Hans zu Hohenlohe-Öhringen

A hereditary prince of the House of Hohenlohe, he was born at Sławięcice Palace in Slawentzitz in the Kingdom of Prussia on 24 April 1858.

[2] His maternal grandparents were Amalie of Baden (daughter of Charles Frederick, the Margrave, Elector and Grand Duke of Baden) and Charles Egon II, Prince of Fürstenberg (the last sovereign prince of Furstenburg).

After his brother's death in Somogyszob in 1926 without issue, Prince Hans became the 6th Prince of Hohenlohe-Öhringen and 3rd Duke of Ujust and inherited the family estates including Sławięcice Palace (in Upper Silesia), Oppurg Castle (in Thuringia), Neuenstein Castle (in Neuenstein), Öhringen Castle (in Öhringen), and the Hohenlohe Hunting Lodge (in Javorina, Slovakia which was sold to the Czechoslovak Republic in 1935).

[5] The palace were severely damaged by the Red Army in January 1945 and the remaining structure burned down in 1948.

[6] On 29 April 1889, Prince Hans was married in Bamberg to his first cousin, Princess Gertrude Auguste Mathilde Olga zu Hohenlohe-Öhringen (Heidelberg, 3 April 1862 – Breslau, 21 April 1935), a daughter of his father's younger brother Prince Felix Eugen Wilhelm zu Hohenlohe-Öhringen and Princess Alexandrine von Hanau-Hořowitz, Countess of Schaumburg (a daughter of Gertrude von Hanau and Frederick William, Elector of Hesse).