Princess Eudoxia (sometimes called Eudoxie) Augusta Philippine Clementine Maria of Bulgaria was born on 17 January 1898 at Sofia, the capital of her father's realm. Eudoxia's parents were Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria (1861-1948; né Saxe-Coburg and Gotha) and his wife Princess Marie Louise of Bourbon-Parma (1870-1899): Ferdinand and Marie Louise were married at the Villa Pianore, a property of the bride's immensely wealthy father the Duke of Parma, on 20 April 1893. Eudoxia joined two older brothers, Prince Boris (1894-1943) and Prince Kyril (1895-1945); the princess was followed a year after her arrival by the last of the four children, Princess Nadejda (1899-1958).
Prince Ferdinand and Princess Marie Louise of Bulgaria
Ferdinand's search for a wife had begun in 1890, after it became clear that the political situation in Bulgaria was tenacious so long as its sovereign had no heirs. Ferdinand had been elected as Prince of Bulgaria in July 1887 after the deposition of Prince Alexander of Bulgaria (1857-1893; né Battenberg). British historian Theo Aronson, in his book Crowns in Conflict, recalled the reaction of Ferdinand's cousin Queen Victoria to her kinsman's elevation to the Principality of Bulgaria: "He is totally unfit ... delicate, eccentric and effeminate ... Should be stopped at once." Fortunately, over time, the Queen's opinion of her cousin would improve. Ferdinand persevered, and his mother, Princess Clémentine, was extremely instrumental in advocating on behalf of her son's interests.
Archduchess Luisa of Austria-Tuscany
In 1890, Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria was twenty-nine: he was fairly good looking, rich, and had impeccable family ties. The first candidate chosen for Ferdinand by his mother was his cousin Archduchess Luisa of Austria-Tuscany (1870-1947; later Crown Princess of Saxony), the daughter of Grand Duke Ferdinando IV of Tuscany (1835-1908) and his second wife Princess Alicia of Bourbon-Parma (1849-1935), who was herself an aunt of Ferdinand's future wife Marie Louise. Needless to say, Ferdinand's wooing in June 1891 of Luisa of Tuscany was not successful, which was probably for the best. Although Luisa's father the grand duke (impoverished as he was) was in favour of the marriage, her mother Grand Duchess Alicia was decidedly not - the grand duchess had no love lost for the Coburgs.
Princess Marie of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in 1888
Next on Ferdinand's radar was one of the daughters of the Duke and Duchess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, and his wife Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna of Russia). Presumably, the object of the prince's "affections" was Princess Marie, the eldest daughter at age sixteen...though which of the daughters was never specified. Ferdinand mused in a letter: "...granddaughter of the Queen of England, granddaughter of the Tsar-liberator and cousin of the German Kaiser! Que voudrait on de plus. That would be a terrible blow for the Russophil part in this country - it would be forced to be loyal to the granddaughter of Alexander II! I see from the Coburg newspapers that the respective parents are already at Coburg. May God give them wisdom, for I am thoroughly sick of this marriage question and long for a result! I do not fear the father: he would agree out of hatred for Russia. But as for the mother? Will she have the good sense to defy her pig-headed and odious brother?" Given the youth of the young ladies involved, it would come as no surprise that no engagement emanated from Ferdinand's daydreams on the subject. His search would have to continue.
Princess Clara of Bavaria
Finally, in late 1892, the prince found his princess...after beating around the bush quite a bit. Princess Clémentine had been in contact with Duke Roberto of Parma, who had lost his duchy in 1860, for sometime; Clémentine realised that the duke's daughter Marie Louise might offer the solution to Ferdinand's marital dilemma. Religion was to play a major part in the negotiations for Marie Louise's hand. Although the Bulgarian constitution required that the heir to the throne must be raised in the Orthodox faith, Duke Roberto demanded that this stipulation would have to be cast aside if Ferdinand were to marry Marie Louise: the duke made it clear that all issue of the marriage must be raised as Roman Catholic At the time, Ferdinand agreed, and was able to have his government acquiesce that the heir to the Bulgarian throne did not need to be baptised in the Orthodox church. With this carte blanche from his government, Ferdinand made one last attempt to snag a Catholic princess from a reigning dynasty. He traveled to Munich to briefly engage Princess Clara of Bavaria (1874-1941), but, again, he met with no success, as the Bavarian Prince Regent forbade any of the Wittelsbach princesses from accepting Ferdinand's proposal. And, so, Ferdinand returned to the prospect of Marie Louise. Their engagement was celebrated at the Castle of Schwartzau: it was the first time that either of the pair had laid eyes on the other. Princess Clémentine was rather forward in describing her future daughter-in-law: "[She is] unhappily not very pretty." Thus began the marriage of convenience of Ferdinand and Marie Louise; neither person in love with the other.
