Tuesday, April 9, 2019

Prince Sergei Poutiatine: The Fate of the Second Husband of Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna

Prince Sergei Mikhailovich Poutiatine was born in the Russian Empire on 7 December 1893 at St Petersburg. He was the eldest son of Prince Michael Mikhailovich Poutiatine (1861-1938) and his wife Princess Sofia Sergeevna (1866-1940; née Paltova). Sergei had one younger brother, Prince Alexander Mikhailovich Poutiatine (1897-1953). The Putyatins (Poutiatines) were a Rurikid family with princely and noble lines.

Prince Michael Mikhailovich Poutiatine (left) with Rasputin in the early 1900s


Sergei attended the Corps des Pages in St Petersburg. Sergei's father Michael was a palace commandant at Tsarkoe Selo. It was there, as youths, that Sergei became acquainted with the young lady who was to become his first wife, Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia (1890-1958). During World War I, Sergei served for four years in the Imperial Fourth Rifle Regiment, where he reached the rank of captain. The prince received the Cross of St George from Emperor Nicholas II for his wartime service. Grand Duchess Maria noted in The Education of a Princess, her first book of memoirs, that "he was a splendid officer, twice wounded, and cited for heroism in action. He came fairly often to our house; I had known him since childhood; but during the war I saw him but seldom."

 
 
Grand Duchess Maria was the only daughter and eldest child of Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich (1860-1919) and Grand Duchess Alexandra Georgievna (1870-1891; née Greece). In 1908, Grand Duchess Maria married Prince Wilhelm of Sweden, Duke of Södermanland (1884-1965). Maria and Wilhelm had one son, Prince Lennart of Sweden, Duke of Småland (1909-2004; later Count of Wisborg). The couple's union was dissolved by divorce in 1914.
 
 
Prince Sergei and Grand Duchess Maria had developed deep affections for one another in Spring 1917.

Again, Maria confided in the pages of The Education of a Princess:
The revolution which brought me to the comparative refuse of Tsarskoie-Selo brought him [Sergei] there also from the front, where - because of his father's situation at court - his position had become dangerous. And now that we were both refugees, in a manner of speaking, at Tsarskoie, he came often to see me at my father's house. Our relations adjusted themselves; our mutual shyness disappeared; we were definitely attracted to each other. 
Feelings that I had never before experienced stirred in the depths of my heart. In spite of the revolution, in spite of all the uncertainty, all the anxiety, our unused youth, our fresh mental forces, leaped to claim their due. Spring was upon us, carrying along living floods of new joy. Above all else, one wanted happiness, one wanted to take from life everything that was left for life to give. Our very realisation of the peril, of the indefiniteness of our situation, our constant personal danger, contributed to the awakening of these feelings and set them aglow. Thus, at the collapse of our old world, we dared upon its wreck to seize at a new chance of happiness, to live a new life. 
I gave myself entirely over to the strange new delight of being really in love.
On 19 September 1917, Prince Sergei Mikhailovich Poutiatine married Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna at Pavlovsk Palace. Maria's father, Grand Duke Paul, was a strong supporter of his daughter's union with Sergei, telling her: "You must find yourself a good man and marry him; then I would feel easy about you... Listen, if you like Poutiatin, I consider that you should marry him."

Shortly after their marriage, the couple resided first at Grand Duke Paul's palace, which was located on the English Embankment in St Petersburg. They moved in with Sergei's parents at the Poutiatine's apartment in the city. Sergei and Maria's only child, a son, was born on 8 July 1918 at Pavlovsk. The infant Prince Roman Sergeievich Poutiatine was baptised on 18 July 1918. On the day of her son's baptism, Grand Duchess Maria lost her half-brother Prince Vladimir Paley and her aunt Grand Duchess Elisabeth Feodorovna when they were assassinated by the Bolsheviks at Alapayevsk.
 
