03-06-2019, 06:17 AM
(03-05-2019, 09:38 AM)FaceInTheCrowd Wrote: Trubel met one Grimm working for HW.
There were seven Grimms in service to the royals during the Crusades. If each family had two or three live Grimms at any given time, that makes 14-21 Grimms. That's assuming that all seven family lines survived, which we actually know was not the case, since Josef Nebojsa was the last of his line, and unless Josh turned Grimm after the last time we saw him, the Porter line has no Grimms either.
Historically, we do know that there was at least one Grimm of Asian extraction, as recounted in one of the books, so there may well be other Grimms in the world not part of the seven families, but the fact that the person making the book entry found it so surprising tells us that there probably were/are not that many of them, either.
Just a small observation from a concerned contributor on the continued flow of some confused facts. The Royals in the Grimm series weren't from Germany. Unlike "SOME" idiotic idiots, this contributor knows, just because they speak German in Vienna, the city is located in Austria not in Germany.
Yes, the whole country of Austria speaks German, not Austrian, which is un-beknown to some presidents, it is a non-existing language.
As it pertains to the 7 royal families, and the Grimms that served them? It applies to all of Europe not just to Germany, nor the rest of the world. Unfortunately, the writers did not give us much access to the "GRIMM Book", which Kelly was adding to in that final scene, to expand our knowledge of Nick ancestry or any other Grimm ancestry tree, listed in there. I do agree with you, I also got the feeling there were other Grimm with ancestry from outside Europe.
You know you are OLD, when you see the Slide Ruler you used in college selling in an ANTIQUE SHOP!!