Monday, December 28, 2020

Christmas Messages from Savoys Emphasise Hope for Italians in New Year

 
Amedeo of Savoy-Aosta and Maria Isabella of Savoy-Genoa, 1955.
 
On the occasion of Christmas and the New Year, both Duke Amedeo of Savoy, Head of the Royal House, and his cousin Princess Maria Isabella of Savoy-Genoa have issued messages to Italians in Italy and abroad. Amedeo and Maria Isabella are close friends as well as third cousins once removed. Both born in 1943, Amedeo is the only child of Prince Aimone of Savoy-Aosta (1900-1948) and Princess Irene of Greece and Denmark (1904-1974); Maria Isabella is the only child of Prince Eugenio of Savoy-Genoa (1906-1996) and Princess Lucia of Bourbon-Two Sicilies (1908-2001).
 
You can read their messages to the Italian people below.
 
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Message from H.R.H. Prince Amedeo of Savoy on the Occasion of Christmas 2020 and for the New Year 2021.

Dear Italians, 

 
A year is drawing to a close that has certainly been the most difficult through which our generations have lived. A year of serious suffering and grief that have affected many families everywhere as well as our social lives and the connective tissue of our national identity. This pandemic, which treacherously affects those large and small and not only our nation but the whole world, has taken us by surprise, unprepared, and, therefore, most vulnerable. Only thanks to the generous selflessness of all the health personnel, including many who have been personally affected themselves, has it been possible to partially contain this virus. All this has generated an unprecedented economic crisis that has severely hit large sectors of production and trade, with serious effects on employment, without sparing artisans and freelancers. 
 
We have been pummelled by information disseminated in an incorrect and contradictory form that has generated confusion, anxiety, and anguish, with serious consequences also on a psychological level. I am thinking of the young people who, due to physical distancing, are deprived of that joy, freedom and human contacts, indispensable for their growth and formation; to the many elderly people who, in need of attention, moral and material support, have remained isolated, confused and deprived of any contact with their loved ones. We Italians have experienced other moments of serious difficulties which we have faced with intelligence and determination, such as in the aftermath of the war, when an entire people were able to resume the path of civil progress and widespread prosperity from underneath the rubble. This recovery will be long and difficult, both as regards public health and the economic situation. An extraordinary commitment of the institutions will be necessary to return to growth and create appropriate aid for those in difficulty. 
 
Parliament must return to being a force of lucid legislative capacity, so that it can pass laws that do not create those confusions and injustices that make the governmental institutions unpopular. It will be essential to invest in safeguarding the hydrogeological structure of the country so that climate change is appropriate addressed and combated. The commitment must be urgent to adapt the road, railway, and port infrastructures of Italy in order to look to the future with a long-term competitive perspective which, also in relation to our geographical position in the Mediterranean, makes Italy a privileged gateway to Europe, Africa, and the Middle and Far East. I would like to end my thoughts by sharing the wonderful news of the return to their families of our fishermen from Mazara del Vallo. 
 
I wish you all a Merry Christmas and a New Year that will bring us trust and hope to be able to look serenely at the future of our children and grandchildren. 
 
Amedeo of Savoy,
San Rocco, 
24 December 2020 
 
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Message from H.R.H. Princess Maria Isabella of Savoy-Genoa on the Occasion of Christmas and the New Year.

Dearest friends,

May an affectionate wish for peace, harmony, and serenity reach you all and your families during this Holy Christmas.

It was a difficult year for all of humanity; the serious losses of family members, friends and acquaintances. The pandemic, social unrest, serious crises and economic difficulties have severely affected our daily lives.

The word crisis in ancient Greek meant "change." It is therefore our duty to keep alive hope and commitment to one another, so that the crises of our recent days will end swiftly and may instead become forces of change aimed at amelioration for all, at social growth, and at development, in order to achieve social peace, and to guarantee and ensure a better future for us all.

With trust in the hope that Our Lord will protect and enlighten us and guide our steps during the New Year 2021 and towards new and more peaceful life, I offer my best wishes.

Maria Isabella of Savoy-Genoa
São Paulo, Brazil
25 December 2020
 
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Sunday, December 27, 2020

The 1969 Thurn and Taxis Marriage That Ended with Protestors and Press Conferences

 

Prince Max Emanuel and Countess Anna Maria on their wedding day. Photograph (c) Getty Images / Hans Gregor.
The wedding card of Prince Max Emanuel and Princess Anna Maria von Thurn und Taxis.

Prince Max Emanuel "Nini" von Thurn und Taxis (1935-2020) and Countess Anna Maria "Mirzl" von Pocci (1944-2008) married civilly at Schwangau on 20 May 1969. The couple celebrated their religious union two days later on 22 May 1969 in a ceremony at Saint Coloman's Church; Father Emmeram of Thurn and Taxis, the uncle of the groom, presided over their Roman Catholic nuptials. The wedding festivities were attended by nearly three thousand guests. The prince was the son of Prince Raphael Ranier von Thurn und Taxis (1906-1993) and his wife and second cousin Princess Margarete "Rita" (1913-1997; née Princess von Thurn und Taxis). The countess was the daughter of Count Konrad von Pocci (1904-1985) and his first wife Countess Anna-Elisabeth (1908-1964; née Hartmann). The von Pocci comital family was not considered up to snuff for the Thurn und Taxis dynasty, and the marriage was deemed morganatic.

