On 23 December 1953, history was made when Queen Elizabeth II arrived in Auckland aboard the liner S.S. Gothic to undertake a royal progress through her Kingdom of New Zealand. She was the first reigning sovereign to visit to do so. Her first greeting from her people was a welcoming escort of several hundred yachts and a 21-gun salute from the North Head battery as the royal ship passed Bastion Point. Soon tugs guided the Gothic safely towards the Central Wharf, as crowds gathered to greet their Monarch.
Shortly thereafter, the Governor-General, Sir Willoughby Norrie and the Prime Minister, the Right Honourable Sidney Holland, went aboard with their respective wives to welcome the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh on behalf of the people of New Zealand. Once the official party had disembarked, a bystander spotted Her Majesty peeking out and a cry went up, the crowd responding by giving three cheers as the Queen made her way down the gangway in a fetching chartreuse silk dress, followed by the Duke of Edinburgh in a uniform of an Admiral of the Fleet. The royal couple then entered the waiting royal car and drove up the main thoroughfare, Queen Street, which was lined with flag-waving crowds to the Town Hall where Her Majesty was introduced to civic dignitaries and their wives. Thereafter, she met with war widows and 500 elderly people, the oldest of whom was 103.
The Queen attends a Garden Party 23 December 1953 Government House Auckland.
The Queen arrived at Government House, where she would stay over the Christmas period, in time for luncheon. But there was to be no chance of a rest as the royal couple had to attend a garden party for 2,000 guests in the grounds. Both the Queen and the Duke spent over an hour chatting to invitees en-route to a roped-off enclosure, where they took tea and received yet more invitees.
On Christmas Eve, the royal duo travelled in open-topped car to the Auckland Public Hospital to inspect the wards and meet staff and patients. Then it was off to the Domain to attend a youth rally of 16,000 schoolchildren (and an additional15,000 onlookers!) during which the Queen and the Duke drove down the lines of waiting children in a specially adapted Land Rover with a reviewing platform. The Queen subsequently told the waiting throng that ‘Your welcome today has warmed our hearts because it has reminded us that even after this long journey we are still at home.’
16,000 School Children gathered at the Auckland Domain to greet the Queen on Christmas Eve.
In the afternoon, the royal couple crossed over Waitemata Harbour in a commodore’s barge to Devonport to attend a Colour-presentation ceremony at the Naval Base. The Queen and the Duke were greeted by 1650 men of the Royal New Zealand Navy. Some 9,000 relatives, friends and dock workers also looked on as, following a brief drumhead service of dedication led by a naval chaplain, the new Colour was presented by the Queen to the leader of the new Colour party.
However, that evening, one of the saddest events in New Zealand history occurred when the Auckland-bound express train from Wellington plunged into the Whangaehu River at Tangiwai. The river had been in full spate and the force of torrents had weakened the concrete piles of the rail bridge. 151 passengers perished. A distressed Queen received regular updates on the situation at Government House.
On Christmas Day morning, after receiving Christmas gifts for their children, Charles and Anne, from 225 carol singing children (accompanied by Santa Claus) the royal couple attended Divine Service at St Mary’s Cathedral. Of course, this was the height of summer in New Zealand but, nonetheless, back at Government House the Queen and the Duke tucked into a traditional Christmas lunch of turkey and plum pudding.
The Queen makes her Christmas Day Broadcast at Government House Auckland
At 9p.m. that evening, the Queen made her Christmas broadcast to the British Commonwealth (as it was then still referred to), her first since being crowned Queen in June. This was the only occasion that the festive royal broadcast would be made outside of the United Kingdom. She praised the Commonwealth and ‘the achievement and opportunity… it presents’. Importantly, Her Majesty also emphasised that this new union of increasingly independent countries ‘bears no resemblance to the Empires of the past. It is an entirely new conception…of equal partnership.’ Furthermore, the Queen made sure to include a moving message of sympathy on behalf of herself, her husband and all the peoples’ of the Commonwealth, to the survivors and to the relatives and friends of victims of the recent railway disaster.
On Boxing Day, the royal visitors attended the Royal Auckland Cup race at Ellerslie Racecourse where they were joined by 43,000 racegoers and the generally curious! At times, the police had to hold back the crowds to allow the Queen and the Duke to pass through. Her Majesty (a keen horse owner and bloodstock expert) was delighted to be asked to present the Cup to the owner of the winner, Coaltown. The race-which was run over two miles with a prize pot of £12650 Sterling-had ended in an exciting photo finish! Later, the royal couple paid a private visit to the home of the Falloon family who had survived the train crash, before returning to Government House to dress for the world premiere, at the St. James Theatre, of the British film, The Million Pound Note.
The Queen enjoys a day out at Ellerslie Race Course 26 December 1953
On 28 December, the royal party departed ‘The Queen City’ to travel by air in a Dakota of 42 Squadron Royal New Zealand Air Force (RNZAF) to Waitangi, the historic site of the signing of the 1840 Treaty which ceded the sovereignty of New Zealand to the British Crown. She first presented her Colour to the RNZAF at Whenuapai Air Base and informed those gathered that ‘I have heard much of your valour in war and of your skill and expertise at all times.’ On arrival in Northland, the Queen and the Duke were greeted by 10,000 people at Kaikohe, some who had travelled as much as 100 miles.
At Waitangi, a crowd of 5,000 had gathered to watch as the Queen and the Duke were greeted by 200 Māori men and women on the lawn in front of the Treaty House and watched a display of the traditional powhiri, which is the formal welcome ceremony onto the Marae (or gathering place). This ritual included what the press described as ‘the age-old ceremonial challenge’. The royal duo were escorted by E.B. Corbett, the Minister for Maori Affairs. The Prime Minister and other dignitaries were also present. Many Māori felt they had a special relationship with the sovereign through the Treaty of Waitangi and had wanted to express their loyalty to the Crown. It was also subsequently arranged for the Queen and the Duke to stop briefly at Tūrangawaewae, the Marae of King Korokī in Ngāruawāhia on 30 December where they stayed longer than expected as the King’s guest and entered the Meeting House (Wharenui).
The Queen pays a visit to Waitangi on 28 December 1953.
Meanwhile, on the evening of 28 December, the royal visitors arrived at Whangarei where they attended a civic reception at Kensington Park and stayed overnight at the Grand Hotel. After dinner, the couple appeared on the balcony to greet crowds chanting “We Want the Queen.” This would become a regular feature throughout the tour. After this brief visit, on 29 December, the royal party motored southwards back to Auckland via the village of Warkworth, where a crowd of 8,000 had gathered (ten times the normal population of this settlement). The motorcade stopped 30 miles outside of Auckland for a picnic at a farm near scenic Puhoi. Thereafter, the royals were cheered most of the way to the city by bystanders who included holidaymakers enjoying the beaches nearby. The royal day ended with an investiture at the Auckland Town Hall.
The Royal Cavalcade arrives in Hamilton 30 December 1953
The Queen and the Duke now travelled down through the North Island en route to the capital Wellington. Given Her Majesty’s interest in all matters equine, it is unsurprising the first stop on the 30 December was to Alton Lodge stud farm at Te Kauwhata, before travelling on via Huntly to Hamilton, the most populous city of the Waikato region where crowds were estimated at 25,000 lined the route and city centre. That evening there was Civic Dinner before Her Majesty retired for the night at the Hamilton Hotel. On New Year’s Eve, the Queen watched a parade of champion cattle and an exhibition of sheep shearing at the Claudelands show grounds. Meanwhile, the Duke of Edinburgh had, at his own request, travelled by air to Wellington in the early hours, to attend the funeral of unidentified victims of the rail disaster at Karori Cemetery. He and the Queen were reunited that afternoon at the limestone caves of Aranui and Waitomo. At the latter, the royal party were able to a journey by boat through the grotto which was lit by a mass of glow worms massed on the rock formations. In the evening the royal party spent the night at the Waitomo Hotel where they brought in the New Year of 1954 with a rendering of Auld Lang Syne.
The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh visited the Waitomo and Aranui Caves on 31 December 1953.
As 1954 dawned, there was no day off for the royal tour as it passed through Te Awamutu and eastwards to Cambridge (where 15,000 had gathered) en route to Karapiro Hydro-electric Station. That evening, the couple spent the night at Moose Lodge overlooking Lake Rotoiti.
The Duke of Edinburgh receives some carvings at Awara Park during the royal visit to Rotorua on 2 January 1954
On 2 January the Queen travelled into Rotorua for a civic reception and official lunch. This was followed by what was described as ‘meeting the Maori people.’ A ceremonial site at Arawa Park had been converted for the occasion into a temporary Marae for this historic occasion which included the traditional powhiri welcome by 140 warriors. Her Majesty received speeches in which she was referred to variously as ‘O stranger from beyond the horizon’ and ‘O Royal daughter of an illustrious line’ for whom there was ‘unswerving devotion.’ After the giving of gifts, one of which was a flaxen Maori cloak, the symbol of a paramount chief (which the Bishop of Aotearoa fastened over the monarch’s shoulders) the Queen made a speech. She indicated she was greatly touched by the kind welcome she had received and expressed the hope that the Maori people would ‘hold fast to your own language and culture…’ She ended with the words ‘Kia ora koutou’ or ‘Good fortune to you all.’ This drew a deafening cheer from those assembled. Her Majesty’s speech was followed by a poi-dance by 300 women from the Arawa tribe, each of whom twirled poi balls of flax with graceful movements of the arms and wrists. Later those gathered joined in the traditional “Ka mate, Ka Mate” haka as the Queen made her departure with the Duke. The royals returned to Moose Lodge for a few days rest, the only engagements being attendance at a church service and a tour of a Maori village at Whakarewarewa.
