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9 Historical Figures You Didn’t Know Were Related

You'd never know these world leaders, actors, and politicians had family ties with other equally famous people.

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10 Historical Figures You Didn't Know Were Related
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George Washington and Napoleon Bonaparte

And if you needed any more proof than that, leadership really does run in the Washington family. The president’s great-grandniece married Napoleon Bonaparte’s nephew Achille Murat, who lived in Florida and fought in the Second Seminole War. Learn 45 other astonishing facts about U.S. presidents.

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Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip

Of course, this royal couple has been married for more than 70 years, but they had family ties long before tying the knot. Queen Victoria is the great-great-grandmother of both of them, making them third cousins. Check out 11 more facts (and scandals) about Queen Elizabeth.

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Barack Obama and George W. Bush

Talk about bringing two sides together. Researchers at the New England Historic Genealogical Society did a bit of digging in 2008 and found that Obama and Bush are very distant cousins—tenth cousins, once removed, to be exact—thanks to a common ancestor from Cape Cod who died in 1662.

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Kaiser Wilhelm II, King George V, and Tsar Nicholas II

No conflict would be complete without a bit of family drama, and World War I was no exception. King George V and Tsar Nicholas II were first cousins through Danish royalty, but at least they were both Allied leaders. German emperor Kaiser Wilhelm II was also King George V’s first cousin (both could call Queen Victoria “grandma”), as well as Tsar Nicholas II’s third cousin. And you thought your family get-togethers were uncomfortable. Speaking of, check out the most famous sibling rivalries throughout history.

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Helena Bonham Carter and H.H. Asquith

That’s not the end of the World War I connections. Herbert Henry Asquinth was prime minister of the United Kingdom at the beginning of the war, and 100 years later, his ancestors are still making names for themselves: Actress Helena Bonham Carter is his great-granddaughter.

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Sophia Loren and Benito Mussolini

There’s no blood relation here, but the actress and the Italian prime minister are connected through marriage. Sophia Loren’s sister, Maria Scicolone, was once married to Benito Mussolini’s son Romano Mussolini.

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Princess Diana and Sarah Palin

No shock here: An English colonist connects the “people’s princess” to one of the few female U.S. vice presidential candidates. The two are said to be tenth cousins, connected by John Strong, a colonist who came to the United States in 1635.

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Abraham Lincoln and Tom Hanks

Tom Hanks might have shaken hands with a few presidents as Forrest Gump, but not the one to whom he’s related. Ever since he was a kid, the actor’s family shared stories about how Abraham Lincoln’s mother, Nancy Hanks, is a distant relative. We can only imagine how cool it must have been for him to talk about his third cousin, four times removed when narrating Killing Lincoln in 2013. Here’s more U.S. trivia your teacher never told you.

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Nicolas Cage and Francis Ford Coppola

Nicolas Cage might not have the best reputation in the acting biz, but he seems to have been destined for the big screen. He’s the nephew of The Godfather director Francis Ford Coppola. For more celebrity trivia, learn about 13 famous people you didn’t know had FBI files.

Marissa Laliberte
Marissa Laliberte-Simonian is a London-based associate editor with the global promotions team at WebMD’s Medscape.com and was previously a staff writer for Reader's Digest. Her work has also appeared in Business Insider, Parents magazine, CreakyJoints, and the Baltimore Sun. You can find her on Instagram @marissasimonian.