Tatiana Maria
Majesty
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2013
- Messages
- 7,158
- City
- St Petersburg
- Country
- United States
Tbh, it is up to the family on who inherits what, the German government as far as I am concerned do not care about who is head of the house or which member inherits what. Yes the inheritance law about children inheriting equally or being entitled to some percentage of inheritance is done.
Exactly, so as previously said: Under German civil laws, legitimate and illegitimate children and male and female lines are equal. Private families may choose to discriminate, but that is also true for the French civil laws in the case we were discussing (private families may choose to discriminate between Catholic and non-Catholic marriages even though French civil law does not), so the comparison is valid.
No, surnames cannot be taken by "anyone" under German law; one would have to be related.
Then explain the “adoptions” of people like Frederich von Anhalt (Hans Robert Litchenberg)? The Anhalt Princess who adopted him didn’t adopt him to be a mother to him. She adopted him for money because she was broke. They weren’t related by blood or marriage either. He’s also gone on to adopt 35 people unrelated to him.
If you are referring to legal adoptions (in which case there is no need for quotation marks), then the adopter and adoptee become legally related by the adoption.
If you are referring to non-legal "adoptions" in which two people do not become legally related, then they cannot legally take each other's names.
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