Photograph (c) Interfoto / Friedrich Rauch
Photograph (c) Interfoto / Friedrich Rauch
Photograph (c) Interfoto / Friedrich Rauch

The wedded bliss of Max Emanuel and Anna Maria was of short duration. In April 1970, Anna Maria left her husband and took refuge at the Hohenschwangau home of her lover Walter Stanner. Mr Stanner was an innkeeper, wild-game dealer, and the local chairman of the Jung Union Deutschlands (Young Union of Germany) of the CSU (Christian Social Union in Bavaria). Max Emanuel's father Raphael was a district counsellor in Bavaria and also belonged to the CSU. Quite bizarrely, looking back from the lenses of today, a number of protestors positioned themselves outside of the residence. The signs that the protestors carried bore such slogans as: "Adulteress Out!" and "We want justice for our Nini!" and "Mirzl, what is the new price of french fries?" Police were on hand to guarantee that the situation did not escalate beyond the demonstrations.

Prince Max Emanuel and his mother Princess Margarete von Thurn und Taxis. Photograph (c) Keystone Press / Alamy.
Countess Anna Maria von Pocci and Walter Stanner. Photograph (c) Keystone Press / Alamy.

The union of Prince Max Emanuel and Princess Anna Maria von Thurn und Taxis was dissolved by divorce on 6 July 1970. A penalty of DM 100,000 prohibited both parties from discussing the specific issues that caused the breakdown of the marriage. Nonetheless, shortly after the divorce, both sides held duelling press conferences. Prince Max Emanuel and his mother Princess Margarete gave their point of view at the Munich hotel Bayerischer Hof. When asked of his future marital plans, the prince responded: "I've had it for awhile." Countess Anna Maria and Walter Stanner, an innkeeper and restauranteur, held their press conference at a Munich biergarten. They announced that they intended to marry in September 1970, after which time the countess would help her new husband with his restaurant. Shortly before the TnT/Pocci press conferences, Walter Stanner was visited by the local chairman of the CSU. During an interview with Der Spiegel in June 1970, Stanner stated: "The chairman came to coffee and said it was a delicate matter. I should voluntarily quit the party because of the princess story." Indeed, there was a motion in the party to eject Stanner owing to "party-damaging behaviour." Stanner countered the chairman's proposal by noting: "my private life has nothing to do with my political activity." Stanner rejected the request to voluntary resign his CSU membership and stated that, since an arbitral tribunal was already entrusted with the case - if necessary, it would "go to the Federal Constitutional Court." Stanner then speculated, perhaps correctly, that the driving force behind the move to eject him from the CSU was Prince Raphael von Thurn und Taxis, the father of the abandoned Prince Max, "who plays a certain role in the matter." As mentioned above, Prince Raphael was a CSU district councillor. Stanner went on to say that "in the family's [Thurn und Taxis'] 1,000-year history, it has never happened to them that a princess leaves one of their own for a commoner."

Prince Max Emanuel and Princess Christa of Thurn and Taxis. Photograph (c) dpa / Alamy.
Countess Anna Maria von Pocci.

The Roman Catholic Church granted an annulment to the Thurn Taxis/Pocci marriage in 1972. Despite the fallout from this coupling, it is fair to say that the couple lived happily ever after, just not together. On 6 November 1970, Countess Anna Maria von Pocci married Walter Stanner (1940-2003). The couple did not have children and divorced in 1997. The countess, a third cousin once removed of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, died in December 2008. In March 1973, Prince Max Emanuel von Thurn und Taxis married Christa Heinle (b.1941); the couple had two sons. The prince, a first cousin of Fürst Johannes von Thurn und Taxis, died in March 2020; he was survived by his wife Princess Christa.

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New Addition to the Georgian Royal Family Expected in 2021!

Prince Juan and Princess Kristine Bagration-Mukhransky. Photograph courtesy of Prince Juan.

Prince Juan Bagration-Mukhransky and his wife Princess Kristine have released the joyous news that they are expecting their first child in early 2021. The couple live in Tbilisi. The latest member of the Bagration dynasty will be a great-great-great-grandchild of King Alfonso XII of Spain.

Prince Juan and Princess Kristine. Photograph courtesy of Princess Kristine.
Kristine and Juan. Photograph courtesy of Princess Kristine Bagration.

