by Emily McMahon and Susan Flantzer © Unofficial Royalty 2013
The second of three daughters of King Frederick 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, Princess Benedikte of Denmark was born on April 29, 1944, at the Frederick VIII Palace in Amalienborg Palace complex in Copenhagen during the Nazi occupation of Denmark. As the Danish military was prohibited from performing the usual salute, a Danish resistance group set off 21 bombs in a Copenhagen park to mark the occasion of her birth. At the time of her birth, her grandfather King Christian X sat upon the throne of Denmark.
The infant princess was christened with the names Benedikte Astrid Ingeborg Ingrid on May 24, 1944, in Holmens Church in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Her godparents were:
- King Christian X of Denmark, her paternal grandfather
- Queen Alexandrine of Denmark, her paternal grandmother, born Alexandrine of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
- Prince Gustav of Denmark, her paternal great-uncle
- King Gustav V of Sweden, her maternal great-grandfather
- Prince Sigvard of Sweden, Duke of Uppland, her maternal uncle
- Princess Caroline-Mathilde of Denmark, her paternal aunt by marriage
- Princess Ingeborg of Denmark, Princess of Sweden, her paternal great-aunt
- Princess Margaretha of Sweden, her first cousin once removed
- Sir Alexander Ramsay, her maternal great-uncle by marriage
- Queen Elizabeth of the United Kingdom, wife of her paternal and maternal second cousin once removed, later The Queen Mother, born Lady Elizabeth-Bowes-Lyon
Princess Benedikte has two sisters:
- Queen Margrethe II of Denmark (born 1940), married Henri de Laborde de Monpezat, had two sons
- Queen Anne-Marie of Greece (born 1946), married King Constantine II of Greece, had five children
During her childhood, Benedikte attended local Danish schools. She also joined the Girl Guides, beginning her association with Danish scouting that has continued to this day. Benedikte also developed a lifelong love of horses, owning several while still in her teens. In her early 20s, Benedikte began performing royal duties. She visited the United States in 1965 and also began working for organizations dedicated to assisting the disabled.
Benedikte served as a bridesmaid for her cousin Princess Birgitta of Sweden at her wedding to Prince Johann Georg of Hohenzollern in 1961, and later for Princess Sophia of Greece when she married Prince Juan Carlos of Spain in 1962. At the 1966 wedding of Princess Beatrix of the Netherlands to Claus von Amsberg, Benedikte met German Richard, 6th Prince of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg and they began dating. The couple announced their engagement in 1967 shortly before the marriage of her sister Margrethe to Henri de Laborde of Monpezat. Benedikte and Richard married on the evening of February 3, 1968, in the Chapel of Fredensborg Palace, followed by a banquet.
The couple took up residence at Berleburg Castle in Germany, the groom’s ancestral home.
The couple had three children:
- Gustav, 7th Prince of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg (born 1969), married Carina Axelsson, had two children
- Princess Alexandra of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg (born 1970), married (1) Count Jefferson von Pfeil und Klein-Ellguth, had two children, divorced (2) Count Michael Ahlefeldt-Laurvig-Bille
- Princess Nathalie of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg (born 1975), married Alexander Johannsmann, had two children, divorced
Benedikte’s daughter Nathalie competed for Denmark in the Equestrian Team and Individual Dressage in the 2008/Bejing and 2012/London Summer Olympics. In the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Nathalie won a Bronze Medal in Team Dressage.
Still in the line of succession to the Danish throne, Princess Benedikte remains a very active member of the Danish Royal House. She is the patron of several organizations in Denmark and appears at most State and official functions, and represents the Danish crown at various events. While she remains in the line of succession, her children are not. At the time of the wedding, her father King Frederik IX had decreed that to be in the succession, any children must be raised in Denmark. As the children were raised in Germany, they hold no succession rights. Princess Benedikte’s husband Prince Richard died at his home, Berleburg Castle, in Bad Berleburg, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany on March 13, 2017, at the age of 82.
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