 
In the wake of the upheaval of the Russian Revolution, Prince Sergei and Grand Duchess Maria fled Russia with their child - they eventually arrived in Romania in December 1918. Prince Michael and Princess Sofia Poutiatine travelled to the Romanian capital to look after their grandson, Roman. In the meantime, Sergei and Maria went first to the United Kingdom and then France, where they were able to secure lodgings in Passy, a suburb of Paris. Tragically, Sergei and Maria's son Roman died on 29 July 1918 at Bucharest shortly after he turned one year-old.

Grand Duchess Maria recalled the loss of her son in her second book of memoirs, A Princess in Exile:

One Monday morning in summer we returned from a quiet week-end in the country and found the usual batch of mail. It included a letter from my mother-in-law. She wrote regularly once a week to give us news of the child, and up till the last letter it had invariably been excellent. The last report was not so good, but there had been nothing alarming about it. Although the letter was addressed to my husband, I opened it myself. From the very first sentence I guessed with a shock that something had happened. I was terror-stricken. Shipping over the first page of preparatory phrases I turned to the second and at the end of it I found the dreadful news. The baby had died. 
How ruthlessly death was persecuting us! Was it going to stamp us out altogether?  
The baby was exactly a year old. This was the fourth being dear to me whom I had lost within just a few months. The letter that had brought the news of his death contained very few details, and we only learned afterwards how it had occurred. He had been in perfect condition, gaining weight steadily and progressing satisfactorily, when as the hot weather came on he developed intestinal trouble. At first his illness inspired no anxieties, but suddenly from one day to the next he grew worse, had convulsions, and died. 
Nothing could describe the despair of his grandparents. Some strange psychological twist in my character made me painfully self-conscious of this new calamity. I concealed it out carefully from my friends in London; only Dmitri knew about it. I feared and wanted to avoid renewed expressions of sympathy; I hated to appear as the embodiment of tragedy.  
The weight on my own heart grew heavier, although I was so crushed already by my father's death that most of my sensibility had been blunted, nearly killed. For many years afterwards I was unable to react to joy. Something seemed to have burnt out within me.
 
Prince Sergei Poutiatine in 1914

In exile, the relationship between Prince Sergei and Grand Duchess Maria slowly deteriorated. The loss of their only child was a contributing factor, combined with the massive chaos brought upon by the Revolution and its effect on both families. For a time, Sergei worked at a bank in London. Maria took solace in the renewed company of her brother Grand Duke Dimitri. Maria recalled that her husband "assimilated things with surprising facility. In London he learned to speak fluent English in no time; in Paris he rapidly pickup French, which he had known but forgotten for want of practice, and he could write both languages extremely well." Maria began to discover a purpose and a sense of independence with the founding of her fashion house Kitmir.

Unsurprisingly, the effects of life in exile took a toll on the couple. Again, Maria remembers: "My second marriage, although a 'love match,' had been an unequal union. It had been contracted, moreover, under the stress of a great crisis. As soon as our lives had ceased to be in actual danger and we had to take up our places in organised society, the difference in our tastes and temperaments became apparent." Prince Sergei Poutiatine and Grand Duchess Maria of Russia were divorced in 1924. The grand duchess wrote: "I decided at last on a divorce. My affection for his family was unchanged, and they remained in my care for a number of years. Until Putiatin's remarriage to an American girl, we met occasionally in a friendly way. The divorce proceedings had to go through two phases, the Russian Orthodox Church and the French courts." In 1930, Sergei immigrated to the United States and settled in New York.

Princess Shirley Poutiatine on her wedding day (1906-1990; née Manning)
Photograph (c) of The New York Times

It was in the New World that Prince Sergei Poutiatine found his future. On 12 January 1931, Prince Sergei married Miss Shirley B Manning (b.6 December 1908) at the Russian Orthodox Church of St Augustine in New York City. Shirley was the second daughter and youngest child of John Alexander Manning (1870-1938) and his wife (1878-1964; née Edith Helen Baker). An industrialist, Mr Manning was the president of the John A Manning Paper Company of Albany, president of the Behr-Manning Corporation of Troy, and president of the Schuyler Meadows Club. For many years, he was also the president of Albany Hospital. His daughter, Shirley, was educated at the Fermata School for Girls in Aiken, South Carolina, and at Miss Porter's School in Farmington, Connecticut.