The wedding of Ferdinand of Bulgaria and Marie Louise of Bourbon-Parma
Princess Marie Louise of Bulgaria
At their wedding at the Villa Pianore, Marie Louise appeared in flowing white, her veil held by a fleur-de-lis tiara: she looked fragile and small next to her husband in his uniform. Pope Leo XIII gave a blessing to the couple via the Archbishop of Lucca. Ferdinand addressed his father-in-law the Duke of Parma by saying, "Bulgaria is grateful to you for having confided your daughter to her Prince. Bulgaria will honour her and guard her like a treasure." The princely couple then set off for a honeymoon cruise around the Mediterranean.
Prince Ferdinand and Princess Marie Louise of Bulgaria with Princess Clémentine of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
(left to right) Princess Clémentine of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (née Orléans), Prince Boris of Bulgaria, and Princess Marie Louise of Bulgaria (née Bourbon-Parma)
Ferdinand quickly ruined Marie Louise's hopes of any semblance of a happy marriage. After a difficult pregnancy, the couple's first son, Boris, was born on 30 January 1894 - the infant was baptised into the Roman Catholic faith with the Duke and Duchess of Parma coming to witness to occasion. Two years later, in 1896, Ferdinand opted for the infant heir Boris to be converted from Roman Catholicism to the Orthodox Church. This move earned Ferdinand the intense frustration of his wife, the anger of his Catholic relatives, and excommunication from the Catholic Church. In order to remedy this difficult situation, Ferdinand christened all his remaining children as Catholics; thus, Kyril, Eudoxia, and Nadejda were all raised in the faith of their parents, as Ferdinand never converted to Orthodoxy. A goddaughter of Pope Pius IX, Marie Louise was so distraught at her husband's betrayal of his initial promise to bring up all their children as Catholics that she initially left Bulgaria and was only pursued to return after the intercession of her mother-in-law Clémentine. Always delicate of health, Princess Marie Louise died on 31 January 1899 of pneumonia, aged twenty-eight. The day before her passing, on 30 January, the princess had given birth to her fourth child and second daughter Nadejda.
Princess Clémentine with her three eldest Bulgarian grandchildren: Boris, Kyril, and Eudoxia
(left to right) Princess Eudoxia, Prince Kyril, Prince Boris, and Princess Nadejda of Bulgaria
Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria
After the premature death of their mother, the two Bulgarian princes and two Bulgarian princesses were looked after by their ageing grandmother, Princess Clémentine, the last surviving child of King Louis Philippe and Queen Marie Amélie of the French. Clémentine was completely devoted to her young grandchildren and their upbringing. In 1903, the eighty-five year-old princess was the subject of a profile by the French newspaper Gaulois, wherein it was written by its author: "And during all seasons one can see this infallible old lady, leave her palace and her peace and to go from Vienna to the Balkans, from the Balkans to Menton, in order to bring to the Prince of Bulgaria, to her son and to the motherless children of this most beloved son, the resources of her heart. I had the privilege, during these days, to observe an unforgettable intimate scene, where the most tender and the most noble and sad mixed together. A large blue room overlooking the palm trees and the sea, in a corner close to the window in a ray of sunshine, the little princes Boris and Cyril and their very blond little sisters Eudoxia and Nadezhda played on the rug. An exquisite picture of innocent delicacy, like a nest fallen from a tapestry, barely a murmur, quiet yet a happy enjoyment of children. While motionless in her chair, the protecting Grandmother watches vigilantly over her brood." Sadly, the Bulgarian siblings lost their overseeing Grand-mère when Clémentine passed away in February 1907 at the age of eighty-nine.
Tsar Ferdinand and Tsaritsa Eleonore of Bulgaria at their wedding
Tsaritsa Eleonore of Bulgaria
Tsaritsa Eleonore with her stepdaughters Princess Eudoxia and Princess Nadejda
In Autumn 1908, Ferdinand I became the Tsar (King) of the Kingdom of Bulgaria. Earlier that year, on 1 March, he had remarried to Princess Eleonore Reuß (1860-1917) in another marriage of convenience. Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna Senior was instrumental in bringing about this union. Ferdinand barely gave any attention to Eleonore: he treated her merely as a member of the household. Eleonore remained neglected by Ferdinand throughout their marriage; she was left to raise her stepchildren and devote herself to the welfare of the Bulgarian people. Having become quite ill during World War I, Eleonore died at the age of fifty-seven on 12 September 1917 Euxinograd, Bulgaria. Her last wish was to be buried in the cemetery of a 12th-century church at Boyana, near Sofia. During the Socialist period, however, the grave was broken into, her jewelry stolen and then the memorial stone bulldozed back in the grave, with no visible marks left over the ground. However, after the democratic changes in 1989, the original memorial stone was excavated and the site was restored back to the original state.
