What do you think about a German prince selling the castle for one euro?

Updated on international 2024-06-21
8 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    In Germany, a 35-year-old Prince of Hanover, Ernst August V, said that he would use the euro as a symbolic **** He is in Lower Saxony in a magnificent dynasty residence - Marienburg Castle, this castle has 135 rooms, the castle is very large, brilliant and shiny, but according to the Prince of Hanover Ernst August V, because the castle is very vast, there are 135 rooms, the maintenance cost of these rooms is very high, he really can't continue to bear, so he can only low price**.

    It turns out that owning a palace is not a very glamorous thing, and even those nobles who have so much wealth can't pay for the maintenance of the palace, although it is a bit incredible, but if you think about it, it is also very reasonable. Because there is a law there, you must maintain the palace under your name according to the requirements, and if you don't maintain it regularly, you will be punished by the law. The 35-year-old German Prince of Hanover, Ernst August V, announced a symbolic **** of one euro in the Marienburg Palace, the grand imperial residence of Lower Saxony, because the Prince of Hanover, Ernst August V, no longer wants to use his personal wealth to maintain the palace, so the life of the German aristocracy is not as brilliant and glamorous as it seems, and the very gorgeous and majestic castle is not always as beautiful as it seems.

    It is reported that in 2004, Prince Ernst August V of Hanover inherited Marienburg Castle from his father. In 2018, he announced that he would sell the castle at a low price, citing "no longer being able to afford the maintenance of the palace".

    Now the new owner of this Marienburg castle is Limark, a subsidiary of the locally owned Klosterkamer company, but then it was reported that the 66-year-old Prince Ernst August, the "head" of the Hanoverian royal family, accused his son Ernst August V of selling Marienburg Castle to ** "without him".

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    I don't think there's a problem, it's a kind of heroic performance, a very loving thing done when you are very rich, so that others can live in the castle.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    I think it's just attracting people's attention, and it doesn't make any sense at all.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    A German prince sold the castle for one euro. In this regard, I believe that the behavior of the German prince is actually an act of disrupting the market order, which has already involved breaking the law.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    A German prince sold the castle for one euro, for which I think he could not afford the costs of the later period, but at a low price**. This may be the best thing for him.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    I don't understand this behavior, maybe it's the willfulness of the rich, or maybe it's to get attention. However, the castle is the prince's own, and the decision is also in his hands, so we can just watch.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Foreigners can never figure it out, but although ** is only 1 euro, I think buyers may spend a lot of money on renovation and maintenance after purchase. You could fall into another pit.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    It can be seen that the prince was very unaware of the relevance, and simply because the subsequent construction was more expensive, he sold the castle at a low price.

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