Yearly Archives: 2013

Princess Ragnhild of Norway

photo: The Royal House of Norway

photo: The Royal House of Norway

September 16 2012 – Death of Princess Ragnhild of Norway

Her Highness Princess Ragnhild, the eldest sister of King Harald V, died at her home in Brazil on September 16, 2012. She was 82.
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Read more here: Unofficial Royalty – In Memoriam: Princess Ragnhild, Mrs Lorentzen (1930-2012)

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Blanche of Lancaster, Duchess of Lancaster

by Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2013

Coat of Arms of the Duchy of Lancaster: Wikipedia

The Duchy of Lancaster is one of the two royal duchies in England and is held in trust for the Sovereign to provide income for the use of the British monarch.  The other royal duchy is the Duchy of Cornwall which provides a similar purpose for the eldest son of the reigning British monarch.  The monarch, regardless of gender, has the style of Duke of Lancaster.  The duchy comprises of 46,000 acres and includes urban developments, historic buildings, and farmland in many parts of England and Wales, and large holdings in Lancashire.  At the end of March 2013, the Duchy of Lancaster had £428 million of net assets under its control. The Sovereign is not entitled to the capital of the Duchy’s portfolio or to capital profits.  Revenue profits are distributed to the Sovereign and are subject to income tax.

In 1265, King Henry III of England granted lands forfeited by Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester to his second son Edmund Crouchback and created him Earl of Lancaster and Leicester. Over the years, more land was added to the original holdings making it quite profitable.  In 1315, Edmund Crouchback’s grandson Henry of Grosmont was created Duke of Lancaster and the lands were thereafter called the Duchy of Lancaster.  Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster became the wealthiest and most powerful peer in England.  So how did the Duchy of Lancaster get into the hands of the British Sovereign?  The connection is Blanche of Lancaster, Henry of Grosmont’s younger daughter.

Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster and father of Blanche of Lancaster, Credit: Wikipedia

The date of Blanche of Lancaster’s birth is not known for certain.  Many sources give March 25, 1345, as her birth date, and some sources believe her birth year was 1347, but she was born in Bolingbroke Castle in Lincolnshire, England.  Blanche’s father was Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster, a great-grandson of King Henry III.  Her mother was Isabel de Beaumont, the youngest daughter of Henry de Beaumont, Earl of Buchan and Alice Comyn.  Blanche had only one sibling, an elder sister Maud.

On May 19, 1359, Blanche married John of Gaunt, the third surviving son of King Edward III of England and Philippa of Hainault, in the Queen’s Chapel at Reading Abbey in Reading, England.  The bride was 14 and the groom was 19.  Blanche and John were third cousins, both being great-great-grandchildren of King Henry III.  This was an excellent match for both Blanche and John.  Blanche was marrying into the royal family and John’s wealth was greatly increased by marrying one of the richest heiresses in England.

Marriage of John of Gaunt and Blanche of Lancaster in Reading Abbey on 19 May 1359 by Horace Wright (1914)

Description of the above painting from the Reading Museum where the painting is on display: In this painting, John of Gaunt and his bride walk from beneath a gilded canopy towards the officiating Bishop of Salisbury. Four lords support the wedding canopy. The one nearest to Blanche is her father, Henry Duke of Lancaster. Close by is the poet Chaucer, clothed in black and bearing a scroll. On the throne is John’s father, King Edward III, beneath a crimson canopy decorated with the lions of England. Beside the King are two of the royal princes, Edward the Black Prince and Prince Lionel.

Blanche and John had seven children:

Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster died of the plague in 1361.  Since Blanche’s father did not have any sons, Blanche and her sister Maud became his co-heiresses. Maud had first married Ralph, the son of Ralph, Lord Stafford when she was very young and was widowed at the age of eight.  When she was 13, Maud married Wilhelm I, Duke of Bavaria, Count of Zeeland, Holland, and Hainault.  The groom was a nephew of Blanche’s mother-in-law Queen Philippa.  Maud did not have any surviving children from either of her two marriages.  Maud died of the plague on April 10, 1362, but some believed she was poisoned at the instigation of her brother-in-law John of Gaunt.  Maud’s portion of her inheritance passed to Blanche and her husband upon her death.

At this time, it was common for extinct titles of heiresses’ fathers to pass to their husbands.  John of Gaunt was created Duke of Lancaster on November 13, 1362.  By that time, his wealth was immense.  He owned thirty castles and estates in England and France. His household was comparable in size and organization to that of a monarch and his annual income between £8,000 and £10,000 a year would be several million pounds in today’s terms.

Blanche died at age 23, possibly of the plague or possibly from childbirth complications, on September 12, 1368, while John was away at sea.  Her funeral was held at the Old St. Paul’s Cathedral in London, England, and was attended by most of England’s nobility and clergy.  John held annual commemorations of Blanche’s death for the rest of his life and had a magnificent double tomb built at St. Paul’s for Blanche and himself.  Despite the fact that he married two more times, when John died in 1399, he was buried with Blanche.  Unfortunately, the Great Fire of 1666 destroyed Old St. Paul’s Cathedral and the tomb of Blanche and John.  Through her daughter Philippa who married King John I of Portugal, Blanche is the ancestress of many European monarchs.

Tomb of Blanche of Lancaster and John of Gaunt, destroyed during Great Fire of London of 1666. Photo: Wikipedia

So how did the Duchy of Lancaster get into the hands of the British monarchs?  When King Edward III died in 1377, he was succeeded by his ten-year-old grandson, King Richard II, the only child of King Edward III’s deceased eldest son Edward the Black Prince.  In 1398, John of Gaunt’s eldest son Henry Bolingbroke made an enemy of his cousin King Richard II and was banished for six years.  When John of Gaunt died in 1399, King Richard II confiscated the holdings of the Duchy of Lancaster and banished Henry Bolingbroke for life.  However, Henry was not having any of this.

While Richard was on a military campaign in Ireland, Henry returned to England to claim his inheritance. Supported by leading families, Henry regained control of the Lancastrian strongholds and captured Richard II. Richard abdicated and was imprisoned in Pontefract Castle where he later died.  Henry Bolingbroke was crowned King Henry IV on October 13, 1399.  The first act of King Henry IV was to declare that the Duchy of Lancaster would be held separately from the other possessions of the Crown, and should descend to his male heirs. This separation was confirmed in 1461 by King Edward IV when he stipulated that the Duchy would be held separate from other inheritances by him and his heirs, Kings of England.  Ever since, the Duchy of Lancaster has effectively passed to each reigning monarch. And it all started with the marriage of a 14-year-old girl in 1359.

