Vad är det som får henne att säga detta? Ligger det någon sanning bakom det eller säger hon så för någon annan orsak? Vad i så fall?
Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av
RudyardKipling
Vill minnas att det stod det på hennes engelska wikipedia tidigare och att de hade ursprung från Ukraina.
Var det på hennes fars eller mors sida? Hon hette Albrecht som ogift.
Ursula, hennes bror Hans-Holger och föräldrarna har allihop sju barn var.
Hennes mor: Heidi Adele Stromeyer. Hennes far: Ernst Albrecht.
Morföräldrar: Gustav Julius Wilhelm Stromeyer och Gertrud Emma Margarethe Stromeyer (född Ohlrogge)
Farföräldrar: Carl Albrecht och Adelheid "Adda" Eugenie Johanna Albrecht (född Berg)
Ernst Albrecht's grandmother Mary Ladson Robertson was an American of prominent planter class origin from Charleston, South Carolina, and a descendant of James H. Ladson and several colonial governors. James H Ladson
owned over 200 slaves. He and other members of the Charleston planter and merchant elite played a key role in launching the American Civil War. His parents: James Ladson and
Judith Smith.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_H._Ladson
Hans-Holger Albrecht resides in London, Austria and Stockholm, and is married with seven children, as many as his sister Ursula von der Leyen. In January 2022, Hans-Holger became chairman of the board of Storytel, one of the worlds leading streaming audiobook services.
Mennoniter:
Mennonites are a group of Anabaptist Christian communities tracing their roots to the epoch of the Radical Reformation. The name Mennonites is derived from the cleric Menno
Simons (1496–1561) of Friesland, part of the Habsburg Netherlands within the Holy Roman Empire, present day Netherlands. Some of the important characteristics of the Mennonite faith are strict pacifism,
a plain lifestyle, shunning oaths, and commitment to social justice.
Googlar:
Leyen Family History
Many of the modern surnames in the dictionary can be traced back to Britain and Ireland. Similar surnames: Leven, Leben, Leen, Leyes, Leyden...
Leven Surname Meaning
Jewish (Ashkenazic): variant of Levin 1 and English and Scottish: habitational name from a place called Leven in East Yorkshire or possibly from Levens in Cumbria. The Yorkshire place probably takes its name from a lost river name of British origin perhaps meaning 'the slow moving one'.