May 23: Daily Featured Royal Date

Palden Thondup Namgyal, 12th Chogyal of Sikkim. Photo credit: radicalroyalist.blogspot.com

May 23, 1923 – Birth of Palden Thondup Namgyal, 12th Chogyal of Sikkim

Palden’s Wikipedia page

Born in Gangtok in the Himalayan country of Sikkim, Palden Thondup Namgyal was the second son of Tashi Namgyal, 11th Chogyal (King) of Sikkim and Maharani Kunzang Dechhen. Palden was educated in India and Nepal, and was recognized as a religious leader of two Buddhist monasteries.

After his older brother Paljor died in a plane crash, Palden became heir to the throne of Sikkim. Palden married a Tibetan woman, Sangey Deki, in 1950 while serving as an advisor to his father. The couple had three children before her death in 1957.

During a visit to India in 1959, Palden met American student Hope Cooke. The two became engaged two years later, marrying in 1963 on the advice of astrologers. He and Hope had a son and a daughter together.

Palden’s father died in late 1963. Palden was crowned in an opulent ceremony two years later on a date selected by court astrologers. Great improvements in education, transportation, and standard of living for Sikkim’s residents were made during his reign. However, a disastrous monsoon season and risings tensions with India (to whom Sikkim was partially dependent). Palden’s reign ended in 1975 when India officially occupied and then annexed Sikkim. He and Hope separated shortly after Palden was placed under house arrest.

Palden was exiled from Sikkim, but never renounced his claim to the throne. His eldest son Tenzin died in a 1978 car accident, which left Palden severely depressed. He followed Hope and their children to the United States. The couple divorced in 1980 after a long separation, shortly before he was diagnosed with cancer.

Palden died in New York in January 1982. His second son Wangchuk became titular Chogyal of Sikkim, but does not hold any official power.

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Royal News: Thursday 23 May 2013

Belgium
Getty Images: Prize Giving Of The King Baudouin International Reward For Development

Denmark
Danish Monarchy: HRH The Crown Princess and HRH Princess Benedikte visit Aachen
Danish Monarchy: HE Count Christian of Rosenborg passed away
Norway Today: Queen Margrethe’s cousin is dead

Japan
Japan Times: Imperial Couple to hand over some public duties to younger generation
RIT Times: Japanese Emperor Plants Rice Seedlings

Monaco
Hello: Charlotte Casiraghi enjoys game of football in Monaco

Multiple Monarchies
Express: Is the Spanish princess taking grooming tips from The Duchess of Cambridge?
Wort: Luxembourg rolls out red carpet for Dutch Royal couple

Netherlands
Getty Images: Queen Maxima Attends 150th Anniversary Of Sophia Childrens Hospital

Spain
Getty Images: Princess Letizia and Prince Feliple Attend Audiences On Their 9th Wedding’s Anniversary
Getty Images: Queen Sofia Attends UNICEF Spain 2013 Awards
Getty Images: Princess Elena Attends San Isidro Bullfight 2013
Getty Images: Spanish Royals Attend Audiences at Zarzuela Palace

Sweden
Swedish Royal Court: Prince Daniel attends the opening of the Tennis Park at the Royal Lawn Tennis Club
Swedish Royal Court: The 2013 Royal Colloquium begins
Swedish Royal Court: The Royal Family congratulate the Swedish winners of the World Ice Hockey Championships