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Queen Paola of Belgium

by Scott Mehl  © Unofficial Royalty 2013

 

Paola Margherita Maria Antonia Consiglia Ruffo di Calabria was born September 11, 1937, in Forte dei Marmi, Tuscany, Italy, the seventh and youngest child of Prince Fulco Ruffo di Calabria and Countess Luisa Gazelli dei Conti de Rossana e di Sebastiano. She was raised in Rome, where she attended school.

Paola had six older siblings:

  • Maria Cristina Ruffo di Calabria (1920–2003), married (1) Casimiro San Martino d´Aglie dei Marchesi di San Germano, had issue;  (2) Count Ernesto Rossi di Montelera, had issue
  • Laura Ruffo di Calabria (1921–1972), married Bettino, Baron Ricasoli Firidolfi, 31th Baron of Brolio, had issue
  • Fabrizio, Prince Ruffo di Calabria-Santapau, 13th Prince of Palazzolo, 14th Prince of Scilla, 7th Duke of Guardia Lombarda, 13th Marquis of Scilla and 18th Count of Sinopoli (1922–2005), married Maria Vaciago, had issue
  • Augusto Ruffo di Calabria (1925–1943), unmarried, killed in battle at sea during World War II, unmarried
  • Giovannella Ruffo di Calabria (1927–1941), unmarried
  • Antonello Ruffo di Calabria (1930–2017), married Rosa Maria Mastrogiovanni Tasca, had issue

In 1958, Paola met her future husband, Albert, Prince of Liège – the future King Albert II – at the installation of Pope John XXIII in Rome. Albert was the second son of the former King Leopold III of the Belgians and the younger brother of King Baudouin of the Belgians. Both Paola and Albert attended a reception at the Belgian Embassy where they were introduced. The following year, their engagement was announced.

 

After briefly considering holding the wedding at the Vatican, the government stepped in and insisted that they marry in Belgium. The wedding was held on July 2, 1959, at St. Michael and St. Gulda Cathedral in Brussels, Belgium. Upon marriage, Paola became a Princess of Belgium and was styled Princess of Liège.

Paola and Albert had three children:

On July 31, 1993, Albert’s brother, King Baudouin, passed away suddenly at his holiday home in Portugal. Albert succeeded to the throne, and Paola became Queen of the Belgians. As Queen, Paola worked closely with The Queen’s Charities to promote her involvement in social projects and assist those in need throughout Belgium. She later established the Queen Paola Foundation which focuses on youth and education, particularly for those in disadvantaged areas. In addition, Queen Paola has been very involved in the areas of art and music.

On July 21, 2013, after nearly 30 years on the throne, King Albert II abdicated in favor of his elder son Philippe. The couple continues to reside at Chateau Belvedere, located within the Royal Park at Laeken, Brussels, Belgium. King Albert and Queen Paola have remained largely out of the public eye, preferring to live a quiet retirement, enjoying time with their children and grandchildren.

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Kingdom of Belgium Resources at Unofficial Royalty

Joan of England, Queen of Sicily, Countess of Toulouse

by Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2013

King Richard I of England and his sister Joan greeting King Philip Augustus II of France, Credit – Wikipedia

Voyages on storm-tossed ships on the Mediterranean Sea. Being held captive and penniless by your husband’s successor and then being gallantly rescued by your brother. Being marooned and nearly captured after a strong storm and again being gallantly rescued by your brother.  Accompanying your brother and his new wife on the Crusades in the Holy Land. Being offered by your gallant brother as a bride to the brother of the man who led the Islamic opposition in the Crusade and being left to deal with a rebellion while you are pregnant. It sounds like an author’s imagination for a new book, but in reality, it is the life of Joan of England, the youngest daughter of King Henry II of England and Eleanor of Aquitaine.  However, Joan does have prominent roles in Sharon Penman‘s wonderful novels Devil’s Brood and Lionheart where she is referred to as Joanna.

Joan, sometimes called Joanna, was born at Château d’Angers in the County of Anjou, now in France in October 1165.  She was the third and youngest daughter and the seventh of eight children of King Henry II of England, who was also Count of Anjou, Count of Maine, Duke of Normandy, Duke of Aquitaine, and Count of Nantes – all territories in France – and Eleanor of Aquitaine who was Duchess of Aquitaine and Countess of Poitou in her own right.  Joan grew up in her mother’s court at the Palace of Poitiers, the seat of the Counts of Poitou and Dukes of Aquitaine, and also at Winchester Castle and/or Sarum Castle in England during part of the time her father kept her mother imprisoned because of her participation in the Revolt of   1173-1174.

Joan had seven siblings:

13th-century depiction of Henry and his legitimate children: (l to r) William, Young Henry, Richard, Matilda, Geoffrey, Eleanor, Joan, and John; Credit – Wikipedia

Joan spent time at Fontevrault Abbey near Chinon in Anjou, now in France, learning English, Norman French, rudimentary Latin, and skills necessary for running an aristocratic household.  Joan’s family was a great benefactor of Fontevrault Abbey and it was common for aristocratic girls to receive an education at abbeys.  Fontevrault Abbey became the burial place for Joan’s parents, her brother King Richard I, Isabella of Angoulême, the second wife of her brother King John, and Joan herself.

Fontevrault Abbey, Credit – Wikipedia

At this time it was common for royal and aristocratic girls to marry young.  Joan’s eldest sister Matilda married Henry the Lion, Duke of Saxony and Bavaria when she was 12 years old.  The next sister Eleanor married King Alfonso VIII of Castile when she was 14 years old.  Therefore, it was not unusual when King William II of Sicily sent ambassadors to England in 1176 when Joan was 11 years old to open marriage negotiations.  Genetically, William was not Sicilian, but rather Norman.  He was a member of the Hauteville family which rose to prominence in Europe, Asia, and Africa through its conquests in the Mediterranean, especially Southern Italy and Sicily.  Joan and William, who was ten years older than Joan,  were betrothed on May 20, 1176.

On August 27, 1176, Joan left England for Sicily accompanied by John of Oxford who later became Bishop of Norwich and her uncle Hamelin de Warenne, Earl of Surrey, an illegitimate son of King Henry II’s father Geoffrey of Anjou.  Typical for royal travel of the period, Joan was also accompanied by ladies-in-waiting, knights, clergy, and everything from cooks and seamstresses to grooms and blacksmiths.  Joan’s eldest brother Henry the Young King accompanied her across the English Channel and then to Poitiers. In Poitiers, Joan was met by her brother Richard, who escorted her through the Duchy of Aquitaine across the County of Toulouse to Saint Gilles, a French port on the Mediterranean Sea.  In Saint Gilles, Alfano of Camerota the Archbishop of Capua and Richard Palmer the Bishop of Syracuse greeted Joan on behalf of King William of Sicily.  The travel across the Mediterranean Sea was dangerous and long and Joan did not reach Sicily until the end of January 1177.

