Princess Ragnhild, Mrs. Lorentzen

by Emily McMahon and Susan Flantzer  © Unofficial Royalty 2013

 

Princess Ragnhild Alexandra of Norway was the eldest child of the future King Olav V of Norway and his wife Princess Märtha of Sweden. She was named for another Ragnhild, the wife of Harald Fairhair, the first king of a united Norway. Born at the Royal Palace in Oslo, Norway on June 9, 1930, Ragnhild was also the first native Norwegian princess born in the country in over 600 years.

Ragnhild was christened on June 27, 1930, at the Royal Chapel of the Royal Palace in Oslo, Norway. Her godparents were:

Princess Ragnhild had two younger siblings:

Ragnhild (on the right) with her parents and siblings; Photo Credit – Wikipedia

Ragnhild was also closely related to the Belgian royal and Luxembourg grand ducal families through her mother; she was the first cousin of Kings Baudouin and Albert II of Belgium and Grand Duchess Josephine-Charlotte of Luxembourg. As a toddler, a section of the Antarctic coastline was named in her honor. Princess Ragnhild Coast makes up a portion of the larger Queen Maud Land, named for Ragnhild’s paternal grandmother. Along with her sister Astrid, Ragnhild served as a flower girl at the wedding of her cousin Ingrid of Sweden to the future Frederik IX of Denmark.

Ragnhild spent most of her childhood at the Skaugum Estate, the family home (rebuilt after a fire shortly before Ragnhild’s birth) located just outside of Oslo. She accompanied her mother and siblings to the United States in 1940 following the German invasion and occupation of Norway while her father and grandfather were based in Britain. The family was reunited and returned to Norway in 1945.

 

On May 15, 1953, Ragnhild married Erling Lorentzen, a commoner and her former bodyguard. Reportedly, Ragnhild’s grandfather King Haakon VII consented to the marriage only after Crown Princess Märtha’s intervention as Ragnhild was the first Norwegian royal to marry a commoner. Ragnhild lost her style of Royal Highness with the marriage, becoming known instead as Her Highness Princess Ragnhild, Mrs. Lorentzen. The couple settled in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and had three children. Märtha was already ill at the time of the marriage and passed away shortly before the birth of Ragnhild’s first child.

Ragnhild and Erling had three children:

  • Haakon Lorentzen (born 1954), married Martha Carvalho de Freitas, had three children
  • Ingeborg Lorentzen (born 1957), married Paulo César Ribeiro Filho, had one daughter
  • Ragnhild Alexandra Lorentzen (born 1968), married Aaron Matthew Long, had two daughters

Ragnhild kept an apartment in Oslo and visited Norway often (despite a lifelong fear of flying), but did not undertake official duties. Often photographed wearing a rather sour expression, Ragnhild gained attention during a 2004 television interview in which she expressed her intense displeasure with Crown Prince Haakon’s and Princess Märtha Louise’s respective spouses. Reportedly the remarks were made after King Harald and Queen Sonia abruptly canceled a visit to Brazil, hurting Ragnhild’s feelings. It is said that Ragnhild privately apologized to her brother’s family afterward, greatly regretting her unkind words. Conversely, Ragnhild was seen in her adopted country as very friendly and warm-hearted due to her charity work. She was known among her friends and family to have a very sharp wit and a dry sense of humor.

 

Ragnhild died in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil on September 16, 2012, following a bout with cancer. Her remains were transferred to Norway where her funeral was held on September 28, 2012. At her request, Ragnhild was buried at Asker Church in Asker, Norway. She was survived by her husband, three children, six grandchildren, and her siblings.

Princess Ragnhild’s widower Erling Lorentzen died after a short illness on March 9, 2021, aged 98, in Oslo, Norway.

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