Thursday, July 2, 2020

The Sad Fates of Two Princely Siblings: The Lobkowicz Brothers


In the 1980s, Prince Edouard and Princess Françoise Lobkowicz twice suffered the loss that no parent ever wants to experience. They had to bury two of four children within a four year span. Violence and illness claimed the lives of their first and second sons.

 

Edouard
(1960-1984)


On 18 October 1960, Prince Marie Edouard-Xavier Ferdinand Auguste Gaspard Lobkowicz was born at Paris. He was the first child of Prince Edouard Lobkowicz and Princess Françoise of Bourbon-Parma. Edouard's parents had married civilly in 1959 and religiously in 1960.

After graduating from secondary school in France, Edouard Lobkowicz received a bachelor's degree in 1983 from the Jesuit-run University of San Francisco. The prince, a reserve lieutenant in the French Army, had fulfilled active service as a paratrooper. He was a Knight of Honor and Devotion of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.


In early April 1984, Prince Edouard went missing in Paris, where he had been residing at the Avenue Morceau apartment of his parents. The French police found Edouard's car in mid-April outside the Gare de Lyon, a Paris rail station. The body of Prince Edouard Lodkowicz was found by the police on 27 April at Ivry in the River Seine. An autopsy of the body was conducted: it found that he had been shot in the throat with a shotgun and had a bullet in his left shoulder blade. His waist was tied to an iron slab, which weighed his body down in the waters of the Seine. The Lobkowicz family was not informed of the discovery of Edouard's body until 4 May. This delay was attributed to the fact that the authorities had been supplied with an inaccurate physical description of Edouard.

The prince was described by his friends as "refined." Edouard had returned to Paris from San Francisco only three months before his untimely death. The police first contemplated the possibility of suicide, but, upon discovering the gun wounds, realised that the prince had been the victim of a murder. No culprits were ever arrested.

Prince Edouard Lobkowicz was twenty-three years-old when he was killed. He was survived by his parents, Prince Edouard and Princess Françoise, by his brothers, Prince Robert and Prince Charles-Henri, and by his sister, Princess Marie-Gabrielle.

Prince Robert Lobkowicz
Robert
(1961-1988)
 
Prince Marie Robert Emanuel Joseph Michel Benoît Melchior Lobkowicz was born at Paris on 31 December 1961. He was the second child of Prince Edouard Lobkowicz and Princess Françoise of Bourbon-Parma.

Like his older brother Edouard, Robert attended the Saint Ignatius Institute at the University of San Francisco, from which he graduated. Robert also completed his service in the French Army. The prince was also a Knight of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.

On 29 October 1988, Prince Robert Lobkowicz died from a brain tumour while in Bhannes, Lebanon.   Robert was twenty-six years-old when he passed away. In 1989, Robert's father Edouard opened the Bhannes Therapeutic Educational Center For Children With Cerebral Palsy in tribute to his late son. 

A Baby Expected in the Royal House of Bavaria!


Prince Konstantin of Bavaria and his wife Princess Deniz are expecting their first child, as has been reported in Bunte.

 
 
Konstantin of Bavaria and Deniz Kaya celebrated their religious marriage on 1 September 2018 at St Moritz, Switzerland. Prince Konstantin of Bavaria is the son of Prince Leopold of Bavaria and his wife Princess Ursula (née Möhlenkamp). Princess Deniz of Bavaria is the daughter of Metin Kaya and his wife Guelseren Kaya.
 
Congratulations to the couple and their families!

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Latest Eurohistory Book: The Grand Ducal House of Hesse (August 2020)

EUROHISTORY
6300 Kensington Avenue
East Richmond Heights, CA 94805 USA
Phone: 510.236.1730
Email: eurohistory@comcast.net or aebeeche@mac.com


It is with great pleasure that we are able to announce to you that our latest book, The Grand Ducal House of Hesse, has gone to print!