German Emperor Wilhelm II and Bulgarian Tsar Ferdinand I at Sofia in 1916
Ferdinand I of Bulgaria abdicates in favour of his son Boris III (October 1918)
Another result of World War I was the abdication of Tsar Ferdinand I. During the initial phase of World War I, the Kingdom of Bulgaria achieved several decisive victories over its enemies and laid claim to the disputed territories of Macedonia after Serbia's defeat. For the next two years, the Bulgarian army shifted its focus towards repelling Allied advances from nearby Greece. They were also partially involved in the 1916 conquest of neighboring Romania, now ruled by another Ferdinand I, who was also Ferdinand's second cousin once removed. To salvage the Bulgarian monarchy after multiple military setbacks in 1918, Tsar Ferdinand abdicated in favour of his eldest son, who became Tsar Boris III on 3 October 1918. For a time, Eudoxia resided in Coburg with her father after the loss of his throne. Yet, in 1922, she returned to Bulgaria to lend her support to her brother King Boris III.
Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria
Article on Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria from 1928
Pavran Draganov (1890-1945)
It was at this point in the dynasty's saga that Princess Eudoxia came to prominence. After her brother's accession to the throne, and her return to Bulgaria after joining her father Ferdinand in exile at Coburg, the princess became a devoted and trusted confidante to Boris. Eudoxia briefly had a romance with an aide-de-camp of Boris, Parvan Draganov; she remained close to Parvan after their relationship ended and stayed friendly with his family as well. Another one of Eudoxia's beaus was van Ivanov Bagryanov. Both Parvan Draganov and Ivan Bagryanov were close friends of her brother the king, being army officers around his age. The royal family's immediate circle became smaller when Princess Nadejda married Duke Albrecht Eugen of Württemberg (1895-1954) in 1924. Prince Kyril never married. Happily, Tsar Boris III found his match in Princess Giovanna of Savoy (1907-2000). Boris and Giovanna were married at Assisi in Italy on 25 October 1930. In the biography of the queen, Giovanna of Bulgaria - The Queen of Charity, the following portrait was given of Princess Eudoxia:
Her [Queen Giovanna's] relations with Eudoxie did not differ much from the usual ones between sisters-in-law. Until the autumn of 1930 the princess had performed the duties of first lady in the kingdom, she was the constant counsellor and confidant of the young march and the mistress of his home. Eudoxie had an exceptional personality, with a quick mind, alert, watchful eyes, an uncanny feeling for people and events. Of all of King Ferdinand's children she is said to have inherited most of his typical character traits. Usually kind and witty, she could be sharp, critical and even sarcastic towards those she thought deserved it. Her authoritarian behaviour towards people contrasted with her full and utter devotion to her brother. She spent the happiest and most difficult times for the crown at his side. Even her personal life was directly linked with the people around him. In the mid-1920s she and one of his inner circle, Ivan Bagryanov, shared a mutual fondness for each other. The instant intervention of the old king, who continued to exert pressure even from a distance, nipped this romance in the bud. The thought of his daughter becoming the wife of an ordinary, albeit wealthy, Bulgarian citizen seemed almost sacrilegious to him. Heart-broken, Eudoxie put herself completely in the service of her brother and forgot about her marriage plans. She was totally in love with everything Bulgarian, fanatically linked to the Bulgarian land, the Bulgarian language, the Bulgarian music and art. She herself was a talented artist who painted remarkable landscapes from beautiful parts of the country, as well as exquisite flowers and still life's.
Princess Eudoxia with her father King Ferdinand in 1931
Eudoxia still kept ties with her father, who had settled into exile in Coburg. As mentioned in the biography of her sister-in-law Queen Giovanna, Princess Eudoxia was considered to be the most similar in character to Ferdinand of all his children. This ability to outlast all misfortunes that came their way was to serve both the king-in-exile and his eldest daughter well.
When Bulgaria found itself in the throes of World War II, Eudoxia was very put off by her brother Boris allowing for their country to become aligned with the Third Reich. In his biography of King Boris, Stephane Groueff recounted Eudoxia's situation: "Princess Evdokia, once the closest confidante of her brother, had gradually drifted apart from him, their relations becoming distant and cool. One reason was personal. Evdokia had never resigned herself to the reduced role she had to play in Boris's life since he had brought Queen Giovanna to the palace. Neither did she learn to get along with her sister-in-law. An emotional and touchy woman, she resented living by herself in her villa instead of at the palace - 'my father's house' - from which she considered herself exiled. She made remarks such as, 'They finally had to invite me to Euxinograd, but I don't know how many days they'll deign to keep me there.' Or when asked about the royal children, she would reply that as far a she knew Simeon and Maria-Luisa were all alright, but she was 'allowed' to see them only occasionally. Increasingly, she showed her hurt feelings, saw herself as the neglected sister, abandoned by old friends, acquaintances, and even the palace personnel. The second reason for her alienation from her brother was political." Eudoxia greatly feared Bulgaria entering into another alliance with Germany, worried that it would let to a repeat of the events of World War I, which had almost cost the Bulgarian Royal Family their country and people. In 1941, the princess told her brother the king: "How long will these Germans stay here! I know how this war will end; I will never live through a second exile." Euxodia was to prove herself wrong in this statement: of the three Bulgarian siblings still in the country during the War, only the princess would make it out of the chaos alive.
