Sunday, September 5, 2021

A Staunch Humanitarian: Princess Cécile of Bourbon-Parma (1935-2021)

Princess Cécile of Bourbon-Parma.
On Wednesday, 1 September 2021, Princess Cécile of Bourbon-Parma died at the Hôpital Broca, in the 13th arrondissement of Paris. The princess was eighty-six years-old. 
Her death was announced on social media by her nephew Duke Carlos Javier of Parma and by only surviving brother, Prince Sixte-Henri.
Prince Xavier of Bourbon-Parma and Madeline de Bourbon-Busset on their wedding day, 1927.
Born on 12 April 1935 at Paris, Princess Cécile Marie Antoinette Madeleine Jeanne Agnès Françoise of Bourbon-Parma was the fourth child and third daughter of Prince Xavier of Bourbon-Parma and Madeleine de Bourbon-Busset. The princess was named after Saint Cecilia; three of her paternal aunts had become nuns at the Abbaye Sainte-Cécile de Solesmes: Princess Adelaide (1885-1959; she became Mother Marie Bénédicte), Princess Francesca (1890-1978; she became Mother Scholastique), and Princess  Maria Antonia (1895-1979; she became Mother Maria Antonia). 
1955: Princess Cécile at her first ball at the Ritz in Paris. Photograph (c) Getty Images / Francois Pages.
Princess Cécile, Princess Marie-Thérèse, and Princess Marie-des-Nieges.
Cécile joined two older sisters and an older brother: Françoise (b.1928), Carlos Hugo (1930-2010), and Marie-Thérèse (1933-2020). The princess was followed by two younger siblings: Marie-des-Neiges (b.1937) and Sixte-Henri (b.1940). 
Princess Cecilia speaks at a Carlist gathering in Spain, 1966. Photo (c) Getty Images / Gianni Ferrari.
Caption: "Princess Cecilia de Bourbon-Parma waving from the door of an aircraft with her parachute on her lap as she prepares for a parachute jump, Madrid, August 18th 1963." Photo (c) Getty Image / Central Press.
Cécile studied in Paris and Munich. She eventually obtained her pilot's license. When her brother Prince Carlos Hugo became engaged to Princess Irene of the Netherlands in 1964, Cécile was his only sibling who traveled with the pair from Madrid to the Netherlands for a meeting with Queen Juliana about the engagement. The princess remained deeply attached to her older brother and his children. Together with her sisters Marie-Thérèse and Marie-des-Nieges, Cécile was a steadfast supporter of Carlos Hugo's modern vision for the Carlist movement, which took on a distinctly socialist bent. Her stance pitted the princess against her parents, Duke Xavier and Duchess Madeleine, as well as her sister Princess Françoise and her brother Prince Sixte-Henri.
Princess Cécile calls for food drops to Biafra, January 1970.  
Between 1968-1970, Princess Cécile participated in humanitarian efforts to bring supplies to the inhabitants of Biafra. The princess undertook this mission as a member of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta. She spent fifteen months in Biafra and was deeply concerned about the well-being of the population there. The Republic of Biafra was a short-lived nation in West Africa, a "break-away" region in Nigeria, that existed from May 1967 to January 1970. In 1969, most of Cécile's family was expelled from Spain due their Carlist ties: only the princess (owing to her charity work in Biafra) and her sister-in-law Princess Irene of the Netherlands were excluded from the order. In early 1970, Cécile was in Washington, DC, to lobby on behalf to the people of Biafra. She stated: "The need is so great. So many people are dying in terrible conditions. In two weeks it will be too late." In 1971, the princess was finally ordered to leave Spain due to her connections with the Carlist movement. From Madrid, Cécile was put on a flight to Paris, where she arrived aboard an Iberian Airlines plane, to which she had been escorted by plainclothes Spanish policemen. She noted that she was asked to leave Spain "undoubtedly because I was with Carlist friends."
(left to right): Princess Marie-des-Neiges, Princess Marie-Thérèse, and Princess Cécile of Bourbon-Parma. Photographed at the christening of their grand-nephew Prince Carlos of Bourbon-Parma in 2016. Photograph (c) PPE / Albert Nieboer. 
Thereafter, the princess made her home in the French capital. Cécile devoted herself to the preservation of the archives of her family. Princess Cécile also immersed herself in caring for the psychological and spiritual needs of terminally ill-people. Recently, for some years, she had been living with her sisters Marie-Thérèse and Marie-des-Neiges in Paris. 
Princess Cécile, Princess Marie-Thérèse, and Princess Marie-des-Nieges attend the funeral of their brother Duke Carlos Ugo of Parma, 2010. Photo (c) PPE / Albert Nieboer.
In 2014, Cécile became the godmother of her grand-niece Princess Cecilia of Bourbon-Parma (b.2013), the daughter of Duke Carlos and Duchess Annemarie of Parma. In 2016, the princess and her two closest sisters attended the christening of their grand-nephew Carlos, the eventual heir to the Ducal House of Parma.
Princess Cécile of Bourbon-Parma with Prince Michael of Greece and Denmark.
In 2020, Cécile lost her sister Marie-Thérèse to complications from the coronavirus. Maria Teresa, as she was known in Carlist circles, had come down with COVID-19 from interactions with the nurse who was looking after Marie-Thérèse, Cécile, and Marie-des-Neiges.
Princess Cécile at a Carlist event.
Duke Xavier and Duchess Madeleine of Parma with their two sons and three youngest daughters and their daughter-in-law.
May the Princess Rest in Peace. 