United Kingdom
BBC: Prince Andrew opens Harrogate police treatment centre
BBC: Duke joins veterans for Kohima memorial in York
Cambridge News: Olympians enjoy royal garden party
Country Life: The Queen’s Coronation: The Crowning Day by Ivor Brown
Daily Mail: Blossoming Duchess of Cambridge brightens up Buckingham Palace garden party in canary yellow coat
Daily Mail: Princess Eugenie’s man is the image of father Prince Andrew as the couple join Pippa for a night on the tiles
Daily Mail: Queen’s coronation outfit, jewels and robes reunited for first time in 60 years as they go on show at Buckingham Palace
Daily Mail: MI5 bugged Edward VIII’s calls to Wallis in days before his abdication as Government paranoia grew over the crisis
Daily Mail: ‘Kate is just a bland Queen of WAGs’: Feminist author claims the Duchess is ‘no better than Cheryl Cole’
Evening Standard: Duchess of Cambridge brings a ray of sunshine to a cold, grey afternoon at the Palace
Evening Standard: A night on the town with the Middletons
Express: Defiant Queen vows to still visit Woolwich
Express: Camilla celebrates 75 years of volunteering
Express: The Duchess of Cornwall proves she’s as stylish as ever in matching monochrome
Getty Images: Queen Elizabeth II Hosts A Garden Party At Buckingham Palace
Getty Images: Queen Elizabeth II Receives Croatian President Ivo Josipovic
Guardian: Ministers ordered bugging of King Edward VIII’s phones, records reveal
Hello: The Queen leads tributes to the Oklahoma tornado victims
Hello: Pregnant Kate Middleton attends the Queen’s summer garden party
Hello: Mike Tindall praises Prince William and Kate Middleton
Independent: What a kiss can tell us about the Royal Family – and our own stiff upper-lip
Mirror: Kate Middleton’s yellow garden party dress coat by Emilia Wickstead is blooming lovely
Mirror: The King and Spy: Edward VIII’s phone calls were bugged in abdication crisis, top secret documents reveal
News.com.au: States in scramble to attract Prince Harry when he visits Australia for Navy Fleet Review
Telegraph: Ben Fogle’s country travels: the Prince Harry effect

Royal News: Wednesday 22 May 2013

Monaco
Wort.lu: Monaco Princess not expected at Luxembourg Games

Multiple Monarchies
Norway Today: The Swedish royal couple in Norway visit in June

Norway
Norway Today: The Abel Prize awarded to Pierre Deligne
Norway Today: Palace Square poses in touch – in one year

Serbia
Royal Family of Serbia: State funeral of HM King Peter II, HM Queen Alexandra, HM Queen Maria and HRH Prince Andrej on Sunday, 26 May 2013

Spain
Getty Images: Princess Letizia of Spain Attend APROCOR Foundation Building Opening
Getty Images: Bill Clinton And Prince Felipe of Spain Attend ‘Laureate Summit On Youth And Jobs’
Getty Images: Princess Letizia of Spain Visits APROCOR Foundation

United Kingdom
BBC: Princes call for action to save wild animals
British Monarchy: The Queen’s message to President Obama
Daily Mail: Ultimate tribute to a selfless hero: Parents of British soldier killed while protecting his comrades in Afghanistan accept his posthumous Victoria Cross from the Queen
Daily Mail: 60 years of the Queen at Chelsea: As one of Her Majesty’s favourite events celebrates its 100th year, FEMAIL looks back at some of her happiest times at the world famous Flower Show
Daily Mail: Is this what the Royal baby will look like as a teenager? Genetic counsellor predicts facial characteristics of Wills and Kate’s future child
Daily Mail: Charles condemns buyers of trendy £4,000 shawl made from rare Tibetan antelope in speech attacking global trade in endangered species
Daily Mail: Prince Charles looks on in admiration as William speaks against illegal poaching
Evening Standard: Chelsea Flower Show: Harry welcomes Granny to his Sentebale garden
Examiner: Prince William and Prince Charles help endangered wildlife
Expatica: Princes William and Charles speak out against wildlife trade
Express: Queen reveals she is ‘deeply saddened’ by Oklahoma tornado horror
Express: Duchess of Cambridge is Britain’s ‘Queen Wag’ says Human Rights Activist Joan Smith
Express: The heir to the throne has learned what love means
Express: Now elephants face fate of the dodo, warns Prince William
Express: Prince Charles warns world’s greatest mammals could be extinct within a decade
Getty Images: Investitures at Buckingham Palace
Getty Images: Princes Charles and Prince William Host Conference On Illegal Wildlife At Clarence House
Guardian: Prince Charles calls for war on animal poachers
Hello: Kate Middleton taking cooking classes ahead of royal baby’s birth
Hello: Prince William can’t wait to be a dad – even with the ‘long sleepless nights’
Prince of Wales: End Wildlife Crime Conference
Prince of Wales: A speech by The Prince of Wales at the Illegal Wildlife Trade Conference
Prince of Wales: A speech by The Duke of Cambridge at the End Wildlife Crime Conference, St. James’s Palace
Prince of Wales: The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall visit Prince Harry’s Sentebale Garden
Telegraph: Rhino faces being my generation’s dodo, warns Duke of Cambridge
Telegraph: Prince issues rallying cry to end poaching
Telegraph: Duke: we must save tigers from extinction