King Boris III of Bulgaria meets Adolf Hitler
On 9 August 1943, Hitler summoned King Boris to a meeting at Rastenburg, East Prussia. Boris arrived by plane from Vrazhdebna on 14 August. The Tsar asserted his stance once again not to send Bulgarian Jews to death camps in Poland and Germany. While Bulgaria had declared a "symbolic" war on the distant United Kingdom and United States, the Tsar was not willing to do more than that. At the meeting, Boris once again refused to get involved in the war against the Soviet Union, giving two major reasons for his unwillingness to send troops to Russia.
Shortly after returning to Sofia from a meeting with Hitler, Boris died of apparent heart failure on 28 August 1943. At his deathbed, he was surrounded by Queen Giovanna, Prince Kyril, and Princess Eudoxia. According to the diary of the German attache in Sofia at the time, Colonel von Schoenebeck, the two German doctors who attended the King – Sajitz and Hans Eppinger – both believed that he had died from the same poison that Dr Eppinger had allegedly found two years earlier in the postmortem examination of the Greek Prime Minister, Ioannis Metaxas, a slow poison which takes weeks to do its work and which causes the appearance of blotches on the skin of its victim before death. Princess Eudoxia was firmly convinced about who was to blame for her eldest brother's death: "The Nazis did it."
Prince Kyril of Bulgaria
Boris was succeeded by his six-year-old son Simeon II, under a Regency Council headed by Boris's brother Prince Kyril of Bulgaria. At this stage, Eudoxia surely was aware that the royal family's time was running out. On his website, King Simeon records the next stages of his aunt's life: "Two days after the communist coup of 9 September 1944, she was arrested by officers of the newly formed People’s Militia. She was placed in solitary confinement and subjected to interrogation and torture with the aim of extracting 'proof' of her guilt as a confidant of ther brother, the late King-Unifier of Bulgaria. The Princess was released after several months and placed under house arresst. The tragic news about the assassination of her brother – Prince Regent Kyril of Preslav – reached her while in confinement at the Directorate of the Militia." On the night of 1 February 1945, Kyril, along with former Prime Minister and Regent Professor Bogdan Filov, General Nikola Mikhov, and a range of former cabinet ministers, royal advisors and 67 MPs were executed. Their death sentences had been pronounced earlier that day by a "People's Tribunal."
King Simeon II of Bulgaria is deposed by Communists
King Simeon II is dethroned after a Communist plebiscite in September 1946
On 15 September 1946, a referendum was held in the presence of the Soviet army. It resulted in a 97% approval for republic (a rigged referendum) and abolition of the monarch. King Simeon was deposed as a result. On 16 September 1946, King Simeon II, Queen Mother Giovanna, and Princess Marie Louise were exiled from Bulgaria. Princess Eudoxia joined her sister-in-law and nephew and niece in their journey from the hell that had encompassed their country.
Princess Eudoxia with Queen Mother Giovanna, King Simeon II and Queen Margarita, Princess Maria Luisa, Duke Ferdinand of Württemberg and descendants of the Bulgarian Royal House.
Princess Eudoxia rejoined her father Ferdinand in Coburg. After his death in 1948, she lived with the family of her sister Nadejda, Duchess of Württemberg, until the latter died in 1958. Then Princess Eudoxia found shelter in the Catholic House for elderly people in Friedrichshafen by the Bodensee Lake. The princess paid regular visits to her sister-in-law Queen Giovanna at her residence in Estoril, as well as to her nephew King Simeon II in Madrid and her niece Princess Maria Luisa in Canada and the United States. The princess lived in austere, almost monastic conditions, overwhelmed with nostalgia for Bulgaria. She shared before visitors, that even the air in her homeland was different from the one she breathed afterwards. Her window panel was invariably lined with fragrant Bulgarian wild geranium. A person of profound faith, Eudoxia never parted with her book of prayers, in which she had written her prayers from the time of her detention. She left it to her niece with the inscription: “To Maria Luisa, the only one who speaks to God in Bulgarian!”
At the age of eighty-seven, Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria died on 4 October 1985 and was laid to rest in the family vault of the Dukes of Württemberg at Schloß Altshausen. In the epilogue of Crown of Thorns: The Reign of King Boris III of Bulgaria, Stephene Groueff wrote, "She spent her old age around her Württemberg relatives on the shores of the lake of Constance, where she died in October 1985, a deeply hurt, ailing old lady burdened with nostalgia."