Friday, September 3, 2021

The 50th Birthday of Prince Christian zu Schaumburg-Lippe

Today, Prince Christian zu Schaumburg-Lippe celebrates his fiftieth birthday!
Left to right: newlyweds Princess Lena and Prince Christian of Schaumburg-Lippe, Queen Margarethe II of Denmark, Princess Ilona and Prince Wilhelm of Schaumburg-Lippe, 2009. Photograph (c) dpa picture alliance archive / Alamy Stock Photo.
Born on 4 September 1971 at Munich, Prince Christian Hubertus Clemens-August Friedrich-Sigismund Louis-Ferdinand Harald zu Schaumburg-Lippe was the first child and only son of Prince Wilhelm of Schaumburg-Lippe and his wife Princess Ilona (née Baroness Hentschel von Gilgenheimb). Christian has one sister, Princess Désirée (b.1974; married Michael Frederik Iuel). In 2009, Prince Christian married Lena Giese (b.1979). Prince Christian and Princess Lena have one child, Prince Julian (b.2012).
Our best wishes to Prince Christian on his birthday!

Wednesday, September 1, 2021

The 90th Birthday of Princess Ingrid of Waldeck-Pyrmont

The princess in 2018.

Today, Princess Ingrid of Waldeck and Pyrmont celebrates her ninetieth birthday!

Born on 2 September 1931 at Munich, Ingrid was the third child and daughter of Fürst Josias of Waldeck and Pyrmont (1896-1967) and Duchess Altburg of Oldenburg (1903-2001), who wed in 1922. The princess had four siblings: Princess Margarethe (1923-2003), Princess Alexandra (1924-2009), Fürst Wittekind (b.1936), and Princess Guda (b.1939).

Princess Ingrid never married and has no children. 

Monday, August 30, 2021

Prince Jan Paweł Sapieha-Różański (1935-2021)

The Sapieha family: Jan Paweł, Paola, Cristina, Michael, and Anna.

On 6 August 2021, Prince Jan Paweł Sapieha-Różański died at Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The prince was eighty-five years-old. Born on 26 August 1935 at Warsaw, Jan Paweł was the first of three sons of Prince Jan Andrzej Sapieha-Rozanski and his wife Princess Maria (née Zdziechowska). Prince Jan Paweł had two younger brothers: Prince Jerzy Andrzej (1937-2010) and Prince Eustachy Piotr (1947-2005). 

 
Princess Charlotte and Prince Jan Paweł, 1970.
Photo (c) Terry Daum.

On 18 December 1964 at London, Prince Jan Paweł Sapieha-Różański married Claudine Cumberledge (b.1938), the daughter of Claude Cumberlege and his wife Nora Kirby. The couple had one son, Prince Michael (b.1966), before eventually divorcing and receiving an annulment from the Roman Catholic Church in 1980. 

 
On 16 May 1980 at Petropólis, Prince Jan Paweł Sapieha-Różański married Princess Cristina of Orléans-Braganza (b.1950), the daughter of Prince Pedro Gastão of Orléans-Braganza and Princess Maria de la Esperanza of Bourbon-Two Sicilies. The couple had two daughters, Princess Anna Theresa (b.1981; married Benjamin Furlong) and Princess Paola Maria (b.1983; married Prince Constantin Swiatopolk-Czetwertynski). Prince Jan and Princess Cristina divorced in 1988.

May the Prince Rest in Peace.

Sunday, August 29, 2021

On This Day in 1981: The Religious Wedding of Prince Ernst August of Hannover and Chantal Hochuli

Photo (c) Getty Images / Picture Alliance.
Forty years ago today, on 30 August 1981, Prince Ernst August of Hannover and Chantal Hochuli celebrated their religious wedding at Schloß Marienburg. The couple were civilly married on 28 August 1981 at Pattensen. 

Photo (c) Getty Images / United Archives.

Born on 26 February 1954 at Hannover, Prince Ernst August Albert Otto Rupprecht Oskar Berthold Friedrich-Ferdinand Christian-Ludwig of Hannover was the first son and second child of Prince Ernst August of Hannover (1914-1987) and his first wife Princess Ortrud of Schleswig-Holstein (1925-1980). Born on 2 June 1955 at Zürich, Chantal Hochuli was the daughter of Johann Gustav Hochuli (1912-?) and his wife Rosmarie Lembeck (1921-2011). 

Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia. Photo (c) Getty Images / United Archives.
Queen Sofía of Spain with Infanta Cristina and Infanta Elena are pictured in the forefront. The queen's and the groom's uncle Prince Georg Wilhelm of Hannover is pictured behind Doña Sofía. Photo (c) Getty Images / United Archives.
King Constantine II and Queen Anne-Marie of the Hellenes. Photo (c) Getty Images / United Archives.

