: Emperor
Wilhelm I,
Crown Prince Frederick,
Prince Wilhelm and the newborn Prince Wilhelm in
Potsdam in 1882. Wilhelm was born on 6 May 1882 as the eldest son of the then Prince
Wilhelm of Prussia, and his first wife, Princess
Augusta Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein. He was born in the
Marmorpalais of
Potsdam in the
Province of Brandenburg, where his parents resided until his father acceded to the throne. When he was born, his great-grandfather
Wilhelm I was the
German Emperor and his grandfather Crown Prince
Frederick was the
heir apparent, making Wilhelm third in line to the throne. with her great-grandson Prince Wilhelm in 1883 His birth sparked an argument between his parents and his grandmother Crown Princess
Victoria. Before Wilhelm was born, his grandmother had expected to be asked to help find a nurse, but since her son did everything he could to snub her, the future Wilhelm II asked his aunt
Princess Helena to help instead. His mother was hurt and his grandmother,
Queen Victoria, who was the younger Wilhelm's great-grandmother, was furious. Prince Wilhelm would have five younger brothers –
Prince Eitel Friedrich,
Prince Adalbert,
Prince August Wilhelm,
Prince Oskar and
Prince Joachim – and one younger sister:
Princess Viktoria Luise. He spent his childhood with his siblings at Marmorpalais and after his father's accession to the throne at the
New Palace, also in Potsdam. In 1888, the
Year of the Three Emperors when his great-grandfather and grandfather both died, his father became German Emperor, and six-year-old Wilhelm became the heir apparent to the German and Prussian thrones with the title of
crown prince. He spent his school days with his brothers at the
Prinzenhaus in
Plön in his mother's ancestral
Schleswig-Holstein. Wilhelm was a supporter of
association football, then a relatively new sport in the country, donating a cup to the
German Football Association in 1908 and thereby initiating the
Kronprinzenpokal (now Länderpokal), the oldest cup competition in German football. The German club
BFC Preussen was also originally named BFC Friedrich Wilhelm in his honour. In 1914, the Kaiser ordered the construction of Schloss
Cecilienhof in Potsdam for Prince Wilhelm and his family which angered him. The Schloss was loosely inspired by
Bidston Court in
Birkenhead, England, resembling a Tudor manor. Completed in 1917, it became the main residence for the Crown Prince for a time. ==World War I==