Prime Minister Ivan Ivanov Bagryanov (1891-1945)
In February 1945, Princess Eudoxia lost her youngest brother and the two Bulgarians with whom she had recorded romances. Ivan Bagryanov served a very short tenure as Bulgarian Prime Minister during World War II. Bagryanov was noted for his pro-Western views, his open dialogue with Bulgarian Jewish leaders, and his attempts to thwart anti-Jewish legislation. His term in office lasted only from 1 June 1944 until 2 September 1944. Aged fifty-three, Ivan was executed on 1 February 1945: the same day that bullets struck down Eudoxia's brother Prince Regent Kyril and another of her former loves, Parvan Draganov, who had briefly served as Foreign Minister under Bagryanov.
Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria
Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria seated below her niece Duchess Sophie of Württemberg and Sophie's groom Antonio Manuel Rôxo de Ramos-Bandeira at their 1969 nuptials at Altshausen
(left to right) Duchess Sophie of Württemberg, Antonio Manuel Rôxo de Ramos-Bandeira, Duke Ferdinand of Württemberg, Duchess Marguerite of Württemberg, Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria, Duchess Alexandra (née Austria) and Duke Eugen of Württemberg in 1969 at Schloß Altshausen
The ultimate survivor, Princess Eudoxia outlived all of her siblings. She survived her brother King Boris III (d.1943) by forty-two years. The princess survived her brother Prince Kyril (d.1945) by forty years. Eudoxia survived her sister Nadejda (d.1958) by twenty-seven years. Princess Eudoxia was the last surviving grandchild of Duke Roberto I of Parma to be born during his lifetime.
The Coat of Arms of Princess Eudoxia of Bulgaria
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HH Princess Woizlawa Feodora Reuß, born Duchess of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, passed away yesterday, 3 June, at Strittmatt, Schwarzwald, Germany. The princess was 100 years old and the eldest surviving European royal. She had suffered from a short illness.
Princess Woizlawa Feodora celebrates her 100th birthday in December 2018
The 100th birthday of Princess Woizlawa Feodora Reuß was celebrated on 20 December 2018 with a ceremony at the Gera Theatre. Her maternal grandfather was the last reigning prince in Gera. There, the princess had witnessed how the castle was destroyed in a bombing raid in 1945. As a result, her family fled.
Fellow friends and family fête the princess on her 100th anniversary of life
In 1991, Woizlawa Feodora returned to Gera and lived there for fifteen years. Since then, she had a home in the Black Forest. It was there that she celebrated her 100th birthday on Monday, 17 December 2018. At the ceremony in Gera, students of the special music class performed at the Geraer Rutheneum. The Gymnasium was founded 400 years ago by Count Heinrich II Reuß.
Duke Adolf Friedrich of Mecklenburg-Schwerin with his daughter Woizlawa Feodora
A young Duchess Woizlawa Feodora of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
Duchess Woizlawa Feodora of Mecklenburg-Schwerin was born at Rostock, Free State of Mecklenburg-Schwerin on 17 December 1918. She was the only child of Duke Adolf Friedrich of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (1873-1969) and Princess Victoria Feodora Reuß zu Schleiz (1889-1918, a day after her daughter's birth). In 1939, Woizlawa Feodora married Prince Heinrich I Reuß zu Köstritz (1910-1982): the couple had one daughter and five sons.
Princess Woizlawa Feodora with her cousin Prince Heinrich XIV Reuß, Head of the Family, at the wedding of her granddaughter Princess Benigna in 2011
Woizlawa Feodora was one of the three remaining members of the House of Mecklenburg-Schwerin, after her cousins Donata and Edwina. The princess was a first cousin of Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich of Russia (1876–1938), Queen Alexandrine of Denmark (1879–1952), German Crown Princess Cecilie (1886–1954), and Queen Juliana of the Netherlands (1909–2004).
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Princess Henriette of Auersperg was born on 2 September 1933 at Sankt Johann im Pongau, Salzburg, as the eldest child of Prince Alois of Auersperg (1897-1984) and Countess Henriette Larisch von Moennich (1903-1994). Known as "Hetty," the little girl was followed by two brothers: Prince Alfred (1936-1992) and Prince Luitpold (1937-1985). The future was to have a great deal of interesting experiences in store for Hetty. For a spell, the young princess worked as a secretary.
Alfie of Auersperg and Sunny Crawford wed in 1957
Sunny von Bülow
On 20 July 1957, Hetty's brother Alfred "Alfie" married Martha "Sunny" Sharp Crawford (1932-2008), daughter of utilities magnate George Crawford. Sunny had been Alfie's tennis instructor at a Swiss resort. The couple had two children: Princess Annie-Laurie "Ala" (b.1958) and Alexander (b.1959). After Alfie and Sunny's divorce in 1965, Sunny reportedly gave Alfie $3.5 million as a settlement. Sunny went on the marry Claus von Bülow (1926-2019) in 1966, with whom she had one daughter, Cosima (b.1967). Hetty Auersperg was subpoenaed in the 1982 trial of Claus von Bülow, who was charged with the attempted murder of Hetty's former sister-in-law.