Prince Sergei and Princess Shirley Poutiatine after their 1931 wedding
Photograph (c) The Capital Times

Prince Sergei became a US citizen on 23 April 1940 at Albany, New York. The naturalisation ceremony was presided over by Justice Francis Bergan of the New York Supreme Court. At the time, Sergei and Shirley Poutiatine were residing in Loudonville, New York. After he became a citizen in the United States, Sergei heartily encouraged others to refer to him as "Mister" Poutiatine - he was not one to put on airs and graces.

In their early years, the couple lived between Loudonville and Paris. However, the hamlet of Loudonville was the town in which the Poutiatines primarily made their home and raised their family. Sergei and Shirley had three children: Prince Ivan Sergeievich Poutiatine (b.3 December 1931), Prince Michael Sergeievich Poutiatine (Albany, New York 8 May 1935-Vero Beach, Florida 17 December 2004), and Princess Mariana Sergeevna Poutiatine (b.6 October 1942). In June 1960, Ivan Poutiatine married Lochiel Cameron; the couple have three sons: Michael (b.1962), Andrew (b.1965), and Peter (b.1969). In May 1965, Michael Poutiatine married Marcia Meserve; they had two daughters, Allison (b.1967) and Jennifer (b.1970). In December 1972, Mariana Poutiatine married Charles Barton Cotten Sr; they have one daughter, Alexandra (b.1975).

Prince Ivan and Princess Lochiel Poutiatine in 2016
Photograph (c) Drew Altizer
Ivan Poutiatine studied architecture and moved to Mill Valley, California, in 1965. He has served on the Mill Valley City Council and Planning Commission, as well as being a participant in numerous other civic endeavours in his community. Ivan attributed his desire to be a part of public service to his parents' admonition that "one must always give back to his/her community."

 
Princess Marcia Poutiatine, widow of Prince Michael, in 2019
Photograph (c) Vero News
Michael Poutiatine graduated from Yale University. He worked for a period at the business that his maternal grandfather had founded, the John A Manning Paper Company. However, for the majority of his career, Michael worked in the travel sector.

Princess Mariana Poutiatine as a student at Miss Porter's School in 1960
 
Aged seventy-two, Prince Sergei Mikhailovich Poutiatine died on 26 February 1966 at Charleston, South Carolina. Sergei and Shirley had a home in the "Holy City." The prince was buried in the cemetery of Old Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church at Charleston. His wife, Princess Shirley Poutiatine, passed away on 7 September 1990 at Charleston, South Carolina. Princess Shirley was eighty-one years-old. Her mortal remains rest beside those of her husband.
 
Princess Shirley Poutiatine's grave in Charleston, SC
Photograph (c) FindAGrave

Prince Sergei Poutiatine survived his first wife, Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia, by nearly eight years. Maria died at Mainau on 13 December 1958, aged sixty-eight. 

Note: Thanks to Nick Nicholson for his input and revisions in this piece. 

For more on the family of Prince Sergei Poutiatine, please visit these links:
 
 

Monday, April 8, 2019

The Fourteenth Wedding Anniversary of the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall

Today His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales and Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Cornwall celebrate their fourteenth wedding anniversary. The forthcoming nuptials of the Prince and Mrs Parker Bowles were announced on 10 February 2005. Under the Royal Marriages Act of 1772, the Queen granted her consent for the marriage to take place on 2 March 2005 in a meeting of the Privy Council. In advance of the union, it was announced that Mrs Parker Bowles would take the style of Her Royal Highness and bear the title Duchess of Cornwall (one of her husband's subsidiary title); however, as the wife of the Prince of Wales, she may be legally titled as Princess of Wales.
The Queen Gives Her Consent to the Marriage in Privy Council (© Parliament of the United Kingdom)
On Saturday, 9 April 2005, the Prince of Wales married Mrs Camilla Parker Bowles (née Shand) in a civil ceremony at the Windsor Guildhall. The witnesses for the couple were sons of the groom and bride, the-then Prince William of Wales and Mr Tom Parker Bowles. From the groom's side, many members of his family were present at the Guildhall. These included both of his sons, Princes William and Harry, the Princess Royal and Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence, Mr Peter Phillips, Miss Zara Phillips, the Duke of York, Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie of York, the Earl and Countess of Wessex, and Princess Alexandra, Lady Ogilvy.
The civil marriage of the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall was followed by a Service of Prayer and Dedication at St George's Chapel at Windsor. The service at St George's Chapel was attended by 800 guests, including the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh. Foreign royal guests included the King of Bahrain, King Constantine II and Queen Anne-Marie of the Hellenes, Prince Constantijn and Princess Laurentien of the Netherlands, the Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Norway, Princess Margarita of Romania, and Crown Prince Alexander and Crown Princess Katherine of Serbia.

On This Day In History: The Birth of Grand Duke Friedrich Franz IV of Mecklenburg-Schwerin



Hereditary Grand Duke Friedrich Franz Michael of Mecklenburg-Schwerin was born at Palermo on 9 April 1882 as the only son of Grand Duke Friedrich Franz III and Grand Duchess Anastasia Mikhailovna of Russia. The young Friedrich Franz joined an elder sister, Duchess Alexandrine (1879-1952; future Queen of Denmark as the wife of King Christian X), and was followed by a younger sister, Duchess Cecile (1886-1954; future German Crown Princess as the wife of Crown Prince Wilhelm). Friedrich Franz III and Anastasia had been married since January 1879.
 
Friedrich Franz III of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (1851-1897) and Anastasia Mikhailovna of Russia (1860-1922)
In 1897, Friedrich Franz III died rather unexpectedly, and he was succeeded by his fifteen year-old son, Friedrich Franz IV, as Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Friedrich Franz IV was to be the last reigning grand duke of his country. In 1904, Grand Duke Friedrich Franz IV took as his bride Princess Alexandra of Hannover (1882-1963). The couple were to have five children during the course of their marriage: Hereditary Grand Duke Friedrich Franz (1910-2001), Duke Christian Ludwig (1912-1996), Duchess Olga (1916-1917), Duchess Thyra (1919-1981), and Duchess Anastasia (1923-1979; future wife of Prince Friedrich Ferdinand of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg). 
 
 
 
In addition to his own duties, Grand Duke Friedrich Franz IV of Mecklenburg-Schwerin became the regent of the Grand Duchy of Mecklenburg-Strelitz in February 1918 after the suicide of his cousin Grand Duke Adolf Friedrich IV (1882-1918). On 14 November 1918, Friedrich Franz IV abdicated his throne in the wake of the Revolution sweeping the German states following World War I. 
 
Grand Duke Friedrich Franz IV of Mecklenburg-Schwerin

The grand duke died on 17 November 1945 at Flensburg while in custody of the Royal Air Force. He was sixty-three years-old. Friedrich Franz's grand ducal house became extinct in the male line upon the death of his eldest son in 2001.

Three of the children of Grand Duke Friedrich Franz IV and Grand Duchess Alexandra married. Of these, only their youngest son and youngest daughter left offspring. In 1954, Duke Christian Ludwig of Mecklenburg-Schwerin married Princess Barbara of Prussia (1920-1994), a daughter of Prince Sigismund of Prussia and Princess Charlotte of Saxe-Altenburg. Christian Ludwig and Barbara had two children: Duchess Donata (b.1956) and Duchess Edwina (b.1960). In 1943, Duchess Anastasia of Mecklenburg-Schwerin married Prince Friedrich Ferdinand of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg (1913-1989). Anastasia and Friedrich Ferdinand were the parents of four daughters: Princess Elisabeth (b.1945), Princess Irene (b.1946), Princess Margaretha (b.1948), and Princess Sibylla (b.1955).