On 6 January, the royal party travelled coastwards by air to Gisborne for a brief stopover which included a civic reception and a visit to Kaiti Hill to view the the beach below where Captain Cook landed in New Zealand in 1769. This was followed by a visit to the art deco town of Napier where 17,000 greeted the royal party at a welcome gathering in McLean Park. The royal duo spent the night at the Masonic Hotel, where the Queen appeared on the balcony to acknowledge the awaiting crowds.
The Queen is escorted by the Mayor on her visit to Gisborne on 6 January 1954
The following morning the royal visitors departed for Hastings and a visit to J. Wattie’s cannery. The royal couple then undertook their first railway journey in New Zealand to make a tour of the farming centres of Waipawa and Waipukurau in Hawke’s Bay; while at Dannevirke, 7,000 people-many of Scandinavian descent-had assembled for yet another a civic reception. After reaching Woodville, the train tour proceeded through the tortuous Manawatu Gorge, the Queen and the Duke taking to the observation platform to take in the view of craggy cliffs and swollen waters. Palmerston North was finally reached that evening. 60,000 watched the Queen as she disembarked the train. Far from putting their feet up, the Queen and the Duke had to attend an official dinner.
Palmerston North crowds greet the Royals
After an overnight stay, the royal train tour set off again at even more frenzied pace than the preceding day. After passing through the Manawatu Plains to Feilding and then into the fertile Rangitikea area, the party reached Marton (named after the birthplace of Captain Cook). At each place there were only the briefest of halts, but at least the people had the opportunity to actually see their Sovereign. At Wanganui, 40,000 people had converged on the town’s Cook’s Gardens for the official welcome. And then it was on to Patea (where local Maoris performed a haka) and Hawera, where a reception was held at the local racecourse. Later at Stratford, the Queen managed a brief walk along the Broadway. The 260 miles covered on this day alone ended at 6.15 p.m. in the town of New Plymouth where the royal party spent the night at the Criterion Hotel. The couple did not retire till gone 10 p.m. as they made several appearances on the hotel balcony due to public demand. Next morning, the Queen and Duke toured a the Bell Block Dairy and attended an official welcome gathering at Pukekura Park.
The Queen passes through New Plymouth on 9 January 1954
On the afternoon of Saturday, 9 January, the Queen flew down to the capital of New Zealand, Wellington. On the Sunday, she attended Divine Service at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul. The following day, 11 January, the Queen was schedule was particularly tight: in the morning, there was a Civic Welcome at the Town Hall, followed by a Wreath Laying Ceremony at the Citizen’s War Memorial, attended by a crowd of 5,000 locals. A State Luncheon followed in the Social Hall of Parliament House. The royal party then travelled through Petone to the Ford Motor Company’s factory at Lower Hutt. Thousands lined the route, it being a public holiday. In the evening, the Queen presided over a Diplomatic Reception at Government House.
The morning of 12 January saw the Queen and Duke up bright and early to travel to Athletic Park to attend a Children’s Gathering. 35,000 children and parents greeted the royal duo with boisterous cheering and the waving of Union Jack and New Zealand flags. The royal couple proceeded in an open Land Rover down through the lines of excited children. In the afternoon, Her Majesty presided over the “Royal Opening” of a special session of the New Zealand Parliament in the Legislative Chamber. For this historic occasion, she wore her dazzling Kokoshnik diamond tiara and Coronation dress. The Duke wore the uniform of an Admiral of the Fleet. Two new painted throne chairs, each covered in red brocade and featuring a fern motif, had been made in Christchurch by cabinet maker Charles McCracken out of Southland Beech especially for the ceremony. The Queen’s chair was emblazoned with her personal cipher of EIIR. Her Majesty acknowledged in her speech that the ‘bountiful lands’ of New Zealand had ‘grown to be a Sovereign and a mature state.’ That evening, Her Majesty held an investiture in Wellington Town Hall. 150 men and women received civil and military awards.
The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh enter Parliament for the “Royal Opening” on 12 January 1954
The new throne chairs specially commissioned for use at the State Opening.
On 13 January, the Queen travelled up to the suburb of Thorndon to lay the foundation stone of a new cathedral to replace the current wooden edifice nearby. The rest of the day was spent at Government House where the Queen joined 4,000 of her New Zealand subjects at a Garden Party. Her Majesty also presided over a meeting of the Privy Council and of the Executive Council, the latter of which advised the Governor-General (the Queen’s representative) on State and Constitutional matters.
The next day, the Queen and the Duke had a chance to relax when they attended the Wellington Racing Club’s meeting at Trentham. Her Majesty presented the Royal Wellington Cup to the owner of the winning horse, Golden Tan, Mr G. W. Hartstone. 30,000 people attended this equestrian event.
On 15 January, the royal couple travelled some 66 miles by train through the district of Wairarapa. At Masterton, the main township of the area, dignitaries and their wives queued to shake hands with the Queen and the Duke, who also later lunched there. At one stage of the journey, the royal train ascended the Rimutaka Range to a height of 1000 feet above sea level. At the summit, local railway workers and their families had a rare chance to greet their Sovereign. No less than two locomotives and three break-vans were then attached here to assist the train as it descended down the steep hillside to the plains below. The return journey to Wellington was by car through the townships of Carterton, Greytown, Featherston and Upper Hutt. And so ended the final day of the 24-day tour of the North Island, as the following morning (16 January) the Queen and the royal party would leave Wellington’s Paraparaumu Airport and fly down in a Dakota of 42 Squadron RNZAF to Woodbourne Aerodrome near Blenheim.
The RNZAF Dakota of 42 Squadron used to transport the Queen around New Zealand.
On 19 June 2026, Queen Silvia of Sweden became the longest-serving Queen Consort in the country’s history. We examine her interesting life.
Silvia Renate Sommerlath was born in Heidelberg, Germany, on 23 December 1943. Her father, Walther Sommerlath was a German-born company director; while her mother Alice Soares de Toledo hailed from Brazil. Alice’s father Artur Floriano de Toledo was a direct descendant of King Afonso III of Portugal, who lived and reigned in the 13th century. Walther first met his wife-to-be during a pre-war visit to Rio de Janeiro. Silvia had three brothers, Ralf, Walther and Jörg. The family lived in Heidelberg until 1947 when they relocated to São Paulo, Brazil, where Walther had been appointed Managing Director of the Brazilian offshoot of the Swedish company, Uddeholm AB. They were to remain there for a decade, meaning that in addition to German, Silvia was equally fluent in speaking Portuguese. She attended Visconde de Porto Seguro School and spent holidays at her maternal uncle’s farm in the country along with members of her extended family. There were many cousins as Alice Soares de Toledo came from a large family. She had eight siblings-all brothers.
Silvia, her parents and brothers taken in Brazil
In 1957, the Sommerlath’s returned to live in Germany in the city of Düsseldorf. The reason for this relocation was that Silvia’s father had been asked to take charge of Uddeholm’s German operations. Silvia subsequently attended the Luisenschule there before enrolling, in 1965, at the Sprachen-und-Dolmetscher-Institut in Munich, to train as an interpreter, specialising in Spanish. On graduating, she was employed at the Argentine Consulate in Munich.
However, she was soon destined for higher responsibilities and oversaw the training of Official Hostesses for the Olympic Games which took place in Munich in 1972 from August until September. During the event itself she acted as Chief Hostess and interacted with many of the VIP’s who attended. It was during these games that she met Crown Prince Carl Gustaf of Sweden in the VIP room. It was, she recalled, a ‘particularly amusing’ encounter as Carl Gustaf was observing her through binoculars, even though she was standing only one metre away from him! Something must have clicked for the Crown Prince invited her to attend a private family dinner attended by himself, his uncle Prince Bertil, the latter’s future wife Lilian Craig, the Crown Prince’s older sister Princess Birgitta and her husband Prince Johann Georg of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen. The dinner seemed to go without a hitch and soon Carl Gustaf and Silvia were dancing the night away at a local night club, Kinki. The couple were to keep in touch by phone, just as Carl Gustav was about to face many major changes in his life.
Silvia during the Olympic Games in Munich in the summer of 1972.
In November of that year, the Crown Prince lost his beloved mother, Sibylla, to cancer, only weeks after she had attended the 90th birthday celebrations of her father-in-law, King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden. Born a Princess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Sibylla had been ‘first lady’ of Sweden since the death of the King’s second wife, Queen Louise in 1965. Sweden was now without a matriarchal royal figure. Then, in September 1973, King Gustaf VI Adolf died and his grandson now succeeded him as King of Sweden, taking the title of Carl XVI Gustaf. The royal title had skipped a generation as the new king’s father, Hereditary Prince Gustaf Adolf had been killed in an air accident in 1947 at Copenhagen’s Kastrup Airport en route home from a hunting expedition.
By this stage, Carl Gustaf and Silvia had been meeting up in Sweden (where she was photographed with Carl Gustaf as he drove his Porsche sports car through the countryside on the island of Öland) and also in Germany. Sometimes, Silvia resorted to wearing a wig as a disguise but very few were fooled as to her identity, as she would later admit. In due course, the couple went skiing in the Alps or sailing with friends in Sardinia. Meanwhile, Silvia had been appointed deputy chief of protocol on the organising committee of the 1976 Winter Olympics which took place in Innsbruck in February of that year. It was a frenetic period with great responsibilities. Ironically, the skills she learned both now and earlier in Munich would stand her in good stead in the future. It helped that she spoke German, Portuguese, Spanish, English and French.
