was baptized in the chapel of the Royal Palace of Ludovicia by the archbishop de La Tourette, with as godfather [[]], and as godmother [[]]. He was second-born after his brother Louis Antoine who perhaps died in 1974 during an accident, so he was proclaimed crown prince.
 
 
Since 1974 he was entrusted for his education to a teacher in the figure of Georges de La Valliere, who in the wake of what were the beginnings of [[Rohan-Lefevre Crisis]] grave him a religious education, believing that such practice was necessary for the proper administration of the kingdom. After the expulsion of the bishop Rohan-Lefevre and the consequent resignation of La Valliere, the little Louis was entrusted to Jean Baptiste De Huguemont, a noble descendant of a family originally from the Ardennes, in France, which bringed him to military career and predisposed him to studies of different languages ​​including, in addition to native French, as English, German, Italian and Latin. With his brother Daniel, he learned playing piano and violin, often making concerts to delight his father's court. So he attended the "[[Louis Amédée Moreau de Maupertuis]]" Institute of Ludovicia and then passed to the [[University of Ludovicia]] since 1986 where he studied mathematics. In 1988 he visited Paris where stayed three months and visited Britain three times between 1988 and 1990.
 
 
===Years of opposition===
 
When in 1976 his father [[Louis VII of Ludovicia|Louis VII]] appointed as his personal advisor and prime minister of his governament the bishop of Port Royale, the influential [[Louis Rohan-Lefevre]], Louis began to hatch a deep impatience with the overwhelming ludovician church government on state affairs, especially as concerned his personal education and the political choices of the state. With the support of his uncle [[Jean Gaston d'Orléans-Ludovicia]], the young Louis became the symbol of the moderate opposition to the monarchy, or the party that, while maintaining the monarchical regime in act, was intended to downsizing the profoundly changing in its costumes reducing greatly the power of the local church with Rohan-Lefevre bishop had gained excessive influence in all fields. The extremist fringe of the movement even came to propose it as a successor to his father, but it was his same father who, fearing that his son could be exploited to build a coup, decided to sack the Bishop of Port Royale and pursue a more favorable policy to Ministers.
 
Louis during these years, and until the death of his father, was particularly close to the conservative Prime Minister [[Karl Kirchbach]] that ''de facto'' ruled the state since Louis VII started to gradually reduce its output after the crisis.
 
 
===Rising the power===
 
After the death of Louis VII, the trone passed at his son Louis Francis, who was solemnly crowned with the name of Louis VIII. He, unlike his father, in the years of the crisis, had harbored a deep hatred of lax administration of the father and why he devoted himself immediately to the consolidation of personal power of the king at the expense of government personalities and influence reached the main characters who had governed the fate of the government in previous years. Since 1993, therefore, he decided to fully renew the Government Cabinet by appointing conservative count [[Leopold von Altbishofen]] as prime minister. Since 1997 he ushered in a series of reforms with the aim of promoting the freedom of religion on national soil, removing the influence of the Ludovician Church accumulated before and during the period of the Rohan-Lefevre crisis, reopening local brothels (including those in the capital), partially legalizing the use of drugs, but while strengthening the police and the secret police controls in the whole state. Also he intensified the army and the national navy.
 
 
Quirky character, invested considerable money for the construction of a new personal residence about 30 kilometers away from the capital, implanting there a great system of channels to bring huge amounts of water from the river Ludovicia to create spectacular water features and beautiful fountains. At the same time he decided to open the gardens to all in order to improve domestic tourism, and to allow all his subjects to enjoy the renewed peace under his rule.
 
 
==Marriage and children==
 
In 1991, the then crown prince Louis Francis married the duchess [[Marie von Turbighen]], daughter of the count general [[Franz von Turbighen]], of austrian origins. The couple had the following children:
 
* Louis Philippe, crown prince (b. 1993)
 
* Ludovica, royal princess (b. 1995)
 
* Isabella, royal princess (b. 2000)
 
 
==Honours==
 
===National orders===
 
*[[Image:Ord.St.LouisLudovicia.png|100px]] [[Order of Saint Louis|Grand Master and Knight Companion of the Order of Saint Louis]]
 
*[[Image:Ord.Mil.Merit.Ludovicia.GC.svg.png|100px]] [[Order of Military Merit|Grand Master and Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Military Merit]]
 
 
===Foreigns orders===
 
 
==Bibliography==
 
*[[Leopold von Altbishofen|L. von Altbishofen]], ''The great house of kings of Ludovicia from its origins to the present day'', Ludovicia's Royal Print, 2015
 
 
<center>
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
|-
 
! Predecessor !! [[Kings of Ludovicia|King of Ludovicia]] !! Successor
 
|-
 
| [[Louis VII of Ludovicia|Louis VII]] || 1993 - present || Incumbent
 
|}
 
</center>
 
 
[[Category:Kings of Ludovicia]]
 
[[Category:Heads of State or Government]]
 

Latest revision as of 09:18, 4 April 2019