Duke Christian Ludwig of Mecklenburg (1912-1996)

Princess Anastasia of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg (1923-1979; née Mecklenburg-Schwerin)
 
 
 

Royal Fashion: Karl Lagerfeld and His Blue-Blooded Friends

For a great deal of his life, fashion powerhouse Karl Lagerfeld (1933-2019) counted numerous European royals and nobles amongst his friends and clientele. The recently deceased creative director of Chanel was especially close to the Princely Family of Monaco. Princess Caroline of Hannover was one of Lagerfeld's dearest supporters, having known Herr Lagerfeld since the 1970s. Caroline's daughter Charlotte Casiraghi was also a keen admirer of Lagerfeld and his work. Another Grimaldi princess who enjoyed the company of Lagerfeld was Princess Charlene of Monaco. Karl Lagerfeld was a guest at Charlene Wittstock's 2011 nuptials to Prince Albert II of Monaco, an event at which he was seated just behind Prince Carl Philip and Princess Madeline of Sweden, and right next to Margrave Maximilian and Margravine Valerie of Baden. Karl Lagerfeld also mixed with various other royal women during his long career: Crown Princess Marie-Chantal of Greece, Princess Mafalda of Hesse, Princess Clotilde of Savoy, Princess Lilly of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg (first wife of Prince Alexander of Schaumburg-Lippe), Princess Ingeborg of Schleswig-Holstein, and Infanta Elena of Spain. Princess Caroline of Hannover paid a heartfelt tribute to the late designer, and recalled how the two met, in an interview with Point de Vue some months after Lagerfeld's death:
It has been more than forty-five years of friendship! It was a photo shoot for American Vogue organised by Mary Russell who my mother knew well, and it was done in Karl’s apartment, place Saint-Sulpice, in Paris. We ended up there with Chris von Wangenheim, a wonderful fashion photographer. I wore Chloé clothes that Karl drew. It was a really happy atmosphere, I was very shy at that age.
Forty-five years is more than we know a lot of our own family members. Only my nanny, who passed away last year, knew me as well. We all felt Karl’s death as a family loss. At the death of my father, he supported me, and today it is like I am losing a close family member again. My children also felt this very painfully. They have known Karl since their birth. He was home the day before the day I gave birth to Andrea, he took a picture of me on the stairs. He was there when they were born.

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Archduchess Sophie of Austria: An Imperial Designer

Archduchess Sophie Franziska Maria Germaine of Austria was born on 19 January 1959 at Boulogne-sur-Seine in Paris. The archduchess was the second child and second daughter of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria (1918-2004) and Archduchess Helen (b.1937; née Törring-Jettenbach), who were wed in 1956. Sophie joined an older sister, Archduchess Elisabeth (1957-1983), and was followed by a younger brother, Archduke Maximilian (b.1961). Sophie's paternal grandparents were Archduke Maximilian of Austria (1895-1952) and Princess Franziska of Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst (1897-1989); her maternal grandparents were Count Carl Theodor of Törring-Jettenbach (1900-1967) and Princess Elisabeth of Greece and Denmark (1904-1955).
In early 1990, Archduchess Sophie of Austria married Prince Mariano Hugo of Windisch-Grätz (b.1955). The couple have three children: Hereditary Prince Maximilian (b.1990), Prince Alexis (1991-2010), and Princess Larissa. Before she became a wife and mother, Sophie had worked as a fashion journalist and as a muse to Valentino.
For the past ten years, Sophie of Austria has channeled her creative energies into creating a line of elegant and timeless handbags.
Although Sophie's website is currently being updated, do visit it in the future: Sophie Habsburg
To read more about the work of Sophie of Austria, check out these articles: So THAT’S what’s in her handbag! The Queen clutches a purse emblazoned with her friend Archduchess Helen of Austria as she leaves her 80th birthday party at The Ivy An interview with princess Sophie Habsburg, style icon and talented handbag designer

EUROHISTORY: Issues CXIX & CXX shipping this week!