Within weeks of completing her duties in Innsbruck, Silvia travelled to Sweden where the couple announced their engagement on March 12, 1976, in the sitting room of what had been the late Princess Sibylla’s apartments in the Royal Palace. The news was widely covered on the world stage and suddenly everyone was interested in the young Swedish king and his beautiful bride-to-be, who had already learned to speak some Swedish. The Swedes seemed keen to embrace their future queen and cheered the pair as they left the Royal Palace, following the press conference, to lunch with Princess Christina and her husband at their Villa Beylon home in the romantic parklands surrounding Ulriksdal Palace.
Silvia and Carl Gustaf at the time of their engagement in March 1976
The King married Silvia in Stockholm’s Storkyrkan before 1200 guests on 19 June 1976. Crowds, estimated at around 200,000 lined the streets of the capital city. Silvia’s wedding dress was beautifully designed by Marc Bohan of the Paris fashion house Dior using white silk with a train of just over 3.5 metres. As if it to emphasise her new role as Queen of Sweden, Silvia wore the historical Kamédiadem, a diadem formed of cameos, gold, pearls and brilliants which was originally a gift from Emperor Napoleon I of France to his wife Joséphine de Beauharnais. The diadem, along with the matching parure of necklace, earrings and bracelets, was subsequently inherited by Empress Joséphine’s granddaughter, Joséphine of Leuchtenberg who was Consort to King Oscar I of Sweden and Norway. The suite of jewels was then passed down through the family to Prince Eugen, the youngest, bachelor son of King Oscar II, who gave the historical jewellery to Princess Sibylla as a wedding gift in 1932. The diadem was subsequently worn by Sibylla’s daughters Princess Birgitta and Princess Désirée at the time of their marriages.
Queen Silvia talks to Prince Bertil at her wedding banquet. Note the Kamédiadem, fragile but beautiful.
At the time of Silvia and Carl Gustaf’s marriage, a royal charitable foundation was established, known as the King and Queen’s Wedding Fund. The fund, which supports the development of projects and activities, whether they be related to sport or culture or athletics, for the benefit of children and young people with disabilities through the award of grants (around 25 each year) to recognised bodies such as sports clubs or disability associations. This was an early indication of the charitable work the Queen would undertake with children and youths in the not too distant future. Indeed, today she has links with around 80 organisations in various sectors, some of which will be discussed in the course of this article.
The couple’s first child, Victoria, was born at Karolinska University Hospital on 14 July 1977. Carl Philip followed in May of 1979. For a brief period he was Crown Prince of Sweden. However, in a somewhat controversial move, the rules of succession of the Crown were changed from 1 January 1980, with the eldest child of the Sovereign becoming heir to the throne regardless of gender (where previously only males could inherit). This applied retrospectively, meaning Victoria was now Crown Princess. The royal couples youngest child, Madeleine, was born on 10 June 1982. The previous year the King and Queen and their children had moved out of the Royal Palace in central Stockholm and moved to a twenty-room apartment in the south wing of Drottningholm Palace in the suburbs. In the summer, Silvia and her family would move southwards to Solliden Palace, the King’s privately-owned residence on the island of Öland. Here Silvia still loves to garden, introducing new plants and enjoying the vistas of the extensive parklands. She has enthused too that ‘the air is so soft here.’
The King and Queen with their children Carl Philip, Victoria and Madeleine.
The Queen had by now established her Swedish credentials. She spoke the difficult language fluently and was present at National Day celebrations throughout Sweden, accompanied by her husband and children, wearing the traditional Sverigedräkten outfit. Silvia also proved a sparkling presence at the annual Nobel awards ceremony each December, for she had one of the largest collections of royal jewellery in the world at her disposal and this was an ideal occasion at which to showcase these items. A particular favourite is the Leuchtenberg sapphire suite which features a magnificent tiara set with diamonds and nine stunning sapphires. This is complimented by a sapphire and diamond necklace and earrings.
Queen Silvia and her daughter Crown Princess Victoria.
Yet, entering public life was not necessarily easy for the Queen. She is actually quite a shy person and during interviews she comes across as quietly spoken but concise. Princess Christina, the King’s sister, has recently admitted that ‘The Queen had no idea what she was getting herself into. And my brother wasn’t very helpful’. Neither, initially, were some of his friends nor members of his small staff from his bachelor days, who included a stern Finnish cook. It has also to be remembered that Silvia at that time had no friends or contacts out with the immediate royal family. Elisabeth Olsson, the Queen’s Lady-in-Waiting during those early years proved particularly helpful where matters of procedure and protocol were concerned. Another of the biggest challenges to be faced was the tremendous amount of planning that was required behind the scenes in relation to Queen’s forthcoming engagements. Like all newlyweds, the couple soon discovered their foibles: the King was punctual while the Queen was much more relaxed about timekeeping. This could put Carl Gustaf in a bad mood. However, the tension would soon dissipate.
On 23 December 1993 the Queen celebrated her 50th birthday. She received a most welcome gift from the people of Sweden: The Queen Silvia Jubilee Fund which provides assistance to children with disabilities. The Queen, as Chairperson, still takes a keen interest in the charity’s work.
In 1994, Silvia was involved in founding the what was then the Mentor Foundation and is today known as Mentor International, with operations in Sweden, Latvia, the United States and Arabia. This organisation provides mentors to children both to guide them in life decisions and to improve their self-esteem. A focus too is on a drug-free life environment.
Silvia established the World Childhood Foundation in 1999, the aim of which is to improve conditions for vulnerable children who are exposed to violence or sexual attacks. Over the years, the Foundation has supported more than 1,200 projects in 19 different countries. The Queen is currently the Honorary Chairperson of the Foundation.
Queen Silvia and her daughter Princess Madeleine (board member) attend a World Childhood Foundation Event in New York.
Queen Silvia makes a speech at the Global Child Forum 2014
The Queen was rightly gaining a reputation, both at home and internationally, for being hardworking and committed to her charitable causes. She was regarded by many peers as a major player in relation to children’s rights issues. However, Silvia was about to expand her interests in yet another direction: The growing cases of dementia also became of concern to the Queen who today feels strongly that ‘it is our duty to know how to deal with dementia.’ She initially realised that many did not recognise it as a disease. Silvia had first hand experience of the problem as her mother (who lived with her for a period in Stockholm in the 1990’s) was a sufferer. The Queen was fortunate in that she had the help of two nurses who had previous experience with the elderly, but that was exceptional. The charity, Stiftelsen Silviahemmet, came into being on Valentine’s Day, 1996 and firstly focused on establishing a school to teach nurses and care assistants about the rudiments of dementia care. Later this awareness was expanded to include doctors, dentists, taxi drivers and professional in the financial sector. Certification programmes were then established. Apartments were also acquired which had special adaptations to make life easier for those caring for a someone with dementia. Then, in 2012, the Queen Silvia Nursing Award was established to foster positive change, growth, innovation and excellence in the field of nursing, especially geriatric nursing. The award (a scholarship) is available to both practicing nurses and nursing students in Sweden, Finland, Germany, Poland, Lithuania and the United States. In recognition of Her Majesty’s dedication to the elderly and dementia care, the Queen was named an Honorary Ambassador of Alzheimer’s Disease International in December 2018.
Queen Silvia at an event in Ekerö for her dementia charity.
But this deep interest in Alzheimer’s did not preclude Queen Silvia expanding her concern for matters relating to children and youths. In 2009, the Queen initiated the World Child & Youth Forum, now known as the Global Child Forum which works with business organisations to raise awareness of children’s rights, and develop effective tools to integrate these perspectives into their everyday operations. Then, in 2013, the Queen celebrated her 70th birthday with the establishment of Queen Silvia’s Foundation – Care About the Children. This provides support to at risk children both in Sweden and overseas through partnerships forged with established aid agencies.
Silvia’s commitment to child welfare now led to her receiving several international awards, including the Martin Buber Prize in 2014. What Queen Silvia would have made of once being ranked 68th in Forbes’ Magazines ranking of the world’s 100 most powerful women must remain open to speculation, but it would not surprise if she was quietly bemused, not to say slightly amused. It seems fitting, however, that Sweden’s largest children’s hospital, Queen Silvia’s Children’s Hospital in Gothenburg, is named after her.
On her 75th birthday, the Queen gave an interview at the Royal Palace in Stockholm to Dirceu Martins of Brazil’s EPTV, for their television series “Our People”. Speaking in faultless Brazilian Portuguese, Silvia spoke of the ‘pleasant joy’ of her childhood and her enduring and very strong connection with Brazil, emphasising that ‘Brazil is part of my life’. She joked, ‘I think I’m the only one who has a jaboticaba tree outside of Brazil that bears fruit’. The tree is carefully kept under glass in a greenhouse in winter but brought out in the warmer months. The Queen also indicated that she still had relations (cousins and second cousins) in São João da Boa Vista, in the municipality of São Paulo, and that ‘I try to come back every year’. But the interview was not just full of pleasantries. Mention was made of Childhood Brazil, a charity the Queen set up in 1999 after visiting a favela where she met a child who literally lived in a box. Silvia was haunted by his situation and decided to act. Today the charity works against the sexual abuse and exploitation of children and adolescents, many of whom have been described in the past as “street children”. It was a controversial move at that time, for as Her Majesty acknowledged, ‘no one wanted to talk about it.’ The Queen however remained determined to draw attention to the matter even though the discussions shocked many. Today, the charity is heavily involved with establishing protection procedures and networks. She also spoke of her cultural roots, ‘I have a Brazilian heart, a mind perhaps which is more German, but the whole thing is now Swedish. I bring together all three of these nationalities and cultures.’ She feels that ‘this helps me a lot now also here in Sweden, we now have many who arrive from other countries and this respect for other cultures is always alive, it helps me a lot.’