On February 13, 1177, Joan married King William II of Sicily and was crowned Queen of Sicily at Palermo Cathedral.  The Sicilian court was very different than the courts Joan was used to.  Much of Sicily was Muslim and this influence was obvious in the Sicilian culture where there were harems, and clothing and food much more exotic than what Joan had ever seen.  According to chronicler Robert of Torigni, Joan gave birth to a son Bohemund in 1182, but the child died in infancy. She may also have had miscarriages during this period. Her father, King Henry II of England, died in July 1189. In November of the same year, Joan was widowed when 36-year-old William died following an illness.

Deathbed of King William II of Sicily, Credit – Wikipedia

Following King William’s death, there was a revolt in which Tancred, Count of Lecce, an illegitimate member of the Hauteville family, seized control of Sicily and was crowned King.  Joan was imprisoned by Tancred who took control of her inheritance.  In 1190, King Richard I of England, Joan’s brother, arrived in Sicily on his way to the Third Crusade in the Holy Lands.  Richard demanded that his sister be released and given her inheritance.  Joan was freed on September 28, 1190, but without the inheritance.  Richard attacked Messina in Sicily, capturing it on October 4, 1190.  After looting and burning Messina, Richard established his base there and remained in Messina until Tancred finally agreed to sign a treaty on March 4, 1191.  One of the treaty’s provisions was to compensate Joan for her taken inheritance.

In the same month the treaty was signed, Joan and Richard’s mother Eleanor of Aquitaine arrived in Messina with Richard’s bride-to-be Berengaria of Navarre.  Berengaria was left in Joan’s care and Eleanor returned to England.  Richard postponed his wedding and set off for the Holy Land along with Joan and Berengaria who were on a separate ship.  Two days after setting sail, Richard’s fleet was hit by a strong storm. Several ships were lost and others were way off course.  Richard landed safely in Crete, but the ship Joan and Berengaria were on was marooned near Cyprus.  Joan and Berengaria were about to be captured by the ruler of Cyprus when Richard’s ships appeared to rescue them.  On May 12, 1191, King Richard I of England married Berengaria of Navarre at the Chapel of St George in Limassol, Cyprus, and then his fleet, along with Joan and Berengaria, traveled to the Holy Land.

King Richard I of England and Queen Berengaria, Credit – Wikipedia

Joan and Berengaria accompanied Richard throughout the Crusade.  At one point, Richard tried to use his sister Joan in a political scheme.  He suggested marrying her to Al-Adil, the brother of Saladin who led the Islamic opposition against the European Crusaders, and making them joint rulers of Jerusalem. This plan fell apart when Joan refused to marry a Muslim and Al-Adil refused to marry a Christian.

When Joan and Berengaria returned from the Holy Land on a different ship than Richard, they landed at Naples and then proceeded to Rome where they had to stay for a year until the Pope gave them safe conduct to travel to Marseilles.  It was at Marseilles that Joan fell in love with Raymond VI, Count of Toulouse.  Joan and Raymond married in October of 1196 in Rouen, Normandy.  Joan gave birth to her husband’s successor Raymond VII and a daughter Mary (or Wilhelmina) born in 1198, who married Berald of Elbine, Prince of Orange.

Joan of England, Credit – Wikipedia

In 1199, while Joan was pregnant with her third child, she was left to deal with a rebellion. Fearing her safety, she traveled to northern France, hoping for the protection of her brother King Richard, but he had died on April 6, 1199.  Joan then fled to her mother’s court at Rouen in Normandy.  Aged 33, Joan died at Fontevrault Abbey on September 4, 1199, shortly after giving birth to a son who lived just long enough to be baptized Richard.  Joan was veiled as a nun on her deathbed and was buried at Fontevrault Abbey.  In 1249, her son Raymond VII of Toulouse was buried next to her.  Unfortunately, both their tombs were destroyed during the French Revolution.

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Archduchess Elisabeth Marie of Austria, Princess of Windisch-Graetz

by Emily McMahon © Unofficial Royalty 2013

Archduchess Elisabeth Marie of Austria, Princess of Windisch-Graetz; Credit – Wikipedia

Born on September 2, 1883, at the Austrian imperial summer residence of Schloss Laxenburg, in Laxenburg, Austria, Elisabeth Maria Henriette Stephanie Gisela was the only child of Rudolf, Crown Prince of Austria and Stéphanie of Belgium. Elisabeth was the granddaughter of Franz Joseph I, Emperor of Austria and his wife, Elisabeth of Bavaria (Sissi) as well as Leopold II, King of the Belgians and Marie-Henriette of Austria. Named in honor of her famous paternal grandmother, the younger Elisabeth was known by the nickname “Erszi,” short for the Hungarian version of her name.

Shortly after her birth, the relationship between Elisabeth’s parents began to deteriorate. Rudolf likely infected Stéphanie with a sexually transmitted disease, rendering her sterile and unable to provide a male heir for the Austrian throne. Both Stéphanie and Rudolf began affairs with other people in the following years and intermittently spoke of divorce.

Elisabeth with her mother in 1894; Photo Credit – Wikipedia

In 1889, Rudolf was found shot to death with his mistress, Baroness Mary von Vetsera, at the imperial hunting lodge in Mayerling. Although the deaths were officially ruled a murder-suicide or double suicide, some evidence suggests the two may have been murdered. Imperial dislike of Stéphanie had been high, and as a result, her paternal grandfather took Elisabeth into his care. The two were close to the end of the Emperor’s life. Following her mother’s remarriage to a Hungarian count in 1900, Elisabeth broke off all contact with her mother.

Despite her unusual family history, as the granddaughter of the Emperor, Elisabeth was still considered politically and financially valuable as a possible royal bride. She was strongly considered as a wife for her distant cousin Albert I of the Belgians, but he married one of Elisabeth’s Bavarian relations (another Elisabeth of Bavaria) instead.

Elisabeth met minor Prince Otto of Windisch-Grätz at a court function and immediately persuaded her grandfather to allow her to marry him despite his low rank. Franz Joseph agreed to the engagement and a generous dowry. Otto, who barely knew Elisabeth, was forced to accept the engagement and break off a previous betrothal. The two married at Hofburg in 1902.

Elisabeth Marie and Prince Otto zu Windisch-Grätz; Credit – Wikipedia

The marriage was fraught with problems from the start. Otto naturally resented Elisabeth for forcing the union and began having an affair with an Austrian actress. It is said that Elisabeth shot the actress (who later died), but the incident was covered up due to Elisabeth’s high status. Within ten years of their wedding, both Otto and Elisabeth were seeing other people. Nevertheless, the marriage produced three sons and a daughter:

  • Prince Franz Josef of Windisch-Grätz (1904-1981), married Ghislaine d’Arschot Schoonhoven, had one daughter and one son
  • Prince Ernst of Windisch-Grätz (1905-1952), married  (1) Ellen Skinner, divorced  (2) Eva Isbary
  • Prince Rudolf of Windisch-Grätz (1907-1939), unmarried
  • Princess Stéphanie of Windisch-Grätz (1909-2005), married  (1) Count Pierre d’Alcantara de Querrieu, had one son  (2) Karl-Axel Björklund, had one son

Elisabeth and Otto separated officially following World War I, and a battle over custody of their children followed. The two, however, did not legally divorce for nearly 30 years.