May 22 – Daily Featured Royal Date

Oscar I of Sweden and Joséphine of Leuchtenberg, Photo Credit – Wikipedia

May 22, 1823 – Wedding of King Oscar I of Sweden and Joséphine of Leuchtenberg at Leuchtenberg Palace in Munich, Bavaria, Germany
King Oscar I of Sweden was the second monarch of the House of Bernadotte.  The House of Bernadotte has reigned in Sweden since 1818 when Jean Baptiste Jules Bernadotte, a Marshal of France, assumed the throne as King Carl XIV John (Karl XIV Johan). His predecessor, King Carl XIII, was childless and the House of Holstein-Gottorp was becoming extinct. On August 21, 1810, the Riksdag (Swedish Parliament) made the decision to appoint Bernadotte as heir to the throne. The first four Bernadotte kings were also Kings of Norway until 1905 when the union between Sweden and Norway was dissolved.

King Oscar I was born Joseph François Oscar Bernadotte on July 4, 1799 in Paris, France. Napoleon Bonaparte was his godfather. When he was 11, his father Jean Baptiste Bernadotte was elected Crown Prince of Sweden and he moved to Stockholm with his mother Désirée Clary.  Oscar was given the title Duke of Södermanland, and, unlike his mother, quickly learned Swedish and adapted to life in Sweden.  He succeeded his father in 1844.   King Oscar I died on July 8, 1859 at age 60 in Stockholm, Sweden and is buried at Riddarholmen Church.

Princess Joséphine of Leuchtenberg was born on March 14, 1807 in Milan, Italy. Her father was Eugène de Beauharnais, the son of Empress Joséphine (Napoleon Bonaparte’s first wife) from her first marriage to Alexandre, Vicomte de Beauharnais, who had been guillotined during the French Revolution. Her mother was Princess Augusta of Bavaria, a descendant of King Gustav I of Sweden and King Charles IX of Sweden, thereby insuring that future members of the House of Bernadotte were descendants of the House of Vasa which ruled Sweden from 1523-1654. Joséphine of Leuchtenberg brought to Sweden jewelry that had belonged to her grandmother Empress Josephine which is still worn by members of the Swedish and Norwegian royal families.  She is known by the Swedish form of her name, Josefina.  Queen Josefina died in Stockholm on June 7, 1876 at age 69. She remained Roman Catholic, was given a Catholic funeral, and buried at Riddarholmen Church.

Photo Credit: marilynsroyalblog.blogspot.com

Above picture shows Queen Josefina wearing the Cameo Tiara which was originally made for her grandmother Joséphine, Empress of the French, and was worn by her descendant Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden at her wedding in 2010.

Crown Princess Victoria wearing the Cameo Tiara at her wedding, Photo Credit: orderofsplendor.blogspot.com

In 1823, Oscar married Princess Joséphine of Leuchtenberg. They married first by proxy at the Leuchtenberg Palace in Munich, Bavaria, Germany on May 22, 1823 and in person at a wedding ceremony conducted in Stockholm on June 19, 1823   The couple had five children:

  • King Charles XV of Sweden (Charles IV in Norway) (1826–1872), married Princess Louise of the Netherlands, had issue
  • Prince Gustaf, Duke of Uppland (1827–1852), died at age 25 from typhoid fever
  • King Oscar II of Sweden (1829–1907), married Princess Sophia of Nassau, had issue
  • Princess Eugenie (1830–1889), unmarried
  • Prince August, Duke of Dalarna (1831–1873), married Princess Therese Amalie of Saxe-Altenburg, no issue

Wikipedia: Oscar I of Sweden
Wikipedia: Joséphine of Leuchtenberg

Check out other royal dates posted daily on our forum.

Royal News: Tuesday 21 May 2013

Belgium
Getty Images: Prince Philippe And Princess Elisabeth Of Belgium Visit South Pole Station Exhibition At Tour & Taxis

Luxembourg
Wort.lu: Young royals to continue tour of cultural centres

Monaco
Getty Images: Prince Albert II Of Monaco And Princess Charlene of Monaco On Official Visit In Corsica
Getty Images: Prince Albert II Of Monaco And Princess Charlene of Monaco On Official Visit In Corsica(2)
Huffington Post: Prince Albert II Does Dior Show With Princess Charlene (PHOTOS)
New York Magazine: See Dior’s Resort Show, Starring Princess Charlene of Monaco