Queen Silvia on a visit to Brazil 2003
Leading such a busy public life, Silvia has to look her best. Peter Hägelstam has been the Queen’s hairdresser of choice almost since her arrival in Sweden. His business partner Johan Hellström has also been known to attend to Silvia’s locks. As to dressing for official occasions, the Queen has a very definite view of what suits her. For day wear two-piece suits are a favourite, although she is also sometimes seen wearing a blazer with trousers (or “pants” as they are referred to in North America). While the Queen may run to Chanel for special occasions, she has often been seen in clothes from high street outlets such as Zara or H & M. She is also keen on sustainability and on one occasion (at a Bea Szenfeld exhibition in Germany) she was photographed in a white suit which was forty years old. For evening wear, she is a devotee of the German fashion brand Georg et Arend, which is overseen by two brothers. During celebrations held over three days in September 2023 and attended by Scandinavian Heads of State to celebrate the King’s fifty years on the throne, Queen Silvia wore several Georg et Arend evening gowns, one in a light pink colour, decorated with pearls and rhinestones and another in a striking yellowish-gold.
Queen Silvia and King Carl XVI Gustaf arrive for the Royal Swedish Opera’s jubilee performance at Drottningholm Palace Theatre September 2023
But having focused on the public side of Silvia’s life, it is also expedient to look at her private life. Where her children concerned, the Queen gave much time and thought on how to raise them, given their unusual situation as royal family members. She admits that ‘it is essential to show them what it all means, to teach them how to evolve in these special circumstances. They need to be helped to distinguish between what is “public” and what is “private”.’ This was particularly true of the heir, Crown Princess Victoria ‘who was always special, even when she was little. She was very observant as a child. She always looked at others with sympathy but also with great curiosity.’
The Queen has been fortunate to make some friends who can be relied upon for their loyalty and discretion. Four names in particular were mentioned in an article by Anna Clara von Hofsten of Svensk Damtidning in 2020. They are Catharina Stenbock Lewenhaupt, Elisabeth Fernström, Agneta Kreuger and Agneta Banér, who have been described as Silvia’s ‘inner circle’. These friends also rely on each other and each can also count on the Queen to be a caring, sympathetic ear should they have any issues or problems in their own lives. Furthermore, even with her busy schedule, Silvia never forgets her friends’ birthdays. Another friend, Marianne Bergengren, who lives in Klosters, notes that when Silvia pays her a visit in Switzerland, she is happy to make her own bed and load the dishwasher. A particularly close friend of the Queen was the late Agneta Génetay, who was married to a good friend of the King, Tim Génetay. This couple helped to ease Silvia’s path into Swedish society. The Queen is godmother to their daughter Josephine. The latter is also a friend of Crown Princess Victoria.
But of course, above all the Queen is closest to her growing family. In February 2012, Silvia’s first grandchild, a girl named Estelle, was born at Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm. As the eldest child of Crown Princess Victoria, she is second-in-line to succeed to the throne of Sweden. Today, Silvia has eight grandchildren, ranging in age from two to eleven. Currently, the three children of Princess Madeleine and her financier husband Christopher O’Neill live in the United States, although they visit Sweden frequently and it is hoped they will the family will settle in Stockholm in the near future. In the summer the O’ Neill family often inhabit the Cavalier House, on the Solliden estate, as do Prince Carl Philip and his family. This property was originally used to house retainers and royal servants. Meanwhile, Crown Princess Victoria and her family also have their own “summer cottage” nearby, the ultra-modern Villa Skönvik near the Kalmar Strait which was built in 2013.
The Swedish Royal Family- A Formal Image.
The Queen has also been kind over the years to many members of her extended family. When Prince Bertil was nearing the end of his life, she would sleep overnight on a makeshift bed at his home, the Villa Solbacken, so she could be of assistance to his wife Princess Lilian. The latter was full of admiration for Silvia and would recall how each morning the Queen would rise (probably after a disturbed night of sleep) and depart for her office at the Royal Palace and a full day of engagements. When Princess Lilian herself became frail and forgetful, the Queen was a constant and comforting presence. The King and Queen and their children were at her bedside when she died in March 2013 at her Djurgården villa at the age of 97. Furthermore, Silvia’s aged brother Walther Sommerlath came to live in Stockholm, staying with his wife Ingrid at Nedre Sjöflygeln, a house in the park at Drottningholm, once used by Crown Princess Victoria and her husband Daniel. He died, aged 86, in October 2020 after a period of illness. The Queen issued a statement stating, ‘I and my family feel great sorrow and loss for my brother Walther’. She also asked for privacy for his family. Her brother Jörg had already passed away in 2006. Meanwhile, Walther’s son, Patrick Sommerlath has lived in Sweden since 1987 and has always been part of the extended royal family. He came to live in Stockholm following the break-up of his parent’s marriage.
The royal children adore their mother. Princess Madeleine finds that ‘She’s so caring. She cares!’ while her son Carl Philip observes that ‘She’s brave and not afraid to ask the uncomfortable questions, but she does ask them in an elegant way.’ This comment has echoes of a remark made by the Queen’s late father concerning her ‘delightful behaviour’ in her dealings with people and situations.
When not working, the King and Queen will often walk his dog. Silvia is a keen swimmer too when she has the chance and in that respect, the Villa Mirage at St Maxime on the French Riviera (formerly owned by Prince Bertil and his wife Princess Lilian) must have seemed a welcome godsend for the house affords privacy and is set on a small private beach. Skiing too is a favourite pastime whether it be downhill or cross-country. For the latter Silvia only has to venture out to the parklands surrounding Drottningholm Palace, but for more adventurous skiing holidays she and the King venture to their lodge in the well-known ski resort of Storlien, near the Norwegian border, or they might even go abroad to Alpine resorts such as Klosters in Switzerland. Silvia also enjoys more leisurely pastimes, such as reading, visits to the opera, the theatre or to concerts (including the summer concerts held in the park at Solliden).
Silvia and Carl Gustaf skiing at Storlien.
Like everyone, the King and Queen had to adapt their lives to cope with the Covid pandemic. Meetings, audiences and conference calls were held on-line, as opposed to in person. Initially, a good deal of their time was spent at Stenhammar Palace near Flen, where they were joined for a period by Princess Birgitta, the King’s older sister. This mansion house (it is not particularly large) with farmland attached, has been used by Carl Gustaf since the 1960’s. The King and Queen often spend weekends here, which suits Silvia who loves walking and horse riding. Otherwise, the summer dining-room at Drottningholm was also used for on-line meetings.
As the Queen’s 80th birthday approached in 2023, she was keen to emphasise-through a court spokesperson, Margareta Thorgren, that she is does not dwell on her age; rather Silvia was focused on the future and what she wished to achieve. Those who know and work with the Queen on a regular basis also observe that she is never short of ideas. Journalist and former court employee Barbro Hultman has said that ‘She places great demands on those around her, but even more on herself. Everything has to be perfect.’ Work is certainly her priority as she arrives most weekday mornings at her three-room office suite close-by the East Gate of the Royal Palace. Should it happen to be Tuesday, then the Queen will be faced with yet another of those interminable planning meetings to coordinate forthcoming engagements and to decide what she can or cannot fit in. Silvia’s own low-ceilinged office is reasonably large and is dominated by a large tiled stove. In one corner, there is a large antique desk at which the Queen works. There are also two separate seating areas for visitors, featuring gilded antique chairs set around tables. By contrast, Her Majesty prefers to make use of a workaday, modern office chair. Silvia clearly has a sense of humour for on display is a rectangular cushion on which are stitched the words “It Ain’t Easy Being Queen!” One downside, say observers, is that Silvia might continue to work too hard on her various projects when perhaps she should take a break!
Queen Silvia applies make-up for a recent photoshoot.
It is fair to say that, despite the Queen’s upcoming special birthday, the focus of 2023 was still very much on the King’s Golden Jubilee with numerous events held throughout Sweden to help commemorate Carl VI Gustaf’s fifty years on the throne-the longest of any king of Sweden in history. This meant the King and Queen undertaking extensive “county” tours the length and breadth of the Kingdom, in addition to the normal work schedule which included a State Visit to Sweden in late October from French President Macron and his wife Birgitte, together with a State Visit in May by the King and Queen to Estonia. There was also the death, in early November, of a close and trusted friend of the King and Queen, 100-year-old Count Hans-Gabriel Trolle-Wachtmeister, whose late wife, Alice, was Mistress of the Court. Silvia was seen to be visibly upset and wiping away tears at his funeral. It is no wonder that commentators noted that the Queen appeared somewhat drawn at the subsequent Nobel festivities.
Queen Silvia with all of her grandchildren taken at the Royal Palace on 18 December 2023. In the background are the Forestry Students who traditionally provide these Nordic spruce trees.
