A
grand duchy is a country which has a
Grand Duke or a
Grand Duchess as head of state. Between the
Napoleonic Wars and
World War I there were eight grand duchies in Europe:
Baden,
Finland,
Hesse-Darmstadt,
Luxembourg,
Mecklenburg-Schwerin,
Mecklenburg-Strelitz,
Oldenburg, and
Saxe-Weimar[?]. Today Luxembourg is the only remaining grand duchy. It has been a grand duchy since 1815, when the
Netherlands became an independent kingdom and Luxembourg was handed over to the King of the Netherlands,
William I.
Luxembourg remained a Dutch dominion until 1890, when King William III of the Netherlands, who was also Grand Duke Guillaume III of Luxembourg, died without leaving a male heir to the Luxembourgian Grand Duchy. The throne then passed to his cousin, Duke Adolf of Nassau who became HRH Grand Duke Adolf I of Luxembourg.
See also: Duchy, Grand duke, Grand duchess, Fürst, Prince, Ranks of nobility and peerage and Titles of nobility
All Wikipedia text
is available under the
terms of the GNU Free Documentation License