Following her separation from Otto, Elisabeth enthusiastically joined the Austrian Social Democratic Party. She also met and began a relationship with Leopold Petznak, a socialist leader. Her association with the Social Democratic Party and her devotion to Leopold earned Elisabeth the nickname “The Red Archduchess.” Leopold and Elisabeth married in 1948 and remained together until he died in 1956.

After Leopold’s death, Elisabeth was in ill health and rarely ventured out in public. Her relationship with her two surviving children was poor, and she left them few possessions when she died on March 16, 1963, at Villa Windisch-Graetz in Hütteldorf, Vienna, Austria, instead choosing to leave the majority to the Austrian state. Elisabeth is buried in a simple grave with her second husband in the Hütteldorfer Cemetery in Vienna, Austria.

Unmarked grave of Elisabeth Marie and Leopold Petznek; Photo Credit – By Artsunlimited – Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=16424510

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August 31, 1997 – Death of Diana, Princess of Wales

by Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2013

August 31, 1997 – Death of Diana, Princess of Wales in Paris, France; buried at Althorp, Northamptonshire, England

At 4 am (Paris time) Sunday 31 August 1997, Diana, Princess of Wales died in hospital after being involved in a car crash which instantly killed Dodi Fayed and the driver of the car. Diana’s car was being chased by photographers on motorbikes at high speeds when the crash happened in the Ponte l’Alma Tunnel. Investigation of the accident also brought to light that the driver of the car was more than three times over the (French) alcohol limit.

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The Pont de l’Alma Tunnel in Paris, where the fatal accident occurred; Photo Credit – Susan Flantzer

The Prince of Wales, along with Diana’s two sisters, flew to Paris to accompany Diana’s coffin back to Britain. Draped with the Royal Standard, the coffin was taken to the Chapel Royal at St. James’ Palace. The funeral was held on Saturday 6 September in Westminster Abbey, following a procession from Kensington Palace. After the service, Diana’s coffin was taken to Althorp, the ancestral home of the Earls Spencer, where she was buried privately on an island in the center of a lake on the grounds.

Diana was born The Honourable (later Lady) Diana Frances Spencer, youngest daughter of John Spencer, Viscount Althorp (later 8th Earl Spencer) and his wife, formerly the Honourable Frances Burke Roche, at Park House, on the Queen’s Sandringham Estate. She married HRH The Prince of Wales on 29 July 1981 at St Paul’s Cathedral in London. The Prince and Princess of Wales have two sons – HRH Prince William and HRH Prince Henry (Harry). The couple divorced in 1996 and Diana’s style became Diana, Princess of Wales. While she lost her HRH status, she remained, officially, a member of the Royal Family.

Links:

 

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Anne-Marie of Denmark, Queen of the Hellenes

by Scott Mehl  © Unofficial Royalty 2013

Anne-Marie of Denmark, Queen of the Hellenes; Credit – Wikipedia

Princess Anne-Marie of Denmark was born August 30, 1946, at Amalienborg Palace in Copenhagen, Denmark, the youngest of the three daughters of the future King Frederik IX of Denmark and Princess Ingrid of Sweden, daughter of King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden, and his first wife Crown Princess Margareta of Sweden, born Princess Margaret of Connaught, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria  At the time of her birth, Anne-Marie’s grandfather King Christian X was King of Denmark.

Anne-Marie has two elder siblings:

Embed from Getty Images 

The princess was christened Anne-Marie Dagmar Ingrid on August 30, 1946, at the Holmen Church in Copenhagen, Denmark. Her godparents were:

Before Anne-Marie’s first birthday occurred, her grandfather died and her father became King of Denmark. Her childhood was spent in three family homes – Amalienborg Palace, Graasten Palace, and Fredensborg Castle.  From 1952 – 1961, Anne-Marie attended Zahle’s Skole, a private school in Copenhagen, the same school her sisters attended.  In 1961, she spent a year at an English boarding school in Switzerland, the Chatelard School for Girls.  From 1963 – 1964, Anne-Marie attended a Swiss finishing school, Institut Le Mesnil, to improve her French.  She also speaks English and Danish and learned Greek after her marriage.

Anne-Marie first met Crown Prince Constantine of Greece in 1959, when he visited Copenhagen on a trip with his parents, King Paul I and Queen Frederica of Greece.   Anne-Marie met him again in Denmark in 1961 and Constantine declared to his parents that he intended to marry her. In 1962, Constantine’s elder sister Sophia married Prince Juan Carlos of Spain in Athens, Greece. Anne-Marie was a bridesmaid and Queen Frederica noted that at the reception, her son “would dance only with Anne-Marie.”  It was at that wedding that Constantine and Anne-Marie realized that they were falling in love. Constantine proposed during a sailing holiday in Norway, but the engagement announcement was postponed for six months because of Anne-Marie’s young age.  In March 1964, King Paul I died and Constantine succeeded his father as King Constantine II.

Embed from Getty Images

Six months after his accession, on September 18, 1964, Constantine married 18-year-old Anne-Marie in a lavish ceremony in Athens.  Upon marriage, she became Queen of the Hellenes and relinquished her place in the line of succession to the Danish throne. Prior to the wedding, Anne-Marie converted to Greek Orthodoxy. Anne-Marie and Constantine are third cousins twice, sharing both King Christian IX of Denmark and Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom as common ancestors.

Anne-Marie and Constantine had five children:

King Constantine and Queen Anne-Marie’s 50th wedding anniversary; Credit – https://www.greekroyalfamily.gr/

As Queen, Anne-Marie established “Her Majesty’s Fund” to provide aid to people in rural areas throughout Greece. Unfortunately, her tenure as Queen did not last very long. Following a coup in 1967, the Greek royal family went into exile, living in Rome for several years before moving to Denmark and then finally settling in the United Kingdom. While in exile, King Constantine was deposed and the monarchy was formally abolished in 1974.