Born at Madrid in 1977, Prince Juan Jorge is the son of the late Prince Bagrat Bagration-Mukhransky (1949-2017) and his first wife Doña Maria del Carmen Ulloa y Suelves (b.1953). Juan has one sibling, Princess Inès (b.1980; married George Gvishiani). In 2003, Prince Juan married Floriane del Rio y Thorn; the couple later divorced. Prince Juan is a grandson of Prince Irakly Bagration (1909-1977) and his second wife Infanta María de las Mercedes of Spain (1911-1953). The prince studied at the Collège Alpin International Beau Soleil. Prince Juan is the founder of the Georgian Foundation, a non-profit that seeks to promote Georgian culture. 

Prince Juan and Princess Kristine at their civil wedding in 2014.
The 2018 religious wedding of Prince Juan and Princess Kristine.

Born at Tbilisi in 1989, Princess Kristine Bagration-Mukhransky is the daughter of Temur Dzidziguri and Lali Vashakidze, a veterinarian. Princess Kristine is a sociologist and a former model. Prince Juan Bagaration and Kristine Dzidziguri married civilly on 10 May 2014 at Ronda, Málaga, Spain. The prince and princess celebrated their religious wedding on 3 June 2018 at Svetitskhoveli Cathedral, Mtskheta, Georgia. Prince Charles-Henri Lobkowicz, a fifth cousin of the groom, acted as Prince Juan's best man. 

The Prince and Princess Bagration-Mukhransky. Photograph courtesy of Princess Kristine.

Our congratulations to Prince Juan and Princess Kristine on this happy news!

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Saturday, December 26, 2020

A Recent Marriage and Birth in the Princely Families of Germany

On 19 December 2020, Princess Teresa zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg married Alexander de Cruce Grubb Villiers-Stuart.

Prince Johannes and Princess Bettina with their daughters Princess Teresa and Princess Helena.
Photograph (c) PPE Agency.
Alexander de Cruce Grubb Villiers-Stuart.
Photograph (c) Twitter.


Born in 1988 at Munich, Princess Teresa Elisabeth Marina Franziska zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg is the eldest daughter of Prince Johannes zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg (b.1953) and his wife Princess Bettina (b.1959; née von Molo). Born in 1984 in Ireland, Alexander Henry de Cruce Grubb Villiers-Stuart is the son of Nicholas de Cruce Grubb and his wife Barbara Villiers-Stuart (b.1955). 

Our congratulations to Teresa and Alexander!
 
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The new parents: Philipp and Alessandra von Thurn und Taxis on their wedding day.
Photograph (c) Schneider-Press/Frank Rollitz
 
On the same day as the wedding above, a birth occurred in the House of Thurn and Taxis. Tassilo Max Emanuel Albert Emmeram Antonius Maria Lamoral Prinz von Thurn und Taxis was born on 19 December 2020. Tassilo is the first child of Philipp Prinz von Thurn und Taxis (b.1975) and his wife Alessandra (b.1984; née Caspari). Philipp and Alessandra married in 2019; their wedding was attended by the groom's cousins Fürst Albert and Princess Maria Elisabeth. The newborn Tassilo (b.2020) is the grandson of Prince Max Emanuel von Thurn und Taxis (1935-2020), a first cousin of the late Fürst Johannes, and his wife Princess Christa (b.1941; née Heinle). 
 
Our congratulations to Philipp and Alessandra on the arrival of Tassilo!

Friday, December 25, 2020

Happy Christmas From Eurohistory!

 

Eurohistory wishes you a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

We know that 2020 has been a challenging year for so many. Please do stay well and safe during this holiday season. May 2021 bring better things to come.

We are immensely grateful to you, our dear readers, for your continued support. We look forward to an exciting royal year ahead: new issues of the European Royal History Journal as well as the numerous royal books that are in the pipeline.

Happy Christmas!

Yours sincerely,

Arturo E. Beéche, Founder & Publisher, and the Eurohistory team

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EUROHISTORY
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Email: books@eurohistory.com / eurohistory@comcast.net / aebeeche@mac.com

An engraving of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert with their children around the Christmas tree.

Thursday, December 24, 2020

A Royal Portuguese Christmas in the USA

 

To dear Willie from his loving sister —Maria Antonia. — Christmas 1938

Infanta Maria Antónia of Portugal (1903-1973) in a signed photo to her brother-in-law William Astor Chanler, Jr. (1904-2002).

Infanta Maria Antónia of Portugal married Sidney Ashley Chanler in 1934.

You can read more about the Infanta and her family here: https://eurohistoryjournal.blogspot.com/2019/06/the-portuguese-infanta-and-blue-blooded.html

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Christmas with the Count and Countess of Paris

The Royal Family of France. Photograph (c) ddp/abaca press.
On 8 December, the Count and Countess of Paris and their five children posed for a lovely Christmas photo-session at Montreal de l'Aude, near Carcassonne, France. The family will be celebrating their first Christmas at this new home. The Count and Countess of Paris departed Dreux earlier this year.
Prince Gaston. Photograph (c) ddp/abaca press. 

Princess Antoniette. Photograph (c) ddp/abaca press.
Princess Louise-Marguerite. Photograph (c) newscom.
Prince Joseph. Photograph (c) newscom.
Princess Jacinthe. Photograph (c) newscom.

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