Saudi Arabia
Al-Arabiya: Syria top priority as Saudi crown prince visits Turkey
Daily Mail: The world’s most luxurious rail station… that the King of Saudi Arabia has ordered to be built in just four years

Serbia
Royal Family of Serbia: Book presentation “Return of King Peter II Karadjordjevic” at the Royal Palace
Royal Family of Serbia: Politika Newspapers: Prince Andrej’s children are learning Serbian

Sweden
Daily Mail: The Princess and her Mr Normal: Madeleine of Sweden’s fiancé declines royal title as couple prepare to marry next month
Royal Court: Wedding website launched ahead of the wedding on 8 June
Royal Court: The Crown Princess opens the exhibition “Princess Estelle — Birth and Christening”

Thailand
Bangkok Post: Concert in memory of late princess
Pattaya Mail: HRH Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn in Sukhothai

United Kingdom
BBC: Chelsea Flower Show visited by the Queen
BBC: Prince Harry shows Queen charity garden at Chelsea
BBC: Princes William and Harry open Help for Heroes centre
BBC: Prince William calls for continued support of injured personnel
Daily Mail: RICHARD KAY: New attack on ‘Queen Wag’ Kate
Daily Mail: Welcome to my garden: Lovable Harry greets Prince Philip, Prince Charles and cousin Beatrice with kisses at Chelsea
Daily Mail: Britain bursts into bloom as Zara Phillips joins Joanna Lumley and Jamie Oliver at Chelsea Flower Show
Daily Mail: ‘I can’t wait to be a dad – even with the long, sleepless nights!’ Prince William says he’s looking forward to fatherhood as he opens Help For Heroes centre with Harry today
Daily Mail: Father-to-be William getting some practise in at Help for Heroes Recovery Centre opening
Daily Mail: Web exclusive: The moment Kate did a Marilyn: Gust of wind that lifted the Duchess’s dress and made her dotty
Evening Standard: Prince William and Prince Harry tour Help for Heroes recovery centre for wounded soldiers
Express: Prince Harry exhibits garden for first time at Chelsea Flower Show
Express: Prince Harry leads a Royal day at Chelsea Flower Show
Express: Father-to-be Prince William is the thinning heir
Express: Prince William says he’s looking forward to fatherhood despite the sleepless nights
Getty Images: The Duke Of Cambridge And Prince Harry Visit Tedworth House
Hello: The Queen leads the Windsors’ colourful history at the Chelsea Flower Show
Hello: Princes William and Harry join forces to open Help for Heroes centre
M&C: Princes William and Harry open Help For Heroes centre
M&C: Prince Charles protester fined
M&C: Princes Charles and William to call for poaching action
M&C: Duchess Catherine’s etiquette knowledge
M&C: Prince Harry to throw party for US swimmer
Manchester Evening News: Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry open Help For Heroes centres
Prince of Wales: A speech by The Duke of Cambridge at Tedworth House
Telegraph: Prince Harry welcomes ‘granny, pa and grandpa’ to his Sentebale garden
Telegraph: Chelsea Flower Show 2013: Queen and Royal family visit
Telegraph: Prince William and Prince Harry opening Help for Heroes centre
Telegraph: Princes open Help for Heroes Recovery Centre
Telegraph: Queen’s protection reviewed after police worker sold information to newspapers
Telegraph: Prince excited about being a father but worried about the sleepless nights

May 21: Daily Featured Royal Date

Sophie of Sweden, Grand Duchess of Baden. Photo credit: Wikipedia

May 21, 1801 – Birth of Sophie of Sweden, Grand Duchess of Baden

Sophie’s Wikipedia page

Sophie was the daughter of Gustav IV Adolf, King of Sweden and Frederica of Baden. Sophie was well-educated and had a wide variety of interests throughout her life. Sophie left Sweden with her family in 1809 following her father’s overthrow as king. She was described as stubborn and self-important as a child and maintained negative feelings about her father’s deposition for the rest of her life.

At the age of fourteen, Sophie was engaged to her half grand uncle, the future Leopold, Grand Duke of Baden. By this time, there were only two heirs left in the direct male line in Baden, both of whom were childless. One of these men, Sophie’s uncle Karl I, arranged a marriage between Sophie and Leopold, the result of a morganatic marriage between Grand Duke Charles Frederick and Louise Caroline of Hochberg. Sophie’s Baden lineage would shore up Leopold’s more tenuous claim to the grand ducal throne.