Anne-Marie, with her husband, established the Hellenic College of London in 1980, a Greek boarding school that her younger children attended. The following year, they were permitted to return to Greece for the funeral and burial of Queen Frederika, however, they were made to leave immediately afterward. In 2003, following reimbursement by the Greek government for properties seized from the royal family, the Anna-Maria Foundation was established with the funds from the reimbursement. Constantine had stated that whatever amount the court ordered would be donated in its entirety for the creation of a foundation so the funds would be returned to the Greek people. The foundation, of which Queen Anne-Marie is president, provides aid and assistance to victims of natural disasters in Greece.  The settlement of the property dispute also allowed Anne-Marie and Constantine to visit Greece and purchase a summer home in Portocheli, Peloponnese, Greece.  In 2013, former King Constantine II and Queen Anne-Marie permanently returned to reside in Greece.

Anne-Marie’s husband King Constantine II, the former King of Greece, died at Hygeia Hospital in Athens, Greece on January 10, 2023, at the age of 82. He had been admitted to the intensive care unit at the hospital a couple of days earlier due to a stroke.

 

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty. Resources at Unofficial Royalty

Prince Carl of Sweden, Duke of Västergötland

by Emily McMahon and Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2013

Prince Carl of Sweden; Credit – Wikipedia

Oscar Carl Wilhelm, called Prince Carl, was born at Arvfurstens Palace in Stockholm, Sweden on February 27, 1861. He was the third of four sons of King Oscar II of Sweden and Sophia of Nassau. Like his father, Carl exhibited excellent skills of diplomacy and was later sought to help mediate peace talks and arrange the release of political prisoners.  Carl had three brothers:

Princess Ingeborg of Denmark and Prince Carl of Sweden in 1897; Credit – Wikipedia

In May 1897, an engagement was announced between Carl and another Scandinavian royal, Princess Ingeborg of Denmark. Born at Charlottenlund Palace in Copenhagen, Denmark on August 2, 1878, Ingeborg was the second daughter and fifth child of the future King Frederik VIII of Denmark and his wife Lovisa of Sweden.  Although neither was the heir to a throne, the prospect of another Danish-Swedish royal union was exciting to the families of the couple and citizens of their respective countries.  On their 50th wedding anniversary, Carl admitted that their marriage had been completely arranged by the couple’s fathers. Ingeborg added, “I married a complete stranger!”

The wedding was held at Christiansborg Palace Chapel in Copenhagen, Denmark on August 27, 1897. Among the guests were Alexandra, Princess of Wales and Russian Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna (Dagmar of Denmark), the bride’s aunts. Copenhagen was decorated with flowers and flags of both countries to celebrate the occasion. Following a brief stay in Denmark, the new couple set off for a honeymoon in Germany.

Carl and Ingeborg had a comfortable family life, dividing their time between Arvfurstens Palace in Stockholm and summers in Fridhem, Sweden. Despite the difference in their ages (Carl was 17 years older than Ingeborg), the two were happy and well-suited to one another. The couple had four children born between 1899 and 1911. They were:

During their young adulthood, the four children of Ingeborg and Carl were repeatedly sought after as spouses by several European monarchs. Astrid and Märtha were both linked to the future King Edward VIII of the United Kingdom before their respective marriages. Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands strongly desired a marriage between Carl and her daughter and heir, the future Queen Juliana of the Netherlands.  However, the two vehemently disliked each other upon meeting in the late 1920s. Carl and Ingeborg are ancestors of the current Belgian royal family, Luxembourg grand ducal family, and Norwegian royal family. Belgian Kings Baudouin and Albert II, Norwegian King Harald V, and Grand Duchess Josephine-Charlotte of Luxembourg, the wife of Grand Duke Jean of Luxembourg, are all grandchildren of Carl and Ingeborg.

Carl and Ingeborg continued to play important roles in European history throughout their marriage. Ingeborg served as the de facto first lady of Sweden for several years during the absence of Sophia of Nassau and Viktoria of Baden. Due to her close familial connections, she also worked to bring peace to the three Scandinavian royal families following the Norwegian independence in 1905. Carl distinguished himself as the President of the Swedish Red Cross, earning several Nobel Peace Prize nominations for his work with prisoners of war.

Both Carl and Ingeborg lived long lives. Carl died on October 24,  1951, in Stockholm, Sweden at the age of 90. Ingeborg survived him by seven years, dying in 1958 at age 79. The two are buried in the Royal Burial Ground in Haga Park in Solna, Stockholm, Sweden.

Prince Carl and Princess Ingeborg in 1926; Credit – Wikipedia

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Tragedy in the British Royal Family at the End of August

by Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2013

Royal Burial Ground Frogmore

Royal Burial Ground, Frogmore near Windsor Castle, Credit – Wikipedia

Of course, it is well known that Diana, Princess of Wales tragically died in a car accident at the end of August. However, several other recent British royals died tragically during the last week of August before her death.

  • August 25, 1942 – Prince George, Duke of Kent, son of King George V and brother of King George VI, died when a military plane taking him to Iceland, crashed in Scotland
  • August 27, 1968 – Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent, widow of Prince George, Duke of Kent, died just hours after it was announced that she was seriously ill with a brain tumor
  • August 28, 1972 – Prince William of Gloucester, a first cousin of Queen Elizabeth II, was killed in an airplane accident at an air show
  • August 27, 1979 – Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma, Prince Philip’s uncle and a great-grandson of Queen Victoria,  was assassinated by an Irish Republican Army bomb
  • August 31, 1997 – Diana, Princess of Wales was killed in a car accident in Paris, France

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Prince George, Duke of Kent; Credit – Wikipedia

August 25, 1942 – Prince George, Duke of Kent, aged 39, son of King George V and brother of King George VI, died when a military plane taking him to Iceland, crashed in Scotland
Unofficial Royalty: Prince George, Duke of Kent

Prince George, the fourth son and fifth of six children of King George V and Mary of Teck, was born on December 20, 1902, at York Cottage on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, England.  On November 29, 1934, he married his second cousin Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark at Westminster Abbey.  Shortly before his marriage, George was created Duke of Kent.  The Duke and Duchess of Kent had three children:

The Duke of Kent spent eight years on active duty in the Royal Navy serving on the dreadnought battleship HMS Iron Duke and the Nelson-class battleship HMS Nelson. After retiring from the navy in 1929, the Duke of Kent held posts at the Foreign Office and the Home Office, becoming the first member of the British Royal Family to work as a civil servant.  At the start of World War II, the Duke of Kent returned to active military service and served in the Intelligence Division of the Admiralty.  In April 1940, he transferred to the Royal Air Force and assumed the post of Staff Officer at RAF Training Command.

On August 25, 1942, the Duke of Kent and fourteen others, took off from Invergordon, Scotland in an RAF Short S.25 Sunderland flying boat. The official story was that the Duke was on a morale-building visit to RAF personnel stationed in Iceland.  The crew had been carefully selected. The pilot Flight Lieutenant Frank Goyen was considered one of the best Sunderland pilots in the RAF. The co-pilot was Wing Commander Thomas Lawton Mosley, one of the RAF’s most experienced pilots. He was also a navigation specialist and a former instructor at the School of Navigation.  Also on board was the Duke of Kent’s private secretary John Lowther, his equerry Michael Strutt, and his valet John Hales.