With more than 400 beautiful images, the 336 pages inside the book bring to life the story of the Grand Ducal House of Hesse (and by Rhine), from its beginnings as Landgraves to Hesse-Darmstadt.

The authors, Arturo E. Beéche and Ilana D. Miller, conducted extensive research in several countries and received assistance from several living descendants of of members of this now extinct dynasty.

The story is gripping, tragic, joyful, hopeful. Eurohistory hopes that readers will find the book as spellbinding as the authors intended it to be!


The Grand Ducal House of Hesse will be available for purchase through our usual outposts (Eurohistory, Hoogstraten Bookstore, Galignani, AMAZON) in the second half of August!

 
 
The books chapters include:
 
Author’s Note
 
The Grand Duchy of Hesse in the German Empire
 
Prologue
 
Chapter I: The Landgraves of Hesse-Darmstadt 
 
Chapter II: A New Grand Duchy: Ludwig I and Ludwig II
 
Chapter III: Grand Duke Ludwig III
 
Chapter IV: Darmstadt & Windsor: Ludwig IV and the English Connections – tragedy and single parenthood
 
Chapter V: The Battenbergs
 
Chapter VI: The Greek-Battenberg Alliance
 
Chapter VII: Tragedy, World War, Turmoil, and Survival
 
Chapter VIII: The Next Generation Settles Down and Tragedy Strikes Again
 
Chapter IX: The Mountbatten-Windsor Connection
 
Chapter X: The End of an Ancient Line
 
Chapter XI: The Women of Darmstadt
 
Epilogue
 
Family Trees
 
 
Endnotes
 
Bibliography
 
 Index

 

 



Monday, June 29, 2020

A Scion of the Guinness Dynasty Marries Bette Midler's Daughter

 
On 6 June 2020, Harry J. N. Guinness married Sophie von Haselberg at Milbrook, New York. Sophie and Harry decided to have their wedding just ten days before the ceremony; however, they both felt that this was the perfect way for the couple to intimately celebrate their marriage. 
 
Bette Midler, Sophie's mother, provided the flowers, and her father, Martin von Haselberg, did the cooking. After their ceremony, Harry and Sophie planted two trees. For the small reception, the newlyweds were given two lobsters (dressed as the bride and the groom; the lobsters were later made into a salad by Sophie). They enjoyed a chocolate Guinness cake and a lemon-elderflower cake. This lovely union brings together a famous Irish brewing dynasty with a well-known American acting family.
 
Harry J. N. Guinness is the son of Timothy Whitmore Newton Guinness (b.Basingstoke, Hampshire 20 June 1947) and his ex-wife Beverly Anne Mills. Timothy Guinness and Beverly Mills were married on 6 June 1974. Harry has three siblings: Edward, Mary, and Elizabeth. 
 
 
 
 
Sophie Frederica Alohilani von Haselberg was born on 14 November 1986 as the daughter of Martin Rochus Sebastian von Haselberg (b.Argentina 20 January 1949; became a naturalised U.S. citizen in 1991) and the well-known U.S. actress Bette Midler (b.Honolulu, Hawaii 1 December 1945). Martin von Haselberg and Bette Midler were married on 16 December 1984 at Las Vegas, Nevada.

A special thank you to Michael Rhodes of the Peerage News Blog for providing the details of the nuptials!

Sunday, June 28, 2020

OTD: Albanian Royal Family Returns to Country in 2002 after Six Decades in Exile

The Albanian Royal Family returns to their country for the first time since 1939.
Photograph (c) HRH Crown Prince Leka of the Albanians
 


On Friday, 28 June 2002, the Albanian royal family returned to Albania for the first time in sixty-three years. Among the returning members of the House of Zogu were King Leka I of the Albanians, his wife Queen Susan, his mother Queen Mother Geraldine, and his son Crown Prince Leka. The family had been living in Johannesburg, South Africa, since the 1980s. The Albanian royals had been forced to leave their country in 1939 in the face of invading Italian troops. Of the four members who returned in 2002, only two had ever been in Albania before: Geraldine had set foot in Albania in 1938 when she was courted by and married to King Zog I of Albania; her son Leka was born in Tirana on 5 April 1939, and, just two days later, his parents fled the country with their baby boy to escape the forces of Mussolini.