By contrast, on the 23 December, Silvia celebrated her milestone 80th birthday with a private dinner, attended by family and friends, at her home at Drottningholm Palace. There had earlier been a concert in her honour (on 30 November) organised by the Lilla Akademien (Music School for Youth) of which Silvia is Royal Patron. This event-which featured singing and musical renditions by pupils of the school-was also attended by representatives of her other charitable foundations. Present too were the King, Prince Carl Philip, Princess Madeleine (who had flown over from the United States), Princess Christina, her husband Tord Magnuson and Princess Benedikte of Denmark, representing the Danish Royal Family. The Queen (who was dressed in a two-piece light pistachio silk suit with sequin panels) and her royal party enjoyed a wide range of music including renditions of Bach’s Ave Maria and Abba’s Dancing Queen. According to Mr Magnuson ‘Silvia was super happy with the evening. It was only positive, so much fun.’ Another event was the Queen’s presence with her eight grandchildren, on 18 December, in the courtyard of the Royal Palace to receive Christmas spruce trees from the forestry students from the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences at Umeå (who were dressed in Christmas attire).
On 4 December 2024, Princess Birgitta, the King’s second oldest sister died in Mallorca where she lived for many years. She was the first of his siblings to die. The funeral was held in Stockholm on 15 December. She was buried at the Royal Cemetery at Haga. Then, on 21 January 2026 Princess Désirée died. A funeral service was held in the Royal Palace on 19 February, with a private family committal following soon thereafter. However, both the King and Queen were cheered by the news of the birth of another granddaughter in February 2025, Princess Ines. She is the youngest child of Prince Carl Philip and his wife Sofia. The King and Queen are also particularly pleased that Princess Madeleine her financier husband Christopher and family have returned to live in Sweden from the United States where they had lived for many years.
On 30 April 2026 festivities were held in Stockholm to mark the 80th birthday of King Carl Gustav, who is the longest-reigning European Sovereign. All of the royal family, apart from aged Princess Margaretha were present, as were many foreign royalties including Queen Margrethe of Denmark, who appeared frail but determined to join in the celebrations (she would later be hospitalised in Copenhagen not long after her return home.) Following a Te Deum service in the Royal Chapel, the King took the salute as Sweden’s Armed Forces held a military parade in the courtyard of the Royal Palace. He was later serenaded by choirs from across Sweden and the day ended with a birthday banquet at the Royal Palace.
An image of the hard-working queen.
June 2026 was again a time for celebration in the life of the Queen. On 13 June a gathering of Swedish and foreign royals, family and friends descended again on Stockholm to celebrate the Golden Wedding of the King and Queen. One particularly welcome guest was the King’s elder sister Princess Margaretha who despite increasing frailty, made the journey from her home in England. She had only recently visited Sweden in February for the funeral of her sister, Princess Désirée, but had been unable to attend the King’s 80th birthday celebrations in April. The day of the Golden Wedding commenced with a Te Deum in the Royal Chapel, followed by a sail by the royal couple on the Royal Barge Vasaorden and a procession in a horse and carriage ride through central Stockholm to an afternoon concert in Kungsträdgården, the theme being “Love.” The couple were cheered throughout the day and into the evening, when the King and Queen attended a Golden Jubilee Gala at the Royal Opera House which included operatic and ballet performances. The celebrations concluded with a private dinner at the Royal Palace.
The King and Queen on the stage at the conclusion of the Golden Wedding Gala at the Royal Opera House Stockholm on 13 June 2026
On 19 June the King and Queen celebrated the actual date of their Golden Wedding quietly. We already know that they have headed to the island of Öland and their home, Solliden to enjoy the midsummer holiday amongst the beautiful landscape. However, the Royal House did publish new images of the Queen as well as a video on Instagram with a greeting from Her Majesty, to celebrate her 50 years as Queen Consort of Sweden, the longest-serving in Swedish history. The theme tune in the background is Abba’s iconic tune Arrival!
The Queen of Sweden: a new image released by the Royal Court to celebrate her 50 years as Queen Consort of Sweden.
For all her achievements the Queen remains remarkably self-effacing. She does not like to be described as powerful or having power. This is a sensitive area as the family must be politically neutral and power is very much associated with politics at this level. The most Silvia would be prepared-at a push-to acknowledge is that she has some influence and the ability to move matters forward on occasion using the ‘diplomatic ability’ her late father spoke of at the time of her marriage in 1976. In reality, she has become a formidable operator, with nearly fifty years of ‘regal’ experience behind her. Silvia’s friend, Catharina Stenbock Lewenhaupt has said ‘She [Silvia] really is the right person in the right place! And with the intelligence, dutifulness, thoughtfulness, and charisma she has, she really is a queen for her time. And a sweet and dear friend…!” Perhaps the last word might go to the Queen’s sister-in-law Princess Christina, who confided to royal biographer Ingrid Thörnqvist that ‘I admire her immensely.’ Sister-in-laws are not always known for kind words, so this is praise indeed.
Every congratulation Ma’am on this wonderful achievement as fifty years a Queen!
Sweden and Norway had been joined together in a union since 1814. From then, they had shared a common monarch, who was the pivotal link in this union of two nations, the last of whom would be King Oscar II of Sweden and Norway, who had been crowned as King of Norway in Nidaros Cathedral on 18 July 1873 (and in Stockholm Cathedral as King of Sweden on 12 May 1873) . This Swedish-born King, who spoke fluent Norwegian, was largely based in Stockholm, although he did make regular visits to the Royal Palace in Christiana (now Oslo) as well as to other parts of Norway. The Norwegians had their own parliament (the Storting) and Constitution (formulated back in 1814 and signed in May of that year). Furthermore, matters relating to foreign affairs were dealt with in Stockholm, where the Foreign Minister was based. This was to be a source of increasing discontent in Norway, for the Norwegians were a proud people with a strong sense of national identity and a Norwegian royal line which stretched back to the 9th century and the reign of King Harald I.
King Oscar (seated centre) at the Villa Victoria on Bygdøy Royal Estate.
In the 1870’s and early 1880’s the King had repeatedly vetoed constitutional amendments passed by the Storting. Yet, royal visits from Stockholm continued regardless. In 1881 the King established-at the instigation of Christian Holst, who was manager of the Bygdøy royal estate-what was known initially as Oscar II’s Collection, a small group of historic buildings, taken from their original locations around Norway and rebuilt at Bygdøy. This collection was to be the forerunner of what would become known as the Norwegian Folk Museum. Another frequent visitor was Oscar’s eldest son, Crown Prince Gustav of Norway and Sweden. Gustav ventured to Norway in June 1877 during which he included a visit to Tromsø and the following year, he was accompanied on his trip by France’s Prince Imperial (the only son of Napoleon III) during which the royal duo enjoyed a stopover at Osebro.
In February 1882, a Welcome Arch was erected in Carl Johans Gate in Christiana to commemorate the visit of Crown Prince Gustav and his wife, Victoria of Baden. This was Victoria’s first visit as Crown Princess to Norway, the couple having married only five months previously. Several buildings were handsomely decorated with the letters of G and V and there was a huge torchlight parade as the royal couple made their way, in an open carriage, through the capital’s streets, which were thronged by well wishers, to the Royal Palace. On another occasion the Crown Princely couple ventured to the theatre during which they passed through a royal arch lit by electric bulbs-something of a rarity in those days.
Crown Prince Gustav and Crown Princess Victoria enter Christiana in 1882
The Liberal Party, elected in 1884, led by Johan Sverdrup, was focused on establishing a strong parliamentary system (and some would say a diminution of the royal prerogative powers). The government would also become increasingly concerned with strengthening Norway’s position on the international scene, particularly as the country’s overseas trade became vital to energising the economy. It was argued by those in the business and shipping sector that there were now too few consulates to support this increase in foreign trade. Following their re-election in 1891, the increasingly nationalistic Liberal Party government, now led by Johannes Steen, therefore took the view that Norway should have its own autonomous consular service. They made NOK 50,000 available for this purpose. But a rattled King Oscar (who had also got wind of the possible appointment of an autonomous Norwegian Foreign Minister) was intent on vetoing such attempts by the government and this led to a constitutional crisis. This was only (temporarily) resolved by putting aside the matter of the consular service for the present.
The royal family, who were keen to maintain the union between Norway and Sweden, continued to make their presence felt in Christiana. In October 1893, King Oscar and Crown Prince Gustav made a joint visit during which they opened the Bandak Canal which connects Skien and Dalen in western Telemark. Another attempt, in 1895, in the Storting, to terminate consular cooperation with Sweden and push through a unilateral resolution for the establishment of a Norwegian Consular Service was met by menacing threats and sabre rattling on the part of Sweden (who were militarily superior to Norway). However, despite ongoing political rumblings, events were sufficiently settled to permit King Oscar to travel by train to Christiana in 1897 to mark the 25th anniversary of his accession to the throne of Norway. A service of thanksgiving was held in St Saviour’s Church, while the Stock Exchange, the Military Academy and many other official buildings were festooned with flags, bunting and greenery.
The Crown Prince also continued to make visits. For instance, in May 1898, he paid a visit to Ullensvang. However, another visit, in the spring of 1899, was to prove more eventful and troublesome as Gustav explained in a letter to his father, King Oscar, from the Royal Palace in Christiana. Most unusually, the Crown Prince had been jeered at by a crowd of around two hundred on his return to the palace from a meeting of the Military Society. Gustav was somewhat shaken by this turn of events, but put it down to ‘half drunk’ students. After the Royal Guard had eventually intervened and arrested a couple of demonstrators, the others soon dispersed.