The Short S.25 Sunderland flying boat took off from Invergordon on the east coast of Scotland at 1:10 p.m.  This type of aircraft had standing orders to fly over water, only crossing land when necessary. The flight plan was to follow the coastline to the northernmost tip of Scotland and then turn northwest towards Iceland.  The aircraft crashed into Eagle’s Rock near Dunbeath, Caithness, Scotland later that afternoon at an altitude of around 650 feet. The aircraft was off course when the accident happened and the exact time of the crash is disputed.  2,500 gallons of fuel, carried in the wings, exploded and 14 of the 15 passengers perished.  The Duke of Kent was 39 at the time of his death and six weeks earlier the Duchess of Kent had given birth to the couple’s third child Prince Michael.  The Duke’s widow was only 35 years old and his children were aged 6, 5, and 6 weeks.  There still is much mystery surrounding this plane crash.

The Duke of Kent’s funeral was held on August 29, 1942, at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor.  The Duchess of Kent entered the chapel with Queen Elizabeth and the Duke’s mother, Queen Mary.  They were dressed in black and their faces were covered with heavy crepe veils.  Queen Elizabeth helped the Duchess of Kent step up to her seat in the choir stalls. Behind the coffin came Admiral Halsey (representing the Duke of Windsor), King Haakon VII of Norway, King George II of Greece, King Peter II of Yugoslavia, Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, Crown Prince Olav of Norway,  and other members of the British Royal Family.  Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands also attended the funeral. As the casket was lowered onto the purple-covered bier, the Duchess of Kent sank to her knees in prayer.  Queen Elizabeth comforted her as she resumed her seat and The Very Rev. Albert Baillie, the Dean of Windsor, began the service.  The Duchess of Kent wept and almost collapsed during the service and there were tears in the eyes of Duke of Kent’s brothers, King George VI and the Duke of Gloucester.  After the service, King George VI, with tears in his eyes, moved forward and sprinkled earth upon the coffin as it slowly descended into the vaults below St. George’s Chapel.

There was a moving scene when the King of Arms recited the styles and titles of the Duke of Kent. The Duchess, still with tears in her eyes, rose to her feet. Members of the Royal Family began to weep, and then Queen Elizabeth, holding the Duchess by the arm, led her from the choir stalls. The Duchess looked down into the gaping space where her husband’s body had descended and stood for several minutes with her lips moving in prayer. The King and the Duke of Gloucester stood nearby. Then Queen Elizabeth led the weeping Duchess from the chapel and King George VI took the arm of his mother Queen Mary.  The coffin of the Duke of Kent was transferred to the Royal Burial Grounds at Frogmore on August 29, 1968, the day before his wife’s funeral.

George Marina Kent grave

Graves of the Duke and Duchess of Kent at the Royal Burial Grounds at Frogmore, Credit – http://www.findagrave.com

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August 27, 1968 – Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent, aged 61, widow of Prince George, Duke of Kent, died just hours after it was announced that she was seriously ill with a brain tumor
Unofficial Royalty: Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark

Princess Marina was born in Athens, Greece on December 13, 1906.  Her father was Prince Nicholas of Greece and Denmark, the third son of King George I of Greece.  Her mother was Grand Duchess Elena Vladimirovna of Russia, a granddaughter of Tsar Alexander II of Russia. The fathers of Princess Marina and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh were brothers, so Marina and Philip were first cousins.

In 1934, Princess Marina married Prince George, Duke of Kent, the son of King George V of the United Kingdom, and was styled the Duchess of Kent.  (See above.)  After her husband’s death, the Duchess of Kent continued to be an active member of the British Royal Family and carried out official engagements.  She was the president of the Wimbledon All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club for 26 years, a position her elder son, the current Duke of Kent, holds now.  Just before the current Duke of Kent’s wedding in June of 1961 to Katharine Worsley, the Duchess announced that she wished to be known as HRH Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent instead of HRH The Dowager Duchess of Kent, a change in the traditional style that was granted by her niece, Queen Elizabeth II.

On July 16, 1968,  Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent was admitted to the National Hospital for Nervous Diseases.  She was discharged six days later.  On August 27, 1968, at 12:05 PM, Kensington Palace issued the following statement: “Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent, died peacefully in her sleep at her home Kensington Palace, at 11.40 this morning, Tuesday, 27th August.”  Her doctors had issued this statement: “The Princess had for some weeks been suffering from an inoperable tumour of the brain and her condition rapidly deteriorated during the past 24 hours.”  At her bedside at the time of her death were her son, the Duke of Kent and his wife the Duchess of Kent; her daughter Princess Alexandra of Kent and her husband Angus Ogilvy; and her son Prince Michael of Kent.  It was only several hours earlier that the severity of her condition became public when Kensington Palace issued a statement that her condition “was giving rise to anxiety.”

The Duchess of Kent’s funeral; Credit – www.bbc.co.uk

Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent’s funeral was held on August 30, 1968, at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor and attended by Queen Elizabeth II, the Duke of Edinburgh, the Prince of Wales, Princess Anne, the Queen Mother, and Princess Margaret.  They sat next to the children of Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent in the front pew.  Behind them sat the Duke of Windsor, the former King Edward VIII, who had flown from his home in France.  Eight officers from the three regiments of which Marina was Colonel-in-Chief carried her coffin. Dr. Arthur Ramsey,  Archbishop of Canterbury and Archimandrite Gregory Theodorus of the Greek Orthodox Church, the religion into which the Duchess was born, conducted the service.  Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent was buried at the Royal Burial Grounds at Frogmore next to her husband whose coffin had been moved there from the vault at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor the day before.

George Marina Kent grave

Graves of the Duke and Duchess of Kent at the Royal Burial Grounds at Frogmore, Credit – http://www.findagrave.com

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Prince William of Gloucester, Photo Credit – www.dailymail.co.uk

August 28, 1972 – Prince William of Gloucester, aged 30, a first cousin of Queen Elizabeth II, was killed in an airplane accident at an air show
Unofficial Royalty: Prince William of Gloucester

Prince William of Gloucester was born on December 18, 1941, at Hadley Common in Hertfordshire, England.  His father was Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, the third son of King George V and Queen Mary, and his mother was Lady Alice Christabel Montagu Douglas Scott, the third daughter of the 7th Duke of Buccleuch.  Prince William was the elder son of his parents and would have succeeded his father as Duke of Gloucester.  His younger brother Prince Richard is the current Duke of Gloucester.