 
 


King Zog, Queen Geraldine, and Crown Prince Leka lived in exile in numerous countries. From August 1939 - June 1940, the family lived in France. However, the outbreak of World War II caused the king and queen to decide that they would be safer in the United Kingdom, which is where they relocated in June 1940. Zog, Geraldine, and Leka were to remain in Great Britain until January 1946. In that month, the royals moved to Egypt, where they lived in Cairo until July 1955. The change of the Egyptian government after the deposition of King Farouk was a key factor in the decision to return to France. From July 1955 until late 1961, the family lived in France. King Zog died in Paris on 9 April 1961. Queen Mother Geraldine and son Leka, the newly acclaimed King of the Albanians, moved to Madrid, Spain, where they resided until 1979. During that time, the royal family grew by one. In 1975, King Leka married Susan Cullen-Ward, an Australian teacher whom he had met at a dinner party in Sydney in 1970. Events forced King Leka and Queen Susan to depart Spain in early 1979. From February 1979 until April 1980, the royal couple lived in Rhodesia, during which time the queen was delivered of a stillborn baby daughter. When Robert Mugabe came to power in the newly formed country of Zimbabwe, Leka and Susan left and settled in Johannesburg, South Africa, where they were granted diplomatic status. It was there that their only surviving child, Crown Prince Leka, was born on 26 March 1982. In the meantime, Queen Mother Geraldine stayed in Madrid until 1995, when she left Spain to join her son, daughter-in-law, and grandson in South Africa. It was from there that the family departed Johannesburg for Tirana on 28 June 2002.

 
 
 

When they arrived at Tirana International Airport, the Albanian royal family was greeted by crowds of supporters. They took up residence in a home in central Tirana. Several months after the family's return, Queen Mother Geraldine of Albania passed away on 22 October 2002 at the age of eighty-seven. Four days later, Her Majesty was buried in the Mausoleum of the Albanian Royal Family in Tirana. Two years after the death of her mother-in-law, Queen Susan of the Albanians died on 17 July 2004, aged sixty-three. The queen joined the queen mother in the royal mausoleum. Lastly, on 30 November 2011, King Leka I of the Albanians passed away at the Mother Teresa Hospital in Tirana at the age of seventy-two. He was buried with his wife and mother. In 2012, King Zog's remains were repatriated from France and laid to rest beside his wife, his son, and his daughter-in-law.


Crown Prince Leka (II) of the Albanians resides with his wife Crown Princess Elia at the Royal Compound in Tirana.

For more about the Royal Family of Albania, please visit this link: Albanian Royal Court

Saturday, June 27, 2020

Princess Teresa of Orléans and Bragança, Last Surviving Sister-In-Law of the Countess of Paris, Passes Away

D. Teresa, wearing Yves Saint Laurent, appears in Vogue's 1970 "10 Best Dressed Women of the World" List
Photograph (c) Richard Avedon
Princess Teresa of Orléans and Bragança died yesterday (26 June 2020) in Rio de Janeiro. Teresa was ninety-one years-old. The princess was the widow of Prince João of Orléans and Bragança.

Teresa in 1956
Photograph (c) O Semanário
1956: Didu (far left) and Teresa (far right) with Didu's daughter Lilian
Photograph (c) Revista da Semana

Teresa (or Tereza) de Jesus Cesar Leite was born on 11 January 1929 at Uba, Minas Gerais. She was the daughter of José da Silva Leite and Branca Queiroz Cesar dos Santos. In the 1950s, Teresa married Carlos Eduardo "Didu" de Sousa Campos, the son of Vilobaldo Machado de Sousa Campos, a former director of the Banco do Brasil, and his wife Letícia Dias. Teresa was Didu's second wife. The couple had one child, a son, Diduzinho (who predeceased his mother). Teresa and Didu lived a jet-set lifestyle in their four-storey, twenty-room mansion in Copacabana. In the 1970s, the couple separated. On 28 January 1986, Didu de Souza Campos died in Rio de Janeiro after suffering a heart attack; he was seventy-two years-old.
 