Announcement of the engagement between Arndt von Bohlen und Halbach and Princess Henriette Article (c) The Pittsburg Press of 23 December 1968
Arndt and Hetty at the 1968 New Year's Eve party on the Kitzbühel estate of US millionaire Matthew Taylor Mellon
In December 1968, it was announced from Munich that Princess Henriette of Auersperg was engaged to Arndt von Bohlen und Halbach, who was considered West Germany's most eligible bachelor as the heir to the Krupp arms dynasty. Four years younger than his betrothed, Arndt had been born on 24 January 1938 at Berlin as the only child of Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach (1907-1967) and Anneliese Bahr (1909-1998). Arndt's parents had married in 1937 to the great disappointment of his paternal grandparents Gustav and Bertha Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach; Bertha especially considered the union a mésalliance - she offered Anneliese a significant sum of money to have an abortion when Bertha discovered her daughter-in-law was with child. In the face of such opposition, Alfried and Anneliese's marriage quickly crumbled, and they divorced in 1941. At the time that Hetty and Arndt's engagement was made public, it was reported that Hetty had been until then a particularly close, "seemingly permanent companion," to Prince Johannes of Thurn and Taxis (1926-1990).
Hetty and Arndt at their civil wedding
The engaged couple at the pre-wedding press conference
The religious wedding of Arndt and Hetty at Schloß Blühnbach
The tall blue-eyed princess with blonde hair wed her "prince charming" in a civil ceremony on 1 February 1969 at Werfen bei Salzburg. The couple celebrated their religious wedding on Valentine's Day 1969 (14 February) at Schloß Blühnbach, the Krupp property that was formerly owned by Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria. The ceremony was Roman Catholic, the faith of the bride; Arndt was still Lutheran, though he converted to Catholicism later in life. Hetty let Arndt plan the entire ceremony, from choosing the 300 strong guest list to selecting the bride's wedding outfit, a Pongauer Dirndl. Hetty was quoted as saying: "His taste is perfect. Leaving all major decisions to Arndt is the way we plan to run our marriage." Amongst the guests were were members of the Liechtenstein, Furstenberg, Hohenberg, Hohenlohe, and Thurn and Taxis families - American actor George Hamilton was also present.
Arndt and Hetty at Gstaad
Hetty and Arndt beside the pool of their villa in Marrakech
The glittering princess with her husband
Arndt and Hetty
Aware of the nature of their marriage of convenience, Arndt and Hetty quickly and happily began living mostly separate lives. Hetty was drawn to the family's thirty-four-room villa at Marrakech. Arndt preferred Palm Beach and then getting away to a little house on the Isle of Sylt, off the German coast. The couple would typically spent August to October of every year at Schloß Blühnbach, where they enjoyed hunting and entertaining their international set of friends. In a 1985 Palm Beach Post interview with Arndt, it was noted that "the Princess is an avid sportswoman, and when not in Blühnbach is on the ski slopes of Gstaad or St Moritz. Their mutual respect and compatibility permits them a personal freedom that has cemented a happy marriage of fourteen years! Each Valentine anniversary, the Baron deluges the Princess with her favourite flower...Lilies-of-the-Valley." Arndt went on to say of his wife: "She is exactly the opposite of me. She likes skiing, golfing, all kinds of outdoor things. She very reluctantly goes to parties, I must say. You see, she's very natural. She doesn't wear lipstick or anything."
The funeral of Arndt von Bohlen und Halbach
Aged forty-eight, Arndt died on 8 May 1986 in the intensive care unit of a private hospital at Munich. He had been suffering from lymph node cancer since 1979 and had dealt with cirrhosis of the liver as a result of his alcoholism. Not surprisingly, Arndt and Hetty never had children. A widow at fifty-two, Hetty never remarried.
Princess Hetty of Auersperg
Long after her husband's death, Hetty granted an interview in 2012 with Express from her home at Marrakech. She recalled when she had initially met Arndt after she approached the Krupp heir for a job: "Why not marry me? You lead your life, and sometimes we bring ours together." he responded. And, marry him she did. Hetty remembered: "I know of some marriages where the husband is homosexual or bisexual. That is not necessarily the worst thing. We had a partnership. Arndt was not jealous. I could do whatever I wanted. We were a good team. I really liked Arndt."
Death notice of Henriette von Bohlen und Halbach (née Princess of Auersperg)
Hetty survived her husband by thirty-three years. Her nephew Prince Alexander of Auersperg and her nieces Princesses Ala and Cecile announced that their beloved aunt had died on 30 May 2019 at St Johann in Tirol. Hetty was eighty-five years-old.
Princess Hetty of Auersperg
May She Rest In Peace.