Prince William attended Wellesley House Preparatory School, Broadstairs in Kent, and Eton College. In 1960, he went to Magdalene College, Cambridge to read history, graduating with a BA degree in 1963, which was raised to an MA degree in 1968. Following Cambridge, he spent a year at Stanford University in California studying political science, American history, and business.  Upon his return to the United Kingdom, he worked for Lazard, an investment bank.  In 1965, he became the second member of the British Royal Family (after his uncle Prince George, Duke of Kent) to work in the civil service or the diplomatic service.  Prince William was employed by the Commonwealth Office and was posted to Lagos, Nigeria as the third secretary at the British High Commission. In 1968, he transferred to Tokyo to accept the post of second secretary in the British Embassy.

Prince William on the right and his co-pilot Vyrell Mitchell on the left, shortly before they took off on their last flight, Credit – http://www.bobbington-village.co.uk

Prince William was a licensed pilot, owned several airplanes, and enjoyed competing in air shows. On August 28, 1972, the prince planned on competing at the Goodyear International Air Trophy at Halfpenny Green, near Wolverhampton, England. He was flying with his co-pilot Vyrell Mitchell who also died. Express and Star photographer Ray Bradbury, an eyewitness, described what happened: “I saw Prince William’s Piper, number 66, and another Piper, number 69, take off. Number 69 appeared to get airborne before the prince. Then it seemed he was in some sort of trouble.  He banked to port. It looked as though the Prince might have been troubled by the other aircraft making a turn but at a higher altitude. His port wing seemed to hit the trees and he disappeared from view. Then there was an explosion.”

Prince William of Gloucester’s funeral was held on September 2, 1972, at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor.  Queen Elizabeth II, the Queen Mother, and Princess Margaret had been at Balmoral and flew from Scotland for the funeral.  The Duke of Edinburgh and Princess Anne arrived from Munich, Germany where they had been attending the Olympics.  Prince William’s gold and crimson personal standard was draped over his coffin carried by eight Scots Guards.  After the service, Prince William of Gloucester was buried at the Royal Burial Grounds at Frogmore.  The Prince of Wales was close to the older Prince William of Gloucester and named his first child in honor of him.

William of Glocester grave

Grave of Prince William of Gloucester at the Royal Burial Grounds at Frogmore, Credit – http://www.findagrave.com

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Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma, Credit – Wikipedia

August 27, 1979 – Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma, aged 79, Prince Philip’s uncle and a great-grandson of Queen Victoria,  was assassinated by an Irish Republican Army bomb
Unofficial Royalty: Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma

His Serene Highness Prince Louis Francis Albert Victor Nicholas of Battenberg was born on June 25, 1900, at Frogmore House in Windsor, Berkshire, England.  His father was Prince Louis of Battenberg.  His mother Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine was a granddaughter of Queen Victoria.  Princess Alice, Queen Victoria’s third child, was Louis’ grandmother.  In the family, Prince Louis was known as Dickie.  His siblings were: Alice, who married Prince Andrew of Greece and was the mother of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh; Louise, who married King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden; and George Mountbatten, 2nd Marquess of Milford Haven.

Louis was raised mainly in England and attended the Royal Naval College at Osborne.  As a child, Louis visited his first cousins, the children of his aunt Empress Alexandra Feodorovna and Tsar Nicholas II of Russia.  He developed a romantic interest in Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna and kept her photo next to his bed his entire life.

During World War I, King George V changed the name of the British Royal House from the Germanic Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to the English-sounding Windsor.  The King requested that his relatives with German names and titles do likewise.  In 1917, Louis’ father relinquished the title Prince of Battenberg in the Grand Duchy of Hesse, along with the style of Serene Highness, and anglicized his family name, changing it from Battenberg to Mountbatten.  King George V created Louis’ father Marquess of Milford Haven, Earl of Medina, and Viscount Alderney in the peerage of the United Kingdom.  Louis’ mother stopped using her title of Princess of Hesse and became known as the Marchioness of Milford Haven.  Louis, his brother George, and his sister Louise assumed the courtesy titles as children of a British marquess. Therefore, Louis was styled Lord Louis Mountbatten.   Louis’ eldest sister Alice had married into the Greek Royal Family in 1903 and never used the surname Mountbatten. However, her only son, Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark, adopted the name when he became a British subject in 1947.

Louis followed his father’s example and had a distinguished career in the Royal Navy during World War II.  He was the last Viceroy of India and the first Governor-General of India. From 1954 – 1959 he was the First Sea Lord, a position that had been held by his father, Prince Louis of Battenberg, forty years earlier. He served as Chief of the Defence Staff until 1965, making him the longest-serving professional head of the British Armed Forces to date. During this period, he also served as Chairman of the NATO Military Committee.  In 1946, he was created Viscount Mountbatten of Burma and in the following year, Earl Mountbatten of Burma.  After that time, he was informally known as Lord Mountbatten.

Lord Mountbatten married Edwina Cynthia Annette Ashley on July 18, 1922, at St. Margaret’s Church, Westminster.  Edwina was the favorite granddaughter of the banker Sir Ernest Cassel and had been the principal heir to his fortune.  When Cassel died in 1921, Edwina received £2 million (£75.1 million in today’s pounds), the country house Broadlands and the London townhouse, Brooke House.  The couple had two daughters, Patricia (born 14 February 1924) and Pamela (born 19 April 1929).  Since Lord Mountbatten had no sons, when he was created Viscount Mountbatten of Burma and then Earl Mountbatten of Burma and Baron Romsey, the Letters Patent were written to allow the titles to pass to his daughters, in order of seniority of birth, and to their heirs male respectively if there were no sons or issue in the male line.  After Lord Mountbatten’s death, his elder daughter Patricia became the 2nd Countess Mountbatten of Burma in her own right.

Lord Mountbatten and his family traditionally vacationed at Classiebawn Castle in Mullaghmore, a village in County Sligo, Ireland and they did so during August of 1979.  On August 27, 1979, Lord Mountbatten and his family members planned to go lobster-potting and tuna fishing despite security warnings.  Unbeknownst to anyone, Irish Republican Army (IRA) member Thomas McMahon slipped onto the unguarded boat the previous night and attached a radio-controlled bomb.  When Lord Mountbatten and his family were just a few hundred yards from shore, the bomb was detonated.  A witness said the bomb blew the boat “to smithereens” and hurled all seven occupants into the water.

Nearby fishermen pulled Lord Mountbatten, aged 79, out of the water. His legs had been almost severed by the explosion and he died shortly afterward. Also killed by the bomb were Nicholas Knatchbull, the 14-year-old son of Lord Mountbatten’s elder daughter; 83-year-old Doreen Knatchbull, Dowager Baroness Brabourne, the mother-in-law of Lord Mountbatten’s elder daughter; and Paul Maxwell, a 15-year-old from County Fermanagh who was a crew member.  Lord Mountbatten’s elder daughter Patricia Knatchbull; her husband John Knatchbull, 7th Baron Brabourne; and their son Timothy Knatchbull, the twin of Nicholas, survived the explosion but were seriously injured.