Sophie married Leopold, only eleven years her senior, in 1819. The couple had seven surviving children, including two future Grand Dukes of Baden. Sophie and Leopold raised their children away from court per request by Sophie’s uncle Louis I. Leopold inherited the grand ducal throne in 1830.

In 1828, so-called “wild child” Kaspar Hauser appeared in Nuremburg. He was believed by some to have ties to the Baden grand ducal family, rumors that were probably manufactured by Leopold’s detractors. When Hauser was stabbed in 1833, Sophie was accused of ordering his murder leading to a rift between her and her husband. The family fled Baden during the 1848 revolutions, returning the following year.

Sophie died in 1865. In 1881, her granddaughter Victoria of Baden married the future Gustaf V of Sweden for much the same reason as Sophie had married Leopold: Victoria was a princess with old Swedish lineage which was meant to strengthen the claim to the throne held by the new Bernadotte dynasty.

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Guts and Glory: Edward VII’s Appendix and the Coronation that Never Was

I have recently found myself with a bit more free time on my hands due to an attack of acute appendicitis and a consequent appendectomy. In these days appendectomies are typically quick, routine surgeries that involve fairly easy recoveries for most patients (as mine has been). However, surgery to relieve appendicitis is a relatively new treatment that has been practiced regularly for only about the past 100 years – previous sufferers of appendicitis typically died of sepsis.

One of the most famous (and at the time controversial) surgeries for appendicitis occurred in the United Kingdom in 1902. After spending more than 59 years as the Prince of Wales, Albert Edward, the eldest son of Queen Victoria, would be beginning his own rule as Edward VII. What occurred a few months into Edward’s reign changed the course of medical and legal history in surprising ways.

Edward had been king for a few months when a brilliant coronation ceremony was meticulously planned for June 26, 1902, at Westminster Abbey. Having spent nearly sixty years in pursuit of the finer things in life, Edward had had plenty of time to consider exactly how large of a celebration his coronation would entail. Several thousand pounds of fowl were ordered for the banquet, viewing stands were constructed along the parade route, and numerous hotels were built to accommodate the influx of expected guests to London.

While Edward was focused on the details of his coronation, his body had other plans. In the two weeks preceding the coronation, Edward had recurrent abdominal pain accompanied by a fever. After being examined by several members of his medical staff, Frederick Treves (once a physician for Joseph Merrick, otherwise known as the Elephant Man), Edward’s accomplished and newly-appointed Sergeant-Surgeon was summoned for his opinion.

Photo credit: Wikipedia

Dr. Frederick Treves. Photo credit: Wikipedia

By the time Treves first examined Edward on June 18, Edward was running a constant fever and had developed a mass in the lower right quadrant of his abdomen. For his part, Edward was eager to resume his activities and was annoyed at the thought of rumors of his illness circulating. Edward’s private secretary, Sir Francis Knollys, quickly issued a report denying any problems with Edward’s health.

Although Edward was feeling well enough to attend a lavish banquet on June 23, he was confined to bed the following day with a high fever and intense pain. After another examination of the King, the medical team concluded that Edward was suffering from appendicitis and required immediate surgery.

The regrettable timing aside, Edward was incredibly fortunate to have appendicitis while in the care of Dr. Treves. Although not the first to perform an appendectomy, Treves first did surgery on a patient with recurrent appendicitis in 1888. After the successful surgery, Treves authored a paper presented to the Royal Medical and Surgical Society a few months later recommending the removal of appendices in similar cases. Although his recommendation was not well-received by the medical community, by the turn of the 20th century he had removed more than one thousand appendices.

Insisting on fulfilling his duty, Edward rejected his doctors’ planned course of action. He continued to refuse surgery until Treves bluntly pointed out that Edward would be dead before the coronation took place. This approach seemed to work on Edward as he finally agreed to the surgery – and the coronation was officially postponed until further notice.

Shortly after noon on June 24, the abscess in Edward’s abdomen was drained, irrigated, packed with gauze, and fitted with rubber tubing to allow additional pus to escape. The operation took about an hour and a half. Edward started to choke during the operation, but the team managed to get the King to breathe again by pulling on his beard, thus opening his mouth.

Edward’s appendix was actually not removed, but the draining and cleaning of the abscess prevented further illness. On the following day, Edward was able to sit up in bed and smoke a cigar and within two weeks, it was clear that the King would make a full recovery. The medical team (including Treves) was awarded knighthoods for their actions and authored numerous articles that described the King’s illness and treatment.

Most rejoiced at the King’s miraculous recovery, particularly those in the East End poorhouses who received the thousands of chickens, quails, and game hens intended for the coronation banquet. However, the cancelled coronation took its toll on those contracted to provide supplies, services, and payment for venues booked. A number of so-called “coronation cases” were decided in the British courts surrounding the contracts broken due to the cancellation.

Most of these contracts were voided as the arrangements were typically made with the sole purpose of celebrating the coronation. However, in the case of Herne Bay Steamboat Company vs. Hutton, it was ruled that a river cruise could be booked and enjoyed regardless of whether the coronation was held. Mr. Hutton was one of the few coronation case plaintiffs who were ordered to provide full payment as agreed by contract.

A more scaled-down coronation for Edward was held on August 9. While the practice of surgical intervention for appendicitis gained acceptance from one of its most famous patients, its adoption was not universal nor were the symptoms of appendicitis yet fully recognized. Shortly before Edward’s operation, Treves’ own daughter Hattie died of a ruptured appendix. Edward’s nephew Christian of Hanover had died from appendicitis that was incorrectly diagnosed a few months before. And in a final twist of irony, Frederick Treves himself died of peritonitis in Switzerland in 1923. An autopsy was not performed, but the culprit was assumed to be a ruptured appendix.

There is no word yet on the new date for my coronation.

Royal News: Monday 20 May 2013

Spain
Guardian: King Juan Carlos of Spain: a man of sacrifice

Sweden
Getty Images: Wedding Preparations For H.K.H. Princess Madeleine and Mr. Christopher O’Neill
UPI: Swedish Princess Madeleine, American fiance attend pre-nuptial service
The Local: Royal Wedding fever hits Sweden

UK
Belfast Telegraph: Queen given sneak Chelsea preview
Telegraph: A coronation for our times
Telegraph: Prince Charles puts heat on ministers over climate change
Telegraph: The Queen to make first foreign visit for two years
Daily Mail: Cross-dressing, shoes galore and an underwear clearout every three months – a dazzling new exhibition reveals what trendsetters the Tudor and Stuart monarchs were
ITV: Prince Harry & Prince William to visit Help for Heroes
Entertainment Wise: Kate Middleton, Duchess Of Cambridge ‘To Take Doctors’ Advice About Caesarean Royal Baby Birth’
Dunmow Broadcast 24: HM The Queen’s horse makes it through to Horse of the Year
Melton Times: The King who gave up his throne recalled
Mirror: Kate Middleton’s royal shop goes head-to-head with the Queen’s over royal babywear
CBC News: Prince Andrew in Victoria for Highland Games

May 20 – Daily Featured Royal Date

Amalia of Oldenburg, Queen of Greece, Photo Credit – Wikipedia

May 20, 1875 – Death of Amalia of Oldenburg, wife of King Otto of Greece, in the Neue Residenz in Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany; buried at the Theatine Church in Munich, Bavaria, Germany
Amalia Maria Frederica was born a Duchess of Oldenburg on December 21, 1818.  Her parents were Duke Augustus of Oldenburg (later Grand Duke of Oldenburg) and his first wife, Princess Adelheid of Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym. Amalia’s mother died two years after her birth at the age of 20.  Five years after his first wife’s death, Amalia’s father married Princess Ida of Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym, a younger sister of his first wife.  Princess Ida died three years after her marriage and three years late Amalia’s father married Princess Cecilia of Sweden, daughter of the deposed King Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden.

On December 22, 1836, Amalia married King Otto I of Greece in Oldenburg.  King Otto had been born Prince Otto Friedrich Ludwig of Bavaria of the Wittelsbach dynasty at Schloss Mirabell in Salzburg, Austria, the second son of King Ludwig I of Bavaria and Therese of Saxe-Hildburghausen.  In 1833, Otto had been appointed king of the newly created Kingdom of Greece.

Upon her arrival in Greece, the 17 year old beautiful Queen Amalia was heartily welcomed.  She worked on social issues and was involved in the creation of gardens in the capital city of Athens.  Amalia wisely realized that her style of dress should emulate the style of the Greek people.  She created a “romantic folksy court dress” which became the Greek national costume.

Queen Amalia in the Greek national costume, Photo Credit – Wikipedia

Because her marriage did not produce an heir and because she interfered with the government, Queen Amalia became unpopular. King Otto was unfaithful to his wife, and had an affair with the scandalous Jane Digby, who previously had an affair with Otto’s father.  In 1861, there was an assassination attempt made on Queen Amalia.  The assassin had been sentenced to death, but Queen Amalia intervened and he was sentenced instead to life imprisonment.

In 1862, a coup took place in Athens while the king and queen were visiting the Peloponnese. Otto and Amalia left Greece for Bavaria aboard a British warship, with the Greek royal regalia, formerly crown jewels of the Wittelsbach dynasty that ruled in Bavaria, that Otto had brought with him to Greece.  In 1959, Albrecht, Duke of Bavaria presented the Greek royal regalia to King Paul of Greece.  Although the Greek monarchy has since been deposed, the jewels have remained in Greece.

The expulsion of King Otto in 1862, Photo Credit – Wikipedia

Otto died in 1867 at the age of 52 in the Neue Residenz in Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany and was buried at the Theatine Church in Munich, Bavaria, Germany.  Amalia survived him by eight years, dying on May 20, 1875 at the age of 56 also at the Neue Residenz in Bamberg, Bavaria, Germany.  Her tomb is next to her husband’s at the Theatine Church in Munich, Bavaria, Germany.

Tomb of Amalia of Oldenburg at the Theatine Church in Munich, Bavaria, Germany , Photo Credit – Susan Flantzer, August of 2012

Wikipedia: Amalia of Oldenburg

Check out other royal dates posted daily on our forum.

Royal Birthdays & Anniversaries: May 19 – May 25

Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands and Laurentien Brinkhorst, Photo Credit – orderofsplendor.blogspot.com

12th wedding anniversary of Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands and Laurentien Brinkhorst; married at Grote of St Jacobskerk in The Hague, The Netherlands on May 19, 2001
Wikipedia: Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands
Wikipedia: Princess Laurentien of the Netherlands

Crown Prince Pavlos of Greece, Photo Credit – www.zimbio.com

46th birthday of Crown Prince Pavlos of Greece, son of former King Constantine II of Greece; born at Tatoi Palace outside of Athens, Greece on May 20, 1967
Wikipedia: Pavlos, Crown Prince of Greece

Felipe, Prince of Asturias and Letizia Ortiz Rocasolano with King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia of Spain, Photo Credit – www.hellomagazine.com

9th wedding anniversary of Felipe, Prince of Asturias and Letizia Ortiz Rocasolano; married at the Cathedral Santa María la Real de la Almudena in Madrid, Spain on May 22, 2004
BBC: Wedding bells for Spain’s royals
Wikipedia: Felipe, Prince of Asturias
Wikipedia: Letizia, Princess of Asturias

Prince Joseph Wenzel of Liechtenstein on the left with his family, Photo Credit – www.jacobite.ca

18th birthday of Prince Joseph Wenzel of Liechtenstein, eldest son Prince Alois of Liechtenstein,  Hereditary Prince of Liechtenstein; born in Portland Hospital in London, England on May 24, 1995
Full name: Joseph Wenzel Maximilian Maria
Joseph Wenzel is third in line as Jacobite pretender to the British crown after his grandfather and mother.
Wikipedia: Prince Joseph Wenzel of Liechtenstein

Princess Märtha Louise of Norway and Ari Behn, Photo Credit – www.kongehuset.no

12th wedding anniversary of Princess Märtha Louise of Norway and Ari Behn; married at Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim, Norway on May 24, 2002
Royal House of Norway: The wedding of Princess Märtha Louise
Wikipedia: Princess Märtha Louise of Norway
Wikipedia: Ari Mikael Behn

Prince Joachim of Denmark and Marie Cavallier, Photo Credit: www.zimbio.com

5th wedding anniversary of Prince Joachim of Denmark and Marie Cavallier; married at Møgeltønder Church near Schackenborg Manor in Denmark on May 24, 2008
Wikipedia: Prince Joachim of Denmark
Wikipedia: Princess Marie of Denmark

Princess Laurentien of the Netherlands, Photo Credit – www.zimbio.com

47th birthday of Laurentien Brinkhorst, wife of Prince Constantijn of the Netherlands; born in Leiden, The Netherlands on May 25, 1966
Full name: Petra Laurentien
Wikipedia: Princess Laurentien of the Netherlands