House of Cessna

The House of Cessna (French: Maison de Cessna) is a noble family, macronationally connected to the Kingdom of France and the Kingdom of England, and micronationally connected to Karnia-Ruthenia. Despite its origins during the 17th century, was King Michael of Burgundaria, an agnate of this family from the Burgundarian branch, became a well-known micronationalist and raise this family to proeminence within micronational circles, establishing it as a royal house. The dynasts are usually known as soldiers, farmers, doctors and futurists.

History
The family descends patrilinially via marriage from one certain "Count John de Cessna". John de Cessna, formerly Jean le Sesne, was a minor son of Charles-Henri, Lord of Bourdin and Baron Ranton, who was a Hueguenot. John rejected the 1685 Edict of Fontainebleau, also known as the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, issued by French King Louis XIV, ordering all Hueguenots to either convert to Catholocism or leave Kingdom of France. While the senior heirs obeyed the King, Jean fled the country, and made his way to Amsterdam, Republic of the Seven United Netherlands. There, Jean became the Captain of a mercenary company in the service of William III, Prince of Orange, and accompanied that Prince when he was offered the Crown of England in 1688, fighting at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690, under Frederick Schomberg, 1st Duke of Schomberg. Anglicizing his name to John de Cessna, he eventually settled for a time in the Kingdom of Ireland, marrying a woman called Priscilla Foulk, in 1690. From Ireland, John de Cessna embarked to the Thirteen American Colonies in 1716, along with several other relatives from the Norman branch of the family, the Le Sesne of Menilles branch, settling in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania.