Friday, October 22, 2021

Prince Philippos and Princess Nina of Greece Marry in Athens!

Capped with a kiss: Prince Philippos and Princess Nina after the ceremony!
Photo (c) Getty Images / Milos Bicanski.

Today, 23 October, Prince Philippos of Greece and Denmark and Princess Nina (née Flohr) celebrated their religious wedding at the Metropolitan Cathedral of Athens. One hundred guests were invited to be present in the Cathedral. Archbishop Ieronymos II of Athens and All Greece officiated over the ceremony, which began at 5:00pm. The crowd gathered outside of the cathedral cheered for Queen Sofía and Princess Irene, King Constantine and Prince Constantine, Queen Anne-Marie and Prince Philippos, and Princess Nina and Thomas Flohr upon their respective arrivals. In a touching scene, the king, who was in a wheel chaired pushed by his grandson, was helped to stand in order to greet the Archbishop. Prince Philippos arrived on the arm of his mother Queen Anne-Marie, who wore her pearl and diamond cross necklace. Princess Nina, wearing a Chanel wedding gown and the Greek Corsage Tiara, arrived on the arm of her father Thomas Flohr. The princess carried a bouquet of peonies. 

Queen Sofía, Crown Prince Pavlos, and Princess Irene.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Princess Benedikte, Princess Alexandra, Count Michael, and Infanta Elena.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Princess Theodora, Princess Tatiana, and Prince Nikolaos.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Princess Alexia and Carlos Morales.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Princess Marina and Prince Michael.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Jack Brooksbank, Princess Eugenie, Princess Beatrice, Edo Mapelli-Mozzi.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
King Constantine II and Prince Constantine.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Queen Anne-Marie and Prince Philippos.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Thomas Flohr walks his daughter Princess Nina into the Metropolitan Cathedral.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.

The Greek royal family was in full attendance: King Constantine II and Queen Anne-Marie, Crown Prince Pavlos and Crown Princess Marie-Chantal, Princess Olympia and the Hon. Peregrine Pearson, Prince Constantine-Alexois, Prince Achileas-Andreas, Prince Odyseus Kimon, Prince Aristidis-Stavros, Princess Alexia and her husband Carlos Morales and their children, Prince Nikolaos and Princess Tatiana, Princess Theodora, and Prince Michael with Princess Marina. 

Prince Philippos and Princess Nina of Greece in the Metropolitan Cathedral during their wedding.
Photo courtesy of the Greek royal family.

Among the foreign royal and noble guests at the wedding were the following: Prince Kyril of Bulgaria and his partner Katherine Butler, Princess Benedikte of Denmark, Princess Alexandra zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg and her husband Count Michael Ahlefeldt-Laurvig-Bille, Princess Beatrice and her husband Count Edoardo Mapelli-Mozzi, Princess Eugenie and her husband Jack Brooksbank, Princess Chantal of Hannover, Hereditary Prince Ernst August and Hereditary Princess Ekaterina of Hannover, Prince Christian and Princess Alessandra of Hannover, Queen Sofía of Spain and her daughter Infanta Elena, Princess Tatiana Radziwill and her husband Dr Jean Fruchaud, Count Nikolai von Bismarck, several of the Countesses von Arco-Zinneberg, Andrea Casiraghi and Tatiana Santo Domingo.

King Constantine II and Queen Anne-Marie of the Hellenes with their grandson Prince Constantine.
Photo (c) Getty Images / Milos Bicanski.
Left to right: Crown Prince Pavlos, Thomas Flohr, King Constantine, Prince Constantine, Queen Anne-Marie, Princess Benedikte, Katharina Konečný, and Queen Sofía.
Photo (c) Getty Images / Milos Bicanski.
The groom's aunts: Princess Benedikte of Denmark, Princess Irene of Greece, and Queen Sofía of Spain.
Photo (c) Getty Images / Milos Bicanski.
Left to right: Prince Odyseus, Prince Constantine, Princess Olympia, Crown Prince Pavlos and Crown Princess Marie Chantal, Prince Achileas, and Prince Aristidis.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Left to right: Arietta Morales, Carlos Morales, Ana María Morales, Carlos Morales and Princess Alexia, and Amelia Morales.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Jack Brooksbank and Princess Eugenie.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Edoardo Mapelli-Mozzi, Hereditary Prince Ernst August of Hannover, Princess Beatrice, and Andrea Casiraghi.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Prince Cyril of Bulgaria and Katherine Butler.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.
Infanta Elena and Princess Alexandra.
Photo (c) PPE AGENCY / Albert Nieboer.

The religious marriage of the prince and princess was followed by a reception at the National Gymnastics Association, hosted by the groom's father King Constantine II of Greece.

The prince and princess greet the crowd outside the Cathedral after their wedding.
Photo (c) Getty Images / Milos Bicanski.
Prince Philippos and Princess Nina depart the Metropolitan Cathedral following their wedding.
Photo (c) Getty Images / Milos Bicanski.
Prince Philippos and Princess Nina surrounded by their parents and bridal attendants.
Picture courtesy of the Greek royal family.
 

Our best wishes and congratulations to Prince Philippos and Princess Nina!

 

Thursday, October 21, 2021

Princess Geraldine of Albania is One!

Princess Geraldine with her parents Crown Princess Elia and Crown Prince Leka.
Picture courtesy of HRH Crown Princess Elia.

Today, Princess Geraldine of Albania celebrates her first birthday!

 

The princess was born at 9:30am on Thursday, 22 October 2020, at the Queen Geraldine Maternity Hospital in Tirana. Geraldine is the first child of Crown Prince Leka and Crown Princess Elia of the Albanians. Princess Geraldine is named for her paternal great-grandmother, Queen Geraldine of Albania (1915-2002; née Countess Apponyi de Nagy-Appony), the wife of King Zog I of Albania. Indeed, Princess Geraldine was born exactly eighteen years after the death of Queen Geraldine, who passed away at Tirana on 22 October 2002.

Mother and daughter!
Picture courtesy of HRH Crown Princess Elia.

The princess is the first member of the royal family to be born in Albania since the birth of her grandfather, King Leka I of the Albanians, in 1939.

Happy Birthday to little Princess Geraldine!


 

Divine Photo of Various Blue Bloods from Raffles Magazine

Photo (c) Raffles Magazine.

The Raffles Hotel and Resorts Magazine published a splendid photo of a variety of royal and noble persons from around the world. In this image, which is part of an advertising campaign for the hotel and resort chain, we can see from left to right: Maharajah Padmanabh Singh of Jaipur, Archduchess Catharina of Austria (formerly Countess Secco di Aragona), Archduchess Anna-Gabriele of Austria (born Fürstin von Wrede), Prince Nikolai of Denmark, the Marquess of Blandford, and Princess Olympia of Greece.

 

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Greek Princes and Princesses Brunch in Athens Ahead of Royal Wedding This Weekend

Nikolaos welcoming his brother Pavlos and sister-in-law Marie-Chantal while his wife Tatiana watches.
Photo (c) TT NYHETSBYRÅN.
Crown Prince Pavlos and Crown Princess Marie-Chantal in Athens.
Photo (c) TT NYHETSBYRÅN.
On Monday, 18 October, several members of the Greek royal family gathered together for brunch at the cafe Athénée in Athens. Crown Prince Pavlos and Crown Princess Marie-Chantal met Prince Nikolaos and Princess Tatiana for a outing ahead of the coming religious wedding of Prince Philippos and Princess Nina. Family friend Filippos Stratos, who is the godfather of one of Princess Alexia's daughters, joined the group for brunch. Philippos and Nina will celebrate their religious marriage this Saturday, 23 October.
Crown Princess Marie-Chantal and Princess Tatiana.
Photo (c) TT NYHETSBYRÅN.
 
For the full photo gallery, please visit this link: TT NYHETSBYRÅN

Prince Giorgi Bagrationi-Japaridze (1948-2021)

 

Prince Giorgi Bagrationi-Japaridze died earlier this week. He was a great-great-great-great-great grandson of King Alexander V of Imereti. A 2007 article about the possibility of a monarchical restoration interviewed Giorgi and his mother: 

 
Historian Raul Chagunava, a longtime researcher of the Bagrationi family, believes that the crown by right belongs to Nugzar Bagrationi-Gruzinski, the director of Tbilisi’s Tumanshivili Theater and a patrilineal descendant of Giorgi XII. Nino Bagrationi, the 90-year-old direct descendant of Solomon II told EurasiaNet that she recognizes the claim of Nugzar Bagrationi-Gruzinski. Meanwhile, Georgia’s monarchist party, Royal Crown, favors another ancillary branch.

But feelings among those Bagrationis still in Georgia are decidedly mixed about the patriarch’s proposal.

Setting up a constitutional monarchy would not solve Georgia’s political woes, noted Giorgi Bagrationi-Jafaridze, a laboratory head, and the son of Nino Bagrationi. The sovereign, he argued, could become a mere puppet in the hands of politicians. "While absolute monarchy is out of the question, the king has to hold control over strategic matters," he commented.

When asked about the restoration of Georgia’s monarchy. Nino Bagrationi, a professor of engineering whose features are reminiscent of those of her royal ancestors, smiles calmly and shakes her head

"The time is not ripe for this," Bagrationi said. "The country has to grow and develop. Later… perhaps."
 
Source: Eurasianet - Time for a King for Georgia?

Princess Nino Bagrationi of Imereti with her grandchildren.

Born in 1948, Prince Giorgi was the son of Princess Nino Bagrationi (1915-2006), head of the Imereti branch of the Bagrationi family, and her husband Prince Avtandil Djaparidze (d.1959). Giorgi's maternal grandparents were Prince David Bagrationi of Imereti (1894-1937) and Princess Kethevan Machabeli (1892-1981).

 

May Prince Giorgi Rest in Peace.

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

The 70th Birthday of Count Karl Eugen von Neipperg, Husband of Archduchess Andrea of Austria

 

Today, Count Karl Eugen von Neipperg celebrates his seventieth birthday.

 

Count Josef Hubert von Neipperg.

Born on 20 October 1951 at Schwaigern, Count Maria Karl Eugen Johannes Nepomuk Erwin Michael von Neipperg was the first child of Count Josef Hubert von Neipperg (1918-2020) and Countess Maria von Ledebur-Wicheln (1920-1984). Karl Eugen has seven younger siblings: Count Reinhard (b.1953), Countess Maria Anna (b.1955), Countess Franziska (b.1956), Count Stephan (b.1957), Count Christoph (b.1958), Countess Barbara (b.1960), and Count Johannes Alfred (b.1964).

Count Karl von Neipperg marries Archduchess Andrea of Austria in 1977
Archduchess Andrea and Count Karl Eugen, 1999.
Photo (c) Seeger-Presse.

In July 1977 at Pöcking, Count Karl Eugen von Neipperg married Archduchess Andrea of Austria (b.1953), daughter of Archduke Otto of Austria and Princes Regina of Saxe-Meiningen. Karl Eugen and Andrea have five children: Hereditary Count Philipp (b.1978; married Paula Wolff), Count Benedikt (b.1980), Count Dominik (b.1981; married Princess Maria Anne zu Salm-Salm), Countess Hemma (b.1983; married Roman Keno Specht), and Countess Katharina (b.1986; married Prince Wenzel von Lobkowicz). Karl Eugen is a vinter who was inspired in this path by his godfather Count Erwein Matuschka.

Our best wishes to Count Karl Eugen on his birthday!

Monday, October 18, 2021

Court Case Between King Michael of Romania's Daughter and Grandson Ends in Switzerland

On Wednesday, 6 October, Judge Lionel Guignard of the District Court of La Côte, which hears cases from Morges and Nyon, acquitted Nicholas de Roumanie Medforth-Mills (also known as "Principele Nicolae al Romaniei" and "Prince Nicholas of Romania") of charges levelled at the erstwhile Romanian heir in 2017 by his aunt Crown Princess Margarita of Romania (now titled "Her Majesty Margareta, Custodian of the Crown" and "Margareta, Majestatea Sa Custodele Coroanei Române"). Margarita became a Swiss citizen in June 2017; she has dual Romanian-Swiss citizenship. On 7 November 2017, Margarita called Vaud police when her nephew attempted to visit his grandfather, the ailing King Michael of Romania, at the home where the king was living in Aubonne, Switzerland. Acting on behalf of her incapacitated father, the crown princess pressed charges against her nephew and alleged that Nicholas committed home invasion and assault when he tried to see the king for a final time. The court dismissed these claims. In November 2017, following his aunt's rejecting his final plea to see his dying grandfather, Nicholas confessed: "My only desire was to see my grandfather one last time, and to say goodbye to him in the most respectful, calm and Christian way possible."

The family of King Michael gathers to honour his memory at the burial place of the king and Queen Anne.
Left to right: Alina de Roumanie, Nicholas de Roumanie, Princess Sofia of Romania, Prince Radu of Romania, and HM Margareta, Custodian of the Romanian Crown.

At the ruling, Nicholas de Roumanie Medforth-Mills was present in chambers with his lawyers, Malek Adjadj and Kristina Croce. Nicholas became emotional and hugged his defenders when the judge ruled in his favour. Margarita of Romania was absent "due to illness" at the proceedings and represented by her attorney, Marc-Antoine Aubert. That Margarita, the Head of the Romanian Royal Family, could not attend the court hearing because of illness is curious, because she had held several events at Elisabeta Palace in the days and weeks prior to the ruling.

Prince Radu of Romania, then Crown Princess Margareta of Romania, and Prince Nicholas of Romania.
Photo (c) Agerpress.

The Swiss court was apprised of the fact that before Nicholas's attempt to visit his grandfather on 7 November 2017, which was Nicholas's seventh and final try, the prince had previously tried to see the king on six different occasions over the previous two years, beginning in 2015. On each of these occasions, Nicholas was denied access to his grandfather. Aware that his grandfather Michael, who had acted as a substitute father since Nicholas's youth, was on his deathbed, Nicholas tried to enter the Swiss residence of the royal family when two nurses arrived. It was at this point that Margarita, Nicolas's aunt and the acting Head of the Romanian Royal Family since King Michael's retirement from public life in March 2016, summoned police to the property. The crown princess alleged that her nephew assaulted the nurses (a claim which has been found to be false) and that he committed home invasion (a claim which has also been dismissed).

King Michael and Prince Nicholas of Romania in 2010 when His Majesty granted title Prince of Romania to his grandson. Also shown are Queen Anne, Crown Princess Margarita, and Prince Radu.
Prince Nicholas of Romania and King Michael of Romania at Elisabeta Palace, 2010.
Photo (c) Bogdan Cristel / Reuters / Alamy.
Prince Radu watches while Crown Princess Margareta embraces her nephew Prince Nicholas.
Photo (c) Bogdan Cristel / Reuters / Alamy.

Judge Lionel Guignard received testimony from several relatives of the late king, who are not named in Swiss news reports, that King Michael had asked his caretakers/family on numerous occasions during this time-frame to see his grandson. Each time, the king's requests to see his grandson, whom Michael named the eventual heir of the Romanian royal family in 2010, were reportedly rebuffed with objections by Michael's eldest daughter Margarita. The court learned that King Michael had been suffering from cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease. The issue of the king's impairment and the possibility of its influence on the August 2015 decision to remove his grandson from the succession was discussed in court; however, the judge did not make a ruling regarding this issue. 

In his ruling, Judge Guignard concluded that "there is nothing in the dossier to confirm that the king did not want to see his grandson." Afterwards, Nicholas of Romania stated: "My right to see my grandfather on his deathbed has been legitimized." Reportedly, the attorney for Her Majesty Margareta, Custodian of the Romanian Crown, rejected the idea of any familial reconciliation as far as his client was concerned. 

Sources:

Prince de Roumanie acquitté - Un conflit royal devant le tribunal de Nyon (24 Heures of 7 October 2021)

Le petit-fils de l'ex-roi de Roumanie nie avoir agressé l'entourage de son aïeul (24 Heures of 9 November 2017)

Brouille au chevet de l'ex-roi de Roumanie Michel (24 Heures of 8 November 2017)

Une altesse royale parmi les naturalisés à Lausanne (24 Heures of 28 June 2017)

Sunday, October 17, 2021

A Bit of A Furore Among the Bagrationi Royal Family of Georgia

 

Last week, several members of different branches of the Georgian royal family issued a letter of protest against their cousin Prince David Bagration-Mukhransky. The letter reads as follows:

 

An Official Letter of Protest

The Bagrationi Family Association is an international organisation uniting the majority of Bagrationi descendants. In 2006, a Memorandum was officially signed by the majority of Bagrationi Family Association members recognising the direct male descendant of the late ruling King of Georgia, Giorgi XII, HRH Crown Prince Nugzar Bagrationi-Gruzinski [as] the Head of the Royal House of Georgia.

We officially declare that neither the Bagrationi Family Association nor the representatives of the Bagrationi-Gruzinski royal line, recognise Tavadi (Prince) David Bagration-Moukhransky as the Head of the Royal House of Georgia or representative of any royal family of Georgia. Consequently, Tavadi (Prince) David Bagration-Moukhransky, as an ordinary member of the Bagrationi Family Association, does not hold any rights to represent Bagrationi family interests officially or unofficially. At any international events, involving royal, business, or political circles, Tavadi (Prince) David represents himself personally and bears full legal and moral responsibility for deliberately misleading the public and the media on his status.

On behalf of the Association:

Crown Prince Nugzar-Bagrationi-Gruzinski

The Head of the Royal House of Georgia,

The leader of the dynastic union "House of Bagrationis"

Prince Giorgi Bagrationi-Japaridze

The Deputy leader of the dynastic union "House of Bagrationi"

Prince Jansug Bagrationi-Davitishvili

The Deputy leader of the dynastic union "House of Bagrationi"

Prince Nodar Bagrationi-Davitishvili

The Deputy leader of the dynastic union "House of Bagrationi"

 
Prince Nugzar Bagrationi-Gruzinski (b.1950) is the son of Prince Peter Bagrationi-Gruzinski. Prince Giorgi Bagrationi-Japaridze (b.1948) is the son of Princess Nino Bagrationi of Imereti, the last member of that branch in the male line, and Prince Avtandil Japaridze. In 2009, Princess Anna Bagrationi-Gruzinski (b.1976), the daughter of Prince Nugzar, and Prince David Bagrationi-Mukhransky (b.1976) married in Tbilisi. The couple welcomed the arrival of their only son Prince Giorgi Bagration in 2011. Anna and David divorced in 2013. 

Saturday, October 16, 2021

The 55th Birthday of Landgrave Donatus of Hesse

 

Today, the Landgrave of Hesse marks his fifty-fifth birthday!
 
The wedding of Prince Moritz of Hesse and Princess Tatiana zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg, 1966.
Photo (c) Getty Images / Keystone-France.
 
Born on 17 October 1966 at Kiel, Prince Heinrich Donatus Philipp Umberto of Hesse was the second child and first son of Landgrave Moritz of Hesse and his wife Princess Tatiana zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg. The paternal grandparents of Donatus were Landgrave Philipp of Hesse and Princess Mafalda of Savoy. The maternal grandparents of Donatus were Fürst Gustav Albrecht zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg and Marguerite Fouché d'Otrante. 
 
Donatus and Floria on their wedding day.
Photo (c) Eurohistory.com.
In 2003, Hereditary Prince Donatus of Hesse married Countess Floria von Faber-Castell (b.1974), the daughter of Count Hubertus von Faber-Castell and Baroness Adelheid von der Leyen zu Bloemersheim. Donatus and Floria have three children: twins Princess Paulina and Hereditary Prince Moritz (b.2007) as well as Prince August (b.2012). 
 
Landgrave Donatus of Hesse and Queen Elizabeth II.
 
In April 2021, Donatus attended the funeral of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. The Landgrave of Hesse was present in his role as representative of the House of Hesse, into which Philip's two sisters, Cecile and Sophie, had married.
 
Our best wishes to the Landgrave of Hesse on his birthday!

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Countess Beatrice von Hochberg (1929-2021), Granddaughter of Princess Daisy of Pless

Photo (c) Fundacja Księżnej Daisy von Pless.


Over this past weekend, Countess Beatrice von Hochberg died on 10 October at Munich. She was ninety-two years-old. The countess was the eldest sister of the current Prince of Pless.


Count Konrad and Countess Beatrice.
Countess Clotilde von Hochberg (formerly Princess of Pless) with her two eldest children, Count Konrad and Countess Beatrice.

Born on 15 July 1929 at Fürstenstein, Countess Beatrix "Beatrice" Maria Luise Margarethe von Hochberg, Baroness zu Fürstenstein, was the first child and only daughter to arrive during the marriage of Fürst Hans Heinrich XV of Pless, Count von Hochberg, and his second wife doña Clotilde de Silva y González de Candamo, who had married in 1925. Beatrice was followed by a younger brother, Count Konrad (1930-1934), who sadly died at the age of four from meningitis. Hans Heinrich XV and Clotilde of Pless divorced in 1934 after nine years of marriage.

