Louis Ferdinand was born in
Potsdam as the third in succession to the throne of the
German Empire, after his father,
German Crown Prince William and elder brother
Prince Wilhelm of Prussia. The monarchy was abolished after Germany's revolution in 1918. When Louis Ferdinand's older brother Prince Wilhelm renounced his succession rights to marry a member of the untitled nobility in 1933 (he was later to be killed in action in France in 1940 while fighting in the German army), Louis Ferdinand replaced him as second in the line of succession to the defunct German and Prussian thrones after the former Crown Prince. Louis Ferdinand was educated in
Berlin and deviated from his family's tradition by not pursuing a military career. Instead, he travelled extensively and settled for some time in
Detroit, where he befriended
Henry Ford and became acquainted with
Franklin D. Roosevelt, among others. He held a great interest in engineering. Recalled from the
United States upon his brother's renunciation of the throne, he became involved in the German
aviation industry, but was barred by
Hitler from taking any active part in German military activities. Louis Ferdinand dissociated himself from the Nazis after this. He was not involved in the
20 July plot against Hitler in 1944 but was interrogated by the
Gestapo immediately afterwards. He was released shortly afterwards. He married his second cousin,
Grand Duchess Kira Kirillovna of Russia, in 1938 in first a
Russian Orthodox ceremony in Potsdam and then a
Lutheran ceremony in
Huis Doorn, Netherlands. Both were great-grandchildren of
Friedrich Franz II of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Kira was the second daughter of
Grand Duke Kyril Vladimirovich and
Princess Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. The couple had four sons and three daughters. His two eldest sons both renounced their succession rights in order to marry commoners. His third son and heir apparent, Prince Louis Ferdinand, died in 1977 during military maneuvers, and thus his one-year-old grandson
Georg Friedrich, Prince of Prussia (son of Prince Louis Ferdinand) became the new heir apparent to the defunct Prussian and German Imperial throne. Upon Louis Ferdinand's death in 1994, Georg Friedrich became the pretender to the defunct thrones and head of the Hohenzollern family. The prince was a popular figure. In 1968
Der Spiegel reported that in a survey of their readers by
Quick magazine about who would be the most honorable person to become
President of the Federal Republic of Germany, Louis Ferdinand, the only one of twelve candidates who was not a politician, won with 39.8% before
Carlo Schmid and
Ludwig Erhard. In an interview with
Quick, the prince indicated that he might accept the presidency but would not relinquish his claim to the imperial or Prussian crowns. In interviews with
C.L. Sulzberger for the book
The Fall of Eagles, Louis Ferdinand expressed a deep sense of admiration for the informal
bicycle monarchy and
crowned republic style favored and used by the Dutch, Belgian, and Scandinavian royal families. Praising how vehicles carrying the King or Queen would stop and wait at traffic lights, Louis Ferdinand stated that if the
House of Hohenzollern were ever restored to the German throne during his lifetime, this same informality was a quality he fully intended to emulate. Prince Ferdinand of Hohenzollern, a member of the senior Swabian branch of the Hohenzollern dynasty,
Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, is his godson. ==Honours==