In addition to members of the Royal House of Hannover, guests came from the royal houses of Greece, Prussia, and Spain. 

55 Years Since the Passing of the Last Queen of Portugal

A Hohenzollern gathering at Burg Hohenzollern in 1961. Front row: Grand Duchess Kira Kirillovna of Russia, Fürstin Margarete of Hohenzollern, Countess Augusta Victoria Douglas, and Princess Xenia of Prussia.

On 29 August 1966, Countess Augusta Victoria Douglas (née Princess of Hohenzollern; former Queen of Portugal) died at Eigeltingen, Baden-Württemberg. She was seventy-six years-old.

Princess Maria Teresa of Bourbon-Two Sicilies and her only daughter Princess Augusta Victoria of Hohenzollern, 1890.
Princess Maria Teresa of Bourbon-Two Sicilies holding her twin sons Prince Friedrich and Prince Franz Joseph of Hohenzollern while her husband Hereditary Prince Wilhelm of Hohenzollern holds their daughter Princess Augusta Victoria, 1901.

Born on 19 August 1890 at Potsdam, Princess Auguste Viktoria Wilhelmine Antonie Mathilde Ludovika Josephine Maria Elisabeth of Hohenzollern was the first child and only daughter of Fürst Wilhelm of Hohenzollern (1864-1927) and his first wife Princess Maria Teresa of Bourbon-Two Sicilies (1867-1909). Often known as Augusta Victoria, the princess had two younger brothers, who were twins: Fürst Friedrich of Hohenzollern (1891-1965; married Princess Margarete of Saxony) and Prince Franz Joseph of Hohenzollern (1891-1964; married Princess Maria Alix of Saxony). 

King Manuel II of Portugal and Princess Augusta Victoria of Hohenzollern on their wedding day, 1913.
Queen Augusta Victoria of Portugal and Queen Amélie of Portugal attend the funeral mass for King Manuel II in London, 1932.
Photo (c) Smith Archive / Alamy Stock Photo.
On 9 September 1913, Princess Augusta Victoria of Hohenzollern married King Manuel II of Portugal (1889-1932) at Schloss Sigmaringen, the bride's childhood home. The couple were second cousins; both being descendants of Queen Maria II of Portugal. Augusta Victoria and Manuel had a happy marriage. However, the king and queen did not have children. Aged forty-two, King Manuel II of Portugal died on 2 July 1932 at Fulwell, Middlesex, England.
Queen Victoria Augusta of Portugal and her second husband Count Robert Douglas, 1939. Photo (c) AP / Shutterstock.
On 23 April 1939, Queen Dowager Augusta Victoria of Portugal married Count Robert Douglas (1880-1955), the son of Count Ludvig Douglas and Countess Anna Louise Ehrensvärd. Robert was married from 1906 until their 1938 divorce to Sophia de Fine Blaauw (1886-1971). The couple were third cousins twice removed; both being descendants of Grand Duke Karl Friedrich of Baden. Aged seventy-five, Count Robert Douglas died on 26 August 1955 at Langenstein. 

Friday, August 27, 2021

The Funeral of the "Red Princess": Princess Marie-Thérèse of Bourbon-Parma

The coffin of the princess inside Basilica di Santa Maria della Steccata.
On Friday, 27 August 2021, the funeral mass of Princess Marie-Thérèse (Maria Teresa) of Bourbon-Parma took place at 4:30pm in the Basilica di Santa Maria della Steccata in the city of Parma. Stemming from precautions around the novel coronavirus pandemic, the service was not publicly announced beforehand. The funeral card for the princess contained the Poem of St. Teresa of Avila, provided below in its English translation: 

Let nothing frighten you, all things pass away.  
God never changes, patience obtains all things. 
He who has God finds he lacks nothing; God alone suffices. 
The Duke and Duchess of Parma and other members of the Ducal Family. Photo (c) RoyalBlog NL / Hans Jacobs.
The funeral mass of Princess Marie-Thérèse was attended by four of her nieces and nephews (some of whom were accompanied by their spouses and children): Prince Carlos Javier and Princess Annemarie, Duke and Duchess of Parma and Piacenza; Prince Jaime, Count of Bardi; Princess Margarita, Countess of Colorno; and Princess Maria Carolina, Marchioness of Sala. After the mass, the princess was interred in the crypt under the basilica next to her beloved brother, the late Prince Carlos Hugo, Duke of Parma (1930-2010), former husband of Princess Irene of the Netherlands. 
A view of the funeral mass. Photo (c) RoyalBlog NL / Hans Jacobs.

Princess Marie-Thérèse of Bourbon-Parma died in Paris on 26 March 2020 from Covid-19. 

You can read Eurohistory's obituary of the princess here: In Memory of a Red Princess: The Passing of Marie-Thérèse of Bourbon-Parma (1933-2020)

For more information about the funeral of the princess, you can read RoyalBlog NL's article here: 
Uitvaart prinses Maria Teresa in Parma
Note: My utmost thanks to Hans Jacobs of RoyalBlog NL for allowing the use of his photographs from yesterday's ceremony. 

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