The attack called into question the security arrangements surrounding the Mountbatten family. Lord Mountbatten never had a bodyguard. The boat had been left unguarded in the public dock in Mullaghmore, a village that is only 12 miles from the Northern Ireland border and was near an area known to be used by IRA members as a refuge.  Thomas McMahon was convicted of the murders, and sentenced to life imprisonment but was released in 1998 under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.

The British Royal Family at Lord Mountbatten’s Funeral, Credit – www.washingtonpost.com

Lord Mountbatten received a ceremonial funeral at Westminster Abbey on September 5, 1979, attended by Queen Elizabeth II, other members of the British Royal Family, foreign royalty, and leaders and politicians from all over the world.  Members of Britain’s armed forces were joined by representatives of Burma, India, the United States, France, and Canada in escorting the naval gun carriage carrying Lord Mountbatten’s body to Westminster Abbey.   The Prince of Wales read the lesson from Psalm 107 and the Archbishop of Canterbury, Donald Coggan, highlighted Lord Mountbatten’s various achievements and his “lifelong devotion to the Royal Navy”.   After the public ceremony, the coffin was taken to Romsey Abbey near Broadlands, the Mountbatten family home in Hampshire, and buried at a private service.

Lord Mountbatten’s grave at Romsey Abbey, Credit – Wikipedia

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Diana, Princess of Wales; Credit – Wikipedia

August 31, 1997 – Diana, Princess of Wales, aged 36, was killed in a car accident in Paris, France
Unofficial Royalty: Diana, Princess of Wales
Unofficial Royalty: In Memoriam: Diana, Princess of Wales (1961-1997)

The Honourable Diana Frances Spencer, the youngest daughter of John Spencer, Viscount Althorp (later the 8th Earl Spencer) and The Honourable Frances Roche, was born on July 1, 1961, at Park House on the Sandringham Estate. She had two older sisters – Sarah and Jane – and two younger brothers – John (died in infancy) and Charles, 9th Earl Spencer.

On February 24, 1981, Buckingham Palace announced the engagement of The Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer.  Diana and Charles married on July 29, 1981, at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London. Entering on her father’s arm as Lady Diana Spencer, she later emerged from the Cathedral as Her Royal Highness The Princess of Wales, the 3rd highest-ranked lady of the land. Soon it was announced that the Princess was expecting her first child. On June 21, 1982, Diana gave birth to Prince William. Two years later, on September 15, 1984, Prince Harry was born.

On December 9, 1992, after several years of media speculation, Buckingham Palace announced the separation of the Prince and Princess of Wales. Following disastrous television interviews given by both Charles, in June 1994, and Diana, in November 1995, Buckingham Palace announced that The Queen had sent letters to both Diana and Charles, advising them to divorce as quickly as possible. Following many private meetings and negotiations with Prince Charles and representatives of The Queen, Diana agreed to a divorce in February 1996. Their divorce became final on August 28, 1996.

After her divorce in 1996, Diana had a relationship with Dr. Hasnat Khan, a British-Pakistani heart surgeon, which ended in June 1997. She then became involved with Dodi Fayed, son of Mohamed Al-Fayed, the owner of Harrods and the Ritz in London. Diana and her sons joined the Fayed family in the south of France for a summer vacation where she and Dodi reportedly began their romance. Following her trip to Bosnia, Diana joined Dodi Fayed on a private cruise aboard the Fayed’s yacht, returning to Paris on August 30. Later that night, hounded by paparazzi, the couple left the Ritz Hotel to go to Dodi’s apartment in Paris. Just minutes later, their car crashed in the Pont de l’Alma tunnel, killing Dodi and the car’s driver, Henri Paul, instantly. Diana was critically injured and eventually taken to the Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital. Diana, Princess of Wales was pronounced dead at 4 am.

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The entrance to the Pont de l’Alma tunnel where Diana, Princess of Wales was fatally injured, Photo Credit – Susan Flantzer

The Prince of Wales and Diana’s two sisters flew to Paris to accompany her body back to England. Draped with the Royal Standard, Diana’s coffin was taken to the Chapel Royal at St. James’s Palace where it remained for several days, before returning to her home at Kensington Palace. On Saturday, September 6, 1997, a procession began at Kensington Palace and ended at Westminster Abbey where Diana’s funeral was held. Following the funeral, the coffin was taken to Althorp, where it was privately interred on an island in the center of a lake.

The funeral of Diana, Princess of Wales, Photo Credit – www.dailymail.co.uk

Island at Althorp House where Diana, Princess of Wales is buried, Credit – www.mirror.co.uk

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Queen Noor of Jordan

by Scott Mehl © Unofficial Royalty 2013

Embed from Getty Images

Lisa Najeeb Halaby was born on August 23, 1951, in Washington DC, the eldest child of Najeeb Halaby and Doris Carlquist. Her father, of Syrian descent, held several prominent positions including head of the Federal Aviation Administration, and CEO of PanAm. Coming from an affluent family, Lisa attended private schools for her primary education – The National Cathedral School in Washington DC, The Chapin School in New York City, and Concord Academy in Massachusetts. She attended Princeton University, as a member of the first coed class, graduating in 1974 with a degree in architecture and urban planning.

In 1977, Lisa met her future husband King Hussein of Jordan while working on the development of Queen Alia Airport in Jordan, named for the King’s recently deceased wife. The couple was soon engaged and married on June 15, 1978, in Amman. Upon marriage, Lisa was given the name Noor Al-Hussein and was made Queen of Jordan. Previously, she had converted to Islam and relinquished her American citizenship.

 

Noor and Hussein had four children. In addition, she raised three of her stepchildren, the children of King Hussein and his third wife Queen Alia who died in a helicopter crash.

King Hussein died in 1999 following a battle with cancer. Queen Noor continues her work with many international organizations, including chairing the King Hussein Foundation, serving as president of the United World Colleges, and working with the Global Zero campaign to eliminate nuclear weapons around the world. Queen Noor divides her time between Jordan, Washington, D.C., and the United Kingdom, in London and at her country residence, Buckhurst Park, near Winkfield, Berkshire, England.

This article is the intellectual property of Unofficial Royalty and is NOT TO BE COPIED, EDITED, OR POSTED IN ANY FORM ON ANOTHER WEBSITE under any circumstances. It is permissible to use a link that directs to Unofficial Royalty.

Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan Resources at Unofficial Royalty

Suggested reading: Leap of Faith: Memoirs of an Unexpected Life, (2003) by Queen Noor of Jordan