The Crown Prince then issued invitations to members of the Storting to dine with him at the Royal Palace. Around 70 members (whom Gustav would later describe to his father, as being of a left-wing persuasion) returned their invites. Nonetheless, the Crown Prince went ahead with the dinner although he decided not to make the customary toast to the Storting (whilst simultaneously declining Mr Viggo Ullman, the President of the Storting’s, request to toast Gustav’s health). Instead, the Crown Prince limited himself to toasting the health of the King. Yet Gustav also made clear his displeasure at this snub by the Norwegian politicians to those members who did attend the event at the Royal Palace. This protest by the Norwegian politicians had also garnered much criticism in Sweden.
Indeed, by October 1900, Crown Prince Gustav was growing increasingly exasperated by events in Norway. Writing to his tennis partner, Pontus Quarnström, he spoke of his longing to leave Christiana and bemoaned the behaviour of Norwegian politicians, three government ministers having recently resigned. Furthermore, Gustav (who had vice-regal authority) felt that the government were not observing the necessary constitutional niceties, by not consulting him about the appointment of new ministers, in particular a Minister of War. A meeting about the matter had proved ‘unpleasant and difficult’ but the Crown Prince seems to have been equal to the task, warning the offenders that if they stepped on his toes, he would most certainly step on theirs. Despite these feelings, the Crown Prince continued to reach out to the Norwegian people and, in 1901, he was present on the balcony of the Royal Palace during Norway’s National Day, 17 May (the first member of the royal family ever to do so, for the Bernadotte’s had customarily avoided being in Norway at this time) to greet flag-waving Norwegians who had gathered before the palace, as had been the tradition for the past thirty years.
However, at least a war between Norway and Sweden-the thought of which King Oscar had regarded as ‘abhorrent’-was averted and an agreement was made whereby the matter of a separate consular service was to be considered by a joint committee of members from both countries in 1902. In February 1903, Gustav was once again in Christiana and complained to King Oscar of a ‘terrible state of affairs’ with ‘hardly a single person who now wants to support the present Union, and most of them are openly crying out for its dissolution’ rather ‘than remain…as a vassal of Sweden.’ Although ‘calm’, the Crown Prince admitted that he was ‘prepared for anything.’ On this occasion, Gustav was accompanied by his son Prince Wilhelm.
To his younger brother Prince Carl, Gustav wrote about the consular crisis on 22 February, 1903 ‘I think that you know enough both of my opinion and the views and thoughts of [Swedish Prime Minister] Boström to know that neither he nor I want to make any further concessions. I consider the Norwegian proposals to be completely unacceptable, well written to be sure, but very insidious.’ In other words, the chance of an accord on the consular matter seemed slim.
Nevertheless, despite the Crown Prince’s scepticism, a form of agreement was eventually reached and a subsequent communiqué issued by the joint committee, dated 24 March 1903. This proposed that any relations between the consuls (of both Norway and Sweden) and the still unified Foreign Ministry in Stockholm, as well as with the joint diplomatic missions overseas, should be governed by separate but identical laws, which could not be altered or repealed without the consent of the governments of both Norway and Sweden. Meanwhile, in July, King Oscar ventured to Norway to open the Ofoten Railway- the Norwegian section of a railway which carried iron ore to the port of Narvik.
King Oscar II opens the Ofoten Railway in 1903.
In the spring of 1904, Crown Prince Gustav enjoyed a brief respite when he and his eldest son Prince Gustav Adolf participated in some cross-country skiing at Holmenkollen and watched some downhill ski action from the Royal Box. The political problems were not abating. Building upon the agreement reached the previous year, in May 1904, the Norwegian Government presented proposals for inclusion in the new ‘identical’ legislation. However, Swedish Prime Minister Boström’s government proved somewhat truculent and when the Swedes made their response in November of that year, one of their counter-proposals was that the Swedish foreign minister should have sufficient control over the ‘independent’ or ‘separate’ Norwegian consuls so as to prevent them from exceeding their authority. Norway interpreted this as placing their consuls in a subordinate position, effectively still under Swedish control.
It so happened that the Crown Prince was again in Christiana in the spring of 1905. One of his final vice-regal acts was the appointment, in March, of a coalition government led by Prime Minister Christian Michelsen. The latter announced in his inaugural address that his government would implement ‘Norway’s constitutional right to its own consular service and assert Norway’s sovereignty as a free, independent kingdom.’ On 29 April, Gustav informed his father that ‘The situation here [in Christiana] is utterly hopeless, and it is impossible to speak a reasonable word to a single person.’ Those politicians the Crown Prince encountered were acting like ‘wild dogs’; although to him personally, they were ‘polite, but ice-cold and there is a lot of hatred …in the air’. He now was firmly of the view that ‘I really cannot do any good here’.
Then, in keeping with Michelsen’s inaugural vow, in May 1905 both chambers of the Storting passed the Consular Act, to establish an independent Norwegian consular service, this to be effective from April 1 1906. On 27 May, King Oscar II refused to ratify the legislation during a cabinet meeting at the Swedish Royal Palace with Norway’s senior politician in Stockholm, Jørgen Løvlandat (also in attendance were Crown Prince Gustav, Norwegian ministers Harald Bothner and Edvard Hagerup Bull, as well as August Sibbern, a civil servant from the Norwegian Cabinet Department). Thereafter, the Norwegian government in Christiana duly resigned.
The crisis deepened when the King was unable to form a new government. In early June, the Prime Minister in Oslo, Christian Michelsen, prepared a statement which he would later make dealing with the current constitutional situation. He posited: It was the monarch’s responsibility to provide Norway with a constitutional government. Since King Oscar had failed to do this, the Norwegian monarchy had now ceased to function. And since it was the King who had bound the union together, these union ties were now broken. On 6 June, Paul Ivar Paulsen, a senior civil servant in the Ministry of Justice in Oslo, travelled to Stockholm on the night train. He had with him the Norwegian government’s final letter of resignation, addressed to the King and signed by Prime Minister Michelsen. The next day, 7 June, Paulsen handed this over to King Oscar II at the Royal Palace, around the same time as the Storting met in plenary session. After listening to the contents of Michelsen’s aforementioned statement, the Norwegian parliament proceeded to pass a resolution to dissolve the union with Sweden. It was then announced that the government ‘until further notice’ would now exercise ‘the authority [previously] granted to the King in accordance with the Constitution of the Kingdom of Norway and applicable laws’. In response, King Oscar sent a telegram to the government in Christiana protesting at this turn of events ‘in the most definite way.’
Meanwhile, the following evening, at Rosendal Castle, where he was currently in residence, Oscar II was joined by his wife and other royal family members to receive a touching tribute from his shocked Swedish subjects, thousands of whom gathered and sang the patriotic song, Ur svenska hjärtans djup [From the Depths of Swedish Hearts]. It was so moving that Queen Sophie and her daughter-in-law Princess Ingeborg (the wife of Prince Carl) could be seen wiping away tears.
King Oscar in Norwegian Military Uniform taken in 1905 in Stockholm
In Christiana, on 8 June, top-ranking men in the military were required to pledge their loyalty to an independent Norway. Then early on the morning of 9 June the Union Flag was ‘struck down’ at Akershus Fortress. At 10am a crowd (estimated at between twenty to thirty thousand) gathered at the Fortress to watch the flag of an independent Norway being raised.
It is fair to say that the Swedish royal family (as they now must be regarded) were taken aback by the Norwegian position. It was all something of a ‘bombshell’ according to Prince Carl. His younger brother Eugen would later observe that ‘My old father [King Oscar] felt the blow as an insult that he had a hard time digesting.’ On 14 June, King Oscar himself was quoted in the Swedish press talking of ‘this illegal conduct’ on the part of the Norwegians being as ‘an incurable wound’ and paid tribute to ‘my Swedish people.’ Despite the distress, Crown Prince Gustav, who had been in England attending the wedding of his eldest son, Gustaf Adolf to Princess Margaret of Connaught, a niece of Britain’s King Edward VII, now advocated that the dissolution of the union should take place in a peaceful manner.
Meanwhile, a request was sent on 19 June from the Storting to King Oscar asking that negotiations commence for a final settlement on the dissolved union. The following day, King Oscar attended the State Opening of the Riksdag (Swedish parliament) in Stockholm, the Swedish Prime Minister, Ramstedt (who would soon be replaced by Christian Lundeberg) indicated that diplomatic negotiations, the commencement of which required the approval of the Riksdag, should now go ahead with Norway. All the members of Sweden’s State Council agreed with this proposal and King Oscar (keen to avoid what he regarded as the ‘greater evil’ of war) spoke movingly of the many years he had concerned himself with the ‘welfare of the brotherly people’ [i.e. the Norwegians] and how ‘it is painful to me to contribute to the dissolution of a union, in which I thought I saw the independence, security and happiness of both united kingdoms. If I am nevertheless willing to do this, it is to avoid a greater evil and in the conviction that a union without mutual consent would not bring any real advantage to Sweden.’ It should be stated that in Sweden, as in some other nations, the Storting’s actions were regarded as tantamount to a coup or revolution.
However, the King decided to appoint Crown Prince Gustav as Regent throughout the period of negotiations. Oscar admitted in a message his people on 7 August that having consulted with his doctors ‘I must now….seek rest and refreshing air… in order to, with God’s help, regain health and strength after the tiring time for body and soul which has been a consequence of the worries which during have followed me for the past few months…’ Of course, the worries over the situation with Norway had actually dogged his reign for decades. Although he did not realise it, Oscar only had a short time to live and he would die in Stockholm in December 1907, at the age of 78.