Teresa de Sousa Campos
The Imperial Siblings of Brazil: Prince João; Princess Isabelle, Countess of Paris; Prince Pedro Gastão; Princess Teresa
In the background: Princess Maria Elisabeth, wife of Prince Pedro Henrique, and Dom Duarte, Duke of Braganza
On 29 April 1990 at Petrópolis, Teresa married in a civil ceremony Prince João of Orléans and Bragança, son of Prince Pedro de Alcântara of Orléans and Bragança, Prince of Grão Pará, and his wife Princess Elisabeth (née Countess Dobrzensky von Dobrzenicz). Teresa and João celebrated their religious wedding on 11 May 1990 in Rio de Janeiro. Residing in Paraty for much of their marriage, Prince João and Princess Teresa were together for fifteen years before Prince João passed away in 2005 at the age of eighty-eight. 
 
May the Princess Rest In Peace. 
 
Thank you to my dear friend Astrid Bodstein Romêo for notifying me of this news.
 
Source:
 

Friday, June 26, 2020

Princess Teresa of Orléans and Bragança, Last Surviving Sister-In-Law of the Countess of Paris, Passes Away

D. Teresa, wearing Yves Saint Laurent, appears in Vogue's 1970 "10 Best Dressed Women of the World" List Photograph (c) Richard Avedon
Princess Teresa of Orléans and Bragança died yesterday (26 June 2020) in Rio de Janeiro. Teresa was ninety-one years-old. The princess was the widow of Prince João of Orléans and Bragança.
Teresa in 1956 Photograph (c) O Semanário
1956: Didu (far left) and Teresa (far right) with Didu's daughter Lilian Photograph (c) Revista da Semana
Teresa (or Tereza) de Jesus Cesar Leite was born on 11 January 1929 at Uba, Minas Gerais. She was the daughter of José da Silva Leite and Branca Queiroz Cesar dos Santos. In the 1950s, Teresa married Carlos Eduardo "Didu" de Sousa Campos, the son of Vilobaldo Machado de Sousa Campos, a former director of the Banco do Brasil, and his wife Letícia Dias. Teresa was Didu's second wife. The couple had one child, a son, Diduzinho (who predeceased his mother). Teresa and Didu lived a jet-set lifestyle in their four-storey, twenty-room mansion in Copacabana. In the 1970s, the couple separated. On 28 January 1986, Didu de Souza Campos died in Rio de Janeiro after suffering a heart attack; he was seventy-two years-old.
Teresa de Sousa Campos
The Imperial Siblings of Brazil: Prince João; Princess Isabelle, Countess of Paris; Prince Pedro Gastão; Princess Teresa In the background: Princess Maria Elisabeth, wife of Prince Pedro Henrique, and Dom Duarte, Duke of Braganza
On 29 April 1990 at Petrópolis, Teresa married in a civil ceremony Prince João of Orléans and Bragança, son of Prince Pedro de Alcântara of Orléans and Bragança, Prince of Grão Pará, and his wife Princess Elisabeth (née Countess Dobrzensky von Dobrzenicz). Teresa and João celebrated their religious wedding on 11 May 1990 in Rio de Janeiro. Residing in Paraty for much of their marriage, Prince João and Princess Teresa were together for fifteen years before Prince João passed away in 2005 at the age of eighty-eight. 
May the Princess Rest In Peace. 
Thank you to my dear friend Astrid Bodstein Romêo for notifying me of this news.
Source:

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