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Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig, Grand Duchess Eleonore, and Hereditary Grand Duke Georg Donatus and Prince Ludwig
The Grand Duke and Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine with their two sons
Eleonore with Georg Donatus and Ludwig
Prince Ludwig Hermann Alexander Chlodwig of Hesse and by Rhine was born on 20 November 1908 as the second son of Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine (25 November 1868–9 October 1937) and his second wife Grand Duchess Eleonore (17 September 1871–16 November 1937; née Solms-Hohensolms-Lich). Ludwig joined an older brother, Hereditary Grand Duke Georg Donatus (8 November 1906–16 November 1937). From his father's first marriage to Princess Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1876-1936), Ludwig had one half sister, Princess Elisabeth (1895-1903), who he never met as a result of her untimely death.
Prince Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine
Together with his brother Georg Donatus, who was two years older, Prince Ludwig grew up alternately at Schloß Wolfsgarten and the Neuen Palais in Darmstadt. At the time of the First World War, he began to be privately tutored. Ludwig, in the family circle called "Lu," was like his brother almost entirely educated at home. Ludwig finished his primary studies in 1926. Then Ludwig went on to study archeology and art history with a specialisation in ornamentation at the Universities of Darmstadt, Lausanne and Munich.
Announcement of the Hesse/Geddes engagement on 17 July 1937
Prince Ludwig and his fiancée the Hon. Margaret Geddes
Report on the death of Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine on 10 October 1937
After graduating, the trained art historian served as an attaché at the German Embassy in London. In Upper Bavaria, Ludwig met Margaret Campbell Geddes (18 March 1913-26 January 1997), the daughter of British diplomat and professor Sir Auckland Campbell Geddes (1879-1954) and American Isabella Gamble Ross (1881-1962). After having met in 1936, Ludwig and Margaret announced their engagement on 16 July 1937. The wedding was postponed after Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig died on 9 October 1937. At this point, it was decided that Ludwig and Margaret should marry on 20 November 1937, the groom's twenty-ninth birthday.
However, further tragedy was to intervene. On 16 November, Eleonore, along with her son Georg Donatus, his pregnant wife Cecilie and his two sons, went to London by plane in order to attend Ludwig's wedding. The plane crashed near Oostende in Belgium and all the passengers were killed. The only one of Georg Donatus and Cecilie's children not aboard the flight was their daughter Johanna.
In London, it was decided that Prince Ludwig and Margaret Geddes should marry without delay in the face of this loss. The couple were married on 17 October 1937, a day after the plane crash, in quiet wedding ceremony at St Peter's Church, Eaton Square. Ludwig's best man was Lord Louis Mountbatten. The wedding was attended by the Duke and Duchess of Kent, Princess Olga of Yugoslavia (née Greece), Countess Elisabeth of Törring-Jettenbach (née Greece), the Dowager Marchioness of Milford Haven, Lady Louis Mountbatten, and Mr and Mrs von Ribbentrop. After the marriage, Ludwig and Margaret traveled to Ostend to see the remains of the groom's family. Ludwig never completely recovered from the death of his family; it was later remarked that "a disciplined sadness marked him."
Princess Johanna of Hesse and by Rhine
Prince Ludwig and Princess Margaret with their niece/adopted daughter Princess Johanna
After the accident, Prince Ludwig and Princess Margaret adopted Johanna, their orphaned niece, and planned to raise her as their own daughter. Sadly, Johanna developed meningitis and died twenty months later at the age of two and a half on 14 June 1939. The little girl's maternal grandmother, Princess Alice of Greece (née Battenberg), said later that the unconscious Johanna so closely resembled her mother at the same age that it felt like losing her daughter Cecilie all over again. Following Johanna's death, she was buried with her parents and brothers at the Rosenhöhe.
Peter Pears, Prince Louis of Hesse and by Rhine, Princess Margaret of Hesse and by Rhine, and Benjamin Britten
Lu and Peg of Hesse
Prince Ludwig and Princess Margaret "Peg" were never able to have children of their own. After the end of World War II, the couple engaged in the reconstruction of Darmstadt, supporting such institutions as Alice Hospital, the Eleonorenheim and the Red Cross. As a lover of classical music, the prince promoted the Ansbach Festival and the Aldeburgh Festival. As a friend of the British musician Benjamin Britten, Ludwig translated his lyrics and invited the English composer come to Wolfsgarten, where parts of Britten's opera Death in Venice were created.
Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine in later life
Lu and Peg of Hesse with The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh
In 1964, Ludwig became of the godfathers of Prince Edward, youngest child of Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh. Ludwig died in 1968 at the age of 59 years. The funeral service took place on 6 June 1968 at Darmstadt in the presence of the European royals and aristocrats. Ludwig is buried together with his wife Margaret (1913-1997) in a simple grave at the Rosenhöhe, in the immediate vicinity of his parents and his brother's family.