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Today, much tour delight, our printer called to inform us that they have Issues CXIX and CXX ready for pickup! We will start ailing the magazines on Wednesday. Inside, all subscribers will receive the renewal form for 2019 – We hope that our monumental effort to get all of 2018 out in one month, will help you choose to remain for the 22nd year of Eurohistory!
Inside  Issue CXX you will find the following articles: 1. From Empire to Nation-States – The Last Days of the Habsburg Monarchy, by Justin Vovk
9. Fortitude and Resignation – The Kaiser’s fall and Exile in The Netherlands, by Arturo E. Beéche

24. Ferdinand of Bulgaria – The Machiavelli of there Balkans, by Coryne Hall

30. Princess Margarethe of Hesse’s Letters to Lady Corkran, by John van der Kiste

38. How Times have Changed, by Joe Spiteri

46. Book Reviews

48. Royal News
Inside Issue CXIX you will find the following articles: 1. The Romanovs Adrift: The Imperial Family in 1913-1919, by Greg King and Penny Wilson 2. Obituary: Prince Michel of Bourbon-Parma – Last of the Royal Swashbucklers, by Charles B. Stewart jr. 3. Kadriorg – A Russian Summer Palace in Tallinn, by Katrina Warne 4. A Royal Wedding in Gotha – The Civil Wedding of Princess Stephanie of Saxe-Coburg & Gotha and Herr Jan Stahl, by Arturo E. Beéche & Marianne van Dam 5. Princess Helen of Serbia, by Coryne Hall 6. Centennial of the Romanov Martyrdom, by Arturo E. Beéche 7. The Wedding of there Duke of Sussex, by Edwina Tash 8. Queen Isabel's Iberian Forge, by Justin Vovk 9. A True Royal Wedding – The Hereditary Prince Ferdinand of Leiningen Marries Princess Viktoria Luise of Prussia, by Arturo E. Beéche 10. Royal News

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EUROHISTORY: Royal Collections III: The Royal House of Bavaria, Volume I

The Wittelsbachs ruled over Bavaria and the Rhineland Palatinate for nearly 750 years, this fact made their dynasty one of Europe's longes-ruling families. Theirs is a history of not only sublime exaltation, but also deep and sorrowful loss. They were patrons of the arts and letters, incredible builders, scientists, politicians, visionaries, and maddening personalities. This first volume covers the history of the family from its beginning in the XI century to the life of Crown Prince Rupprecht, who died in 1955. In fact, the book is dedicated to him, "the best king Bavaria never had." Authored by Arturo E. Beéche and Coryne Hall, The Royal House of Bavaria, Volume I includes over 330 images documenting the Wittelsbach dynasty from its beginning in the XI century to today.  The book is currently printing and we expect to bring it to you promptly. The Royal House of Bavaria, Volume I will go on sale on June 1, 2019! The books sections include:  Introduction (by Greg King) Prologue: The Bavarian Succession Crisis 1777 Chapter I: Electors and Counts Palatine Chapter II: King Maximilian I Joseph Chapter III: King Ludwig I Chapter IV: King Maximilian II Chapter V: King Ludwig II Chapter VI: King Otto and Prince Regent Luitpold Chapter VII: King Ludwig III Chapter VIII: Crown Prince Rupprecht Epilogue: The Jacobite Succession The book also includes nine family trees displayed across 16 pages! The cost is $48.95 plus shipping ($8.00 USA – $35.00 international) We accept the following forms of payment:
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