The surviving children of Bolko and Clotilde (l to r): Bolko Jr., Beatrix, and Gioia.
Photo (c) Zamek Książ w Wałbrzychu.

In reality, Beatrice and her brother Konrad were the biological children of Clotilde de Silva y González de Candamo and her stepson Count Bolko von Hochberg. A few months after his father's divorce from his stepmother was finalised, Bolko and Clotilde married in 1934. They welcomed two additional children: Countess Gioia von Hochberg (b.1934; married Count Alfred Schenk von Stauffenberg; married Count Karl Magnus Leutrum von Ertingen) and Count Bolko (b.1936; current Fürst of Pless; married Ruth Marie Therese Reuther; married Elisabeth Malisse). 

Beatrice and her daughter Olivia in the late 1960s.
Photo (c) Zamek Książ w Wałbrzychu.

On 29 December 1951 at Munich, Countess Beatrice von Hochberg married Dr Franz "Frank" Armin Lindemann (b.1920). The couple divorced in 1955; they had no children. On 5 June 1961, Countess Beatrice married András Rudnay de Rudna et Divékujfalu (b.1911). The couple divorced in 1965; they had one daughter, Olivia. 

Countess Beatrice von Hochberg during her last visit to her family's home in 2014.
Photo (c) Zamek Książ w Wałbrzychu.

May the Countess Rest in Peace.

Sister Alix of the Silent Workers of the Cross (Archduchess Marie Adelheid; 1933-2021)

Sister Alix.
Photo (c) Corriere della Sera (Brescia).

At 6:30am on Sunday, 10 October, Sister Alix of the Silent Workers of the Cross died at Poliambulanza after a serious illness. Sister Alix was eighty-eight years old.

Born on 28 July 1933 at Schloß Persenbeug, Archduchess Marie Adelheid Theodora Antonia Bartholomea Leopolda Amalia Mathilde Markus d'Aviano Huberta Josepha Ignatia of Austria was the fourth daughter and fifth child of Archduke Hubert Salvator of Austria (1894-1971) and his wife Princess Rosemary zu Salm-Salm (1904-2001), who married in 1926. Marie Adelheid had twelve siblings: Archduke Friedrich (1927-1999; married Countess Margarete Kálnoky von Köröspatak), Archduchess Agnes (1928-2007; married Prince Karl Alfred of Liechtenstein), Archduchess Maria Margaretha (b.1930), Archduchess Maria Ludovika (1931-1999), Archduchess Elisabeth (1935-1998; married Prince Heinrich von Auersperg), Archduke Andreas Salvator (b.1936; married and divorced Maria Espinosa de los Monteros y Rosillo; married Countess Valerie Podstatzky-Lichtenstein), Archduchess Josepha (b.1937; married Count Clemens von Waldstein), Archduchess Valerie (b.1941; married Margrave Max of Baden), Archduchess Maria Alberta (b.1944; married Baron Alexander von Kottwitz-Erdödy), Archduke Markus (b.1946; married Hildegard Jungmayr), Archduke Johann (b.1947; married Annemarie Stummer), and Archduke Michael (b.1949; married Eva-Antonia von Hofmann). Marie Adelheid had a particular fondness for her three youngest brothers. In 1963, the archduchess became Sister Alix after she joined the Silent Workers of the Cross (Silenziosi Operai della Croce) following a meeting in Rome with its founder, the Blessed Father Luigi Novarese.

Sister Nora, the Head of the Silent Workers of the Cross, remembered Sister Alix: "Always smiling, active, energetic, in all circumstances of life. Her attention to the sick consisted above all in being close to them to instill serenity. Lover of nature and gardening. Many of us remember the works in the park of the Montichiari Castle."

May Sister Alix Rest in Peace.

Source:

Addio a sorella Alix, pronipote dell’imperatore Francesco Giuseppe

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Prince Luiz of Brazil Hospitalised Since Last Week


Prince Luiz of Brazil was hospitalised last week in São Paolo after a period of ill health. The prince initially began to feel unwell on 29 September. This information was released on Monday by the Secretariat of the Brazilian Imperial House. The prince, who is eighty-three years-old, has remained under observation by doctors. More information is to be released in due course.

 

The prince spent a period in hospital last November: Prince Luiz, Head of the Brazilian Imperial Family, Released From Hospital Yesterday

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