The late Landgraf Moritz of Hesse as a young man
In 1960, Prince Ludwig adopted Prince/Landgraf Moritz of Hesse-Kassel (1926-2013), in whose person the two separate lines of the House of Hesse were reunited from the first time since 1567 after Prince Ludwig's death in 1968.
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Radu Duda of Romania: When an Actor turned Prince runs for President
Ten years ago, Prince Radu of Romania (né Duda) announced his candidacy for the Romanian Presidency in a press conference at Elisabeta Palace in Bucharest on 9 April 2009. Radu was accompanied by his wife Princess Margarita. The couple had married in 1996.
On 23 April 2009, King Michael of Romania gave a speech in support of his son-in-law's political aspirations. Some suspected that the king did so reluctantly as he had always sought to remain above the political fray. The king delivered his address from Elisabeta Palace. In full, the speech read as follows:
I spent half a century in exile together with my family and another ten years in government imposed restrictions in our own country. For us these were the most terrible years and perhaps for the country were even worse. Our whole life was dedicated to serving the country as we always wished to see her powerful, prosperous and proud within Europe. During these more than six decades all good hopes of the Romanian people were shattered, one by one. […] The right deed comes at the right time for the country. I believe that this moment has arrived.
My Family through its presence in the democratic elections for the institution of the Chief of State strives to unite and restore to a state of health contemporary Romania. We want to prove how the people should be properly served. I am fully confident that Prince Radu has the capacity to bear forward this important responsibility and high ideal.
Romania faces difficult times. I appeal to you all in supporting this important step forward for Romania. In these moments the country needs you united and generous, cohesive and responsible.
Let us together give Romania hope in this difficult year!
So help us God!
Mihai R.
Radu Duda announces his bid for the Romanian Presidency in April 2009
In September 2009, Radu quit the presidential race. He attributed this decision to a lack of broad support from the political establishment, other groups and the business community in Romania. The Royal Forums elaborated:
The Prince said he was very sad to make the decision but had ‘hopes for the future’. He maintained that the election campaign was not a fair race but merely a fight between different political clans: “Most Romanian politicians act as though the state and public institutions are personal goods. The current president began the process of privatization of the Romanian state. The next president will continue it.”
Radu Duda announced his intention to fun for Presidency in April and registered as an independent candidate, without links to or support of any political party. At the time, Prince Radu declared that should he be successful, he would not seek to restore the Monarchy.
Former King Michael of Romania supported both his son-in-law’s campaign and his decision to end it.
The Duchess of Kent and Strathearn (née Saxe-Coburg-Saafeld)
On 29 May 1818 at Amorbach, Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, and Princess Viktoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld were wed. This was the first marriage for Prince Edward (2 November 1767-23 January 1820), who was the fourth son and fifth child of King George III of the United Kingdom (1738-1820) and Queen Charlotte (1744-1818; née Mecklenburg-Strelitz). It was the second marriage for Princess Viktoria (17 August 1786-16 March 1861): she married her first husband, Emich Carl, Prince of Leiningen, on 21 December 1803 at Coburg. Viktoria was widowed when Emich Carl died in 1814, leaving behind Viktoria and their two children, Carl (1804-1856) and Feodora (1807-1872). Princess Viktoria was the fourth daughter and seventh child of Duke Franz Frederick Anton of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (1750-1806) and his second wife Countess Augusta of Reuß-Ebersdorf (1757-1831).
The Dowager Duchess of Kent with her daughter Princess Victoria
Report on the christening of Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent
Article (c) The Times of London (25 June 1819)
Princess Victoria of Kent, aged four
The couple's only child was born almost a year to the day after their marriage. On 24 May 1819, Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent entered the world at Kensington Palace. The princess was christened privately by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Charles Manners-Sutton, on 24 June 1819 in the Cupola Room at Kensington Palace. She was baptised Alexandrina after one of her godparents, Emperor Alexander I of Russia, and Victoria, after her mother. For the rest of her life, she would be known by her second name, Victoria.
The Duke of Kent
Aged fifty-two, Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, died of pneumonia on 23 January 1820 at Woolbrook Cottage, Sidmouth. He was buried at St George's Cathedral, Windsor. Edward died six days before his father King George, who passed away on 29 January 1820.
The Dowager Duchess of Kent with her grandchildren Prince Alfred and Princess Alice
The Dowager Duchess of Kent in 1860, one year before her death
Princess Viktoria, the Dowager Duchess of Kent, survived her husband by over forty years. At the age of seventy-four, the duchess drew her last breath on 16 March 1861 at Frogmore House, Windsor. The Dowager Duchess of Kent is buried at the Duchess of Kent's Mausoleum at Frogmore, Windsor.
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Emanuele Filiberto of Savoy, Prince of Venice, has made it public knowledge that he is suffering from cancer: the exact kind is not specified. The forty-six year-old prince stated that he was originally diagnosed in 2011. However, he has had a recurrence of the disease and decided to share this development with others.
Photo from the Instagram of Emanuele Filiberto di Savoia
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