Meanwhile, on 13 August, the decision of the Storting of 7 June was backed by a referendum in Norway (held at the insistence of Sweden’s Riksdag) which resulted in 368,392 votes in favour of dissolution of the Union, and only 184 against. Negotiations between the delegations from Norway and Sweden took place in the Masonic Lodge in Karlstad from 31 August and lasted till 23 September, when a conditional agreement was reached. The main sticking point was border fortifications between the two nations. In the end several forts were demolished and a neutral zone established which could not be used for military purposes. Any further disputes would be solved by international arbitration. The Karlstad agreement was ratified by the Storting on 9 October; as well as by an extraordinary sitting of the Riksdag on 13 October.
Oscar II now formally recognised Norway as an independent state and, on 26 October, he abdicated from the Norwegian throne on behalf of both himself and his successors. The latter words are particularly important, as when the Storting unilaterally dissolved the union with Sweden, it also made an offer (sometimes referred to as the “Bernadotte proposal”) to King Oscar to nominate a prince of the House of Bernadotte to be the new King of an independent Norway. King Oscar wisely demurred fearing that the independence and impartiality of a new monarch in Norway with such close links to him and the House of Bernadotte might be constantly called into question. However, another (Swedish) source quotes him as having been ‘insulted’ by this offer and raging, “Sooner will they carry me to the Riddarholmen Church [at that time the final resting place of Swedish monarchs] than I consent to one of my family going to Norway [as king].” Yet Oscar also sent a final and conciliatory message to his ‘brothers’ in Norway: ‘To those who faithfully served me in Norway during my 30-year reign and who still have some love for their former king, I send my heartfelt thanks and my sincere good wishes in farewell.’
Yet the Bernadotte’s were still involved in one last act regarding the future of Norway. On 14 November Crown Prince Gustav of Sweden arrived in Copenhagen. He had been sent as an emissary to make it clear that, despite the recent dissolution of union with Norway, Sweden had no objections to Prince Carl of Denmark’s (the second born son of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark) imminent elevation as King of Norway.
Gustav-now King Gustav V of Sweden-returned to Christiana by train from Stockholm for a three-day visit on 28 November 1917 to attend a meeting of the three Scandinavian monarchs. Not only was this Gustav’s first visit since becoming King of Sweden in 1907, it was also the first since the break-up of the Union in 1905. Gustav was now hosted by the Danish-born King Haakon VII in the city and at the Royal Palace he knew so well from his days as Crown Prince of Norway. Haakon’s older brother, King Christian X of Denmark, completed the trio. Gustav hoped that this current visit would demonstrate that the dissolution between Norway and Sweden did not stand in the way of any rapprochement between the two countries. The Swedish king was not disappointed by his reception, as crowds lined the streets to welcome the visiting monarch and his Danish counterpart. Two aeroplanes flew overhead briefly spooking the horses. Local hotels were filled by the curious, many of whom had travelled from western Norway. At the Royal Palace the press reported that the trio of kings feasted on lamb, chicken, ice cream and petit fours.
King Haakon VII , King Gustav V and King Christian X pictured in 1914 during an earlier meeting in Sweden.
And today relations between the Royal Houses of Norway and Sweden remain extremely close. Sweden’s King has just celebrated his Golden Jubilee and his daughter, Crown Princess Victoria is a popular monarch-in-waiting. Meanwhile, King Harald of Norway, the mother of whom was a Swedish Princess, has reigned for over thirty years. He is the first Norwegian-born monarch of Norway since the Union with Sweden was dissolved in 1905 and he is due to be succeeded, in due course, by his Norwegian-born son Crown Prince Haakon and his Norwegian-born granddaughter, Princess Ingrid Alexandra, both of whose mothers were commoners.
When Prince Bertil of Sweden, Duke of Halland-who was serving in London as assistant naval attaché at the Swedish Embassy-sowalked into the elegant London nightclub Les Ambassadeurs Club one summer’s evening in 1943, he couldn’t take his eyes off a woman in the room. The lady in question-a 28-year-old called Lilian Craig née Davies-hailed from Swansea in Wales. Her parents were William John Davies, a factory worker, and Gladys Mary Curran, a shop assistant. Lillian (the second ‘L’ of her birthname was dropped as the future princess thought it to be more professional) had left home at the age of 16 and moved to London eventually becoming a model, appearing in fashion magazines such as Vogue. However, during the years of the Second World War, British women without children were required to undertake work to help the war effort. Therefore, at the time of her encounter with Prince Bertil, Lilian was seconded to work in a factory making radios for the British Navy. She also worked for a spell at a military hospital in Sussex. Lilian subsequently moved into the Prince’s apartment in London after her own home was damaged during a German bombing raid. Prince Bertil came to her assistance after having learned of her plight when he telephoned her to check if she was unscathed. However, as Lilian was unable to find a hotel room that night, she later recalled that, ‘We went to his [Bertil’s] house and calmed down with a drink. I stayed overnight. Then I stayed…’ However, Lilian also happened to be married to a Scots actor called Ivan Craig, who was then serving in the British army in North Africa. He would also fall in love with someone else (an Italian) and an amicable divorce was arranged in 1947 following a meeting between Prince Bertil and the Scotsman. Mr Craig’s only request of Prince Bertil was ‘Promise me that whatever you do, you will always take care of Lilian.’
Prince Bertil of Sweden and Lilian Davies in wartime London.
Bertil’s older brother, Prince Gustaf Adolf, Duke of Västerbotten, was second-in-line to the Swedish throne; but he died in an air accident in January 1947. The new heir-but-one to the throne was Gustaf Adolf’s only son, Carl Gustaf, who was not yet a year old. As the latter’s great-grandfather, King Gustaf V, was then aged 88 and his grandfather, Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf 64, there was every chance that Bertil would be required to serve as regent for his nephew until the latter reached his majority (Bertil’s brothers and two of his cousins having already renounced their princely titles and their places in the succession due to making ‘unequal’ marriages). The Prince therefore made the decision (or was told) not to make an ‘unsuitable’ marriage at this juncture (for Lilian was after all a divorced commoner), so as to keep secure the future of the royal dynasty. It was a great sacrifice on the part of both Bertil and ‘Lily’ (as the Prince referred to his partner) who would have liked nothing better than to have married. Thanks to a large measure of goodwill towards the couple on the part of the Swedish press, the couple’s relationship was kept a secret from the public for almost 30 years. According to the Swedish journalist Sten Hedman, who reported on royal matters from the 1960’s onwards, ‘the press never wrote about their relationship because Prince Bertil said that if we did, we would ruin their [his and Lilian’s] lives.’
Prince Bertil and Lilian Davies circa 1950
Meanwhile, in 1947 Bertil bought both the Villa Solbacken on Djurgården in Stockholm and the seven-roomed Villa Mirage in Sainte-Maxime on the French Riviera as homes where he and Lilian could live together in relative peace. Lilian was left in no doubt that this arrangement would mean both a life in the shadows, and without children. She had to content herself with reading of her husband’s official life in the newspapers or, in later years, watching him on television attending the famous Nobel Prize ceremonies. Lilian made sure not relinquish her links with Britain: Until her death, she maintained a small top-floor flat in London’s Mayfair and would visit the British capital several times a year. She remained close to friends (such as actor Roger Moore) and to her cousin, Jean Beaumond. Lilian was not warmly welcomed by some of those at court who knew of the relationship. This initially is said to have also extended to Bertil’s sister, Queen Ingrid of Denmark who, although based in Copenhagen, was still a very influential person in Stockholm as her father was after all King of Sweden.
Yet, the couple enjoyed a busy and fulfilling private life as they enjoyed a shared interest in dogs, gardening, playing golf (often at Halmstad), motor cars (Bertil was Chairman of the Swedish Royal Automobile Club [KAK]), the arts (the couple owned a large collection of artworks by artists of the avant-garde Halmstad group) and other cultural activities. They could sometimes be spotted shopping together in Östermalmshallen. At the Villa Mirage, where the couple spent several months of the year, a large terrace, overlooking the Mediterranean, was the duo’s favourite spot for eating and sunbathing. It was on the French Riviera that Lilian and Bertil could entertain members of the Swedish Royal Family and their eclectic group of friends. Bertil, Lilian admitted, was a ‘great cook’ and loved to hold a barbecue when they had guests. The villa had a fireplace, in the main sitting room, for cooler nights and Lilian recalled ‘We loved sitting in front of a crackling fire.’ Bertil also received the use for life of a small house, the Villa Solgården in Tylösand. This was a 40th birthday gift to the Prince and the residence was paid for via a fundraising campaign and owned by a foundation chaired by the County Governor of Halland. Lilian and Bertil paid visits here in the spring and autumn. The white-washed rooms were sparsely but tastefully furnished and the walls were hung with paintings by the likes of the post-war artist, Mats Norryd.
While in Sweden the press never breached their accommodation with the couple, it would prove more difficult when the duo travelled overseas. Prince Bertil and Lilian were photographed together as they arrived at the Sheraton Hotel in Munich in August 1972, to attend the Olympic Games. But times and attitudes were changing, as even the ageing King Gustaf VI Adolf seemed to realise. Thus, in November, Prince Bertil and Lilian made their ‘official’ debut in Sweden as a couple, when they were pictured arriving together at Stockholm’s Opera House for a gala evening in honour of the 90th birthday of Bertil’s father. For the first time, Lilian sported a magnificent antique family tiara.
In the summer of 1973 there was a large gathering of the younger generation of the Swedish Royal Family at the Villa Mirage. Those visiting included Crown Prince Carl Gustaf and his sisters Christina, Birgitta, Margaretha and Désirée, as well as their respective spouses (although Carl Gustaf and Christina had still to marry). But back in Sweden the old King was ailing and he was rushed from his summer residence at Sofiero to hospital in Helsingborg where Bertil and Lilian visited him. Gustaf VI Adolf died of pneumonia on 15 September. Bertil’s nephew now ascended the Swedish throne as King Carl XVI Gustaf. Lilian accompanied Bertil to the late King’s funeral. The prospect of a marriage between Bertil and Lilian was now drawing tantalisingly close…but first the succession required to be secured and all eyes now looked to the new King to settle down and begin a family. In the interim, although no longer called-on to act as regent, Prince Bertil proved to be an invaluable support to his somewhat reticent and inexperienced young nephew.
Lilian Davies 1971Prince Bertil and Lilian Davies arrive at the Sheraton Hotel Munich 1972First ‘Official’ Appearance: Prince Bertil and Lilian Davies: 90th birthday celebrations of King Gustaf VI Adolf 1972A Gathering of Swedish Royalty at Sainte Maxime, France Summer 1973.
On 19 June 1976, King Carl Gustaf married Silvia Sommerlath, a German-born translator who had been partly raised in Brazil. This was also a true love match for the newlyweds had met at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich and immediately ‘clicked’. Following this happy development, Lilian and Bertil were at long-last able to become engaged. They married in the Royal Chapel at Drottningholm Palace in December 1976, some 33 years after they had first met. It had already been decided that Bertil would be allowed to keep his titles and place in the royal succession. Perhaps a reward from the King for his Uncle’s patience and sense of duty? The bride-now aged 61-wore a chic silvery-blue long silk twill dress, designed by the London-based designer Elizabeth Wondrak, accessorised by pearls and a diamond brooch. Lilian sported a feathery fascinator in her hair, rather than a hat. A delighted Princess Lilian later wrote to Ms Wondrak about her wedding outfit to say, ‘It really was a dream and admired by everyone’. The bride’s wedding bouquet was a large bunch of Lily of the Valley provided by Stockholm florist Anita Pelenius, who had risen before 4am on the morning of the wedding, to arrange this floral tribute. The couple-Lilian was now officially styled Her Royal Highness Princess Lilian of Sweden, Duchess of Halland- were interviewed by the press in Swedish-and it was clear that Lilian was well-versed in understanding the language of her adopted homeland, although she was a little reticent when she spoke in Swedish. Prince Bertil reflected that ‘There’s only one thing we regret and that’s that we haven’t been able to get married earlier so we haven’t been able to have children, it’s a bit sad, but after all, we are still very happy, aren’t we?’ Lilian looked at him as he squeezed her hand and answered:– ‘Very!’ The irony of how long this marriage had taken to achieve was not lost on Prince Bertil who joked that he and Lilian must have been ‘the world’s oldest cohabiting couple.’ The newlyweds honeymooned in Kenya.
Prince Bertil and Lilian Davies Engagement Photo 1976Prince Bertil and Princess Lilian on their wedding day, Stockholm, 1976
In due course, when the King and Queen Silvia had children of their own, Lilian and Bertil became devoted to them all and were treated as honorary grandparents. Princess Victoria (from 1979 Crown Princess) was born in July 1977 (Lilian and Bertil attended the child’s christening in September), her brother Prince Carl Philip in May 1979 (Prince Bertil was named as one of his great-nephew’s godparents) and Princess Madeleine, the youngest child came along in June 1982. Lilian sometimes accompanied Carl Philip to football matches; she was also a great support and comfort to Crown Princess Victoria, particularly in later years, when Victoria met and fell in love with Daniel Westling, a gym owner and personal trainer. The royal family initially hesitated to accept Daniel and Lilian was able to draw on her first-hand experience of what it was like to be an outsider on the fringes of the royal circle. It is said she helped smooth the couple’s path to marriage.
Prince Bertil and Princess Lilian attend the Christening of Princess (later Crown Princess) Victoria of Sweden 1977
Now that Lilian had married into the Royal Family, she was able to participate in royal duties. The Princess established connections with UNICEF and SOS Barnbyar [the Swedish branch of SOS Children’s Villages]. She was Patron of the Swedish British Society. On her 80th birthday in August 1995, Princess Lilian paid tribute to her husband Bertil: ‘If I were to sum up my life, everything has been about my love… He’s a great man, and I love him.’ Although by now Bertil was ailing (he suffered from heart problems and had mobility issues after breaking his hip during a fall), Princess Lilian was still a wonderful help to the King and Queen. For instance, she was present at proceedings held during the State visit from President and Mrs Meri of Estonia in September 1995. She also made regular appearances at events in connection with Sweden’s National Day. Fortunately, in addition to nursing staff, the Princess had the services of old family retainers to assist her in caring for Prince Bertil. Dagmar Nilsson and her sister Maj-Christian Nilsson were of particular help as they had worked as housekeepers for the Prince and Princess for many years and remained a constant presence at the Villa. Another loyal figure was the couple’s chauffeur, Stig Jurlander.
Bertil and Lilian in the grounds of Villa SolbackenBertil and Lilian at racing event. Princess Lilian with Prince Bertil at a State Gala for the King and Queen of Spain 1979
Prince Bertil and Princess Lilian dance the night away.
Princess Lilian with Queen Silvia, Crown Prince Victoria and Prince Carl Philip on Sweden’s National Day
Prince Bertil died on 5 January 1997, just shy of his 85th birthday. His funeral service was held in the Chapel of the Royal Palace in Stockholm. Particularly poignant, was the presence of Queen Ingrid of Denmark, who although bent with age, insisted on processing up the long aisle with some assistance from her great-niece Crown Princess Victoria. Also present were Bertil’s surviving brothers Sigvard and Carl Johan, as well as foreign royalty, including his niece Queen Margrethe of Denmark and Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, a nephew of the late Queen Louise of Sweden. Amongst the music performed was a composition by the Welsh composer Vaughan Williams. But perhaps the most moving was a rendition of the jazz number, Nat King Cole’s ‘Unforgettable’ which was Lilian and Bertil’s special song. Thereafter, the Prince was laid to rest at the Royal Burial Ground in the Hagaparken, his coffin borne on a horse-drawn funeral carriage through the icy streets of Stockholm.
Prince Bertil’s funeral 1997
The Princess took a brief respite from royal duties following her husband’s death, often walking her golden retriever Bingo in the grounds of the Villa Solbacken. However, she was soon back at work and joked to one interviewer, ‘I’m very glad I’ve got a steady job’. One of her first events following Bertil’s death was her presence at the opening of a new session of the Swedish Parliament. Interviews with Lilian tended to be in her native English-it was still the language she was most comfortable speaking, particularly under the public spotlight. The Welsh-born Princess would continue to emphasise that ‘I want to carry on doing, as much as I can, all my husband’s jobs. I enjoy it. I don’t know what I would do without it.’
Princess Lilian with Crown Princess Victoria late 1990’sPrincess Lilian and Queen Ingrid
Presenting a prize to Swedish conductor Stefan Solyom, she spoke too of her deep love for opera, be it modern or traditional, as well as the enjoyment she derived from the music and films of the 1920’s and 1930’s. When one interview ended after only a few questions, she seemed surprised and laughed, ‘Is that all?’ Many of the scholarships and grants which the Princess awarded were given by the Order of Free Masons of Sweden. Again this was a link with Prince Bertil who had been had been Grand Master of the Order. One interviewer-who admitted in advance that his question was somewhat controversial-asked Lilian if freemasonry had a place in modern society. She was slightly evasive on the subject, saying that she did not know much about it, as after all it was so ‘secret’. However, she was quick to agree the Freemason’s ‘do a wonderful job’ in relation to charitable fundraising. The Princess also presented awards for industrial design and glassware. Lilian admitted to having a penchant for Orrefors glass. However, she also mentioned a wonderful set of antique glassware, belonging to King Carl XIII, which had been a gift to Bertil from Prince Eugene, the youngest son of King Oskar II. Eugene had wonderful taste, for he was a renowned patron of the arts. He certainly might have been amused by Lilian’s outspokenness regarding a portrait of Prince Bertil which hung in the Freemasons’ Hall in Stockholm. In response to a question on whether it bore a resemblance to Bertil, she admitted to an interviewer that she did not like it as ‘It does not look like him’. Lilian then turned the question on the hapless questioner, ‘What do you think?’ He was left fumbling for a quick reply in English, eventually observing it was ‘a vague resemblance’. She retorted decisively, ‘Very vague!’
Meanwhile, in France the Princess continued to visit the Villa Mirage, sometimes accompanied by Queen Silvia, who was spotted shopping with Lilian at the local market. The visits to the south of France were not all for pleasure as the Princess was Patron of the Swedish Club on the French Riviera and also attended the local Swedish church for which she raised funds. Yet, despite these duties, Lilian would joke, on arriving back in Stockholm, ‘I just came back home to work…’ for causes which were ‘so close to my heart.’ As the years rolled on, the Princess visited the Riviera less and ownership of the villa was eventually passed over to the King and Queen who make use of the holiday residence to this day, although there was press speculation (Expressen) in September 2023 that the King was considering selling it.
Princess Lilian celebrates the Millenium.
On the eve of the Millennium, Lilian joined other members of the royal family and their guests to watch a spectacular sound and light show with a historical theme sporting a shimmery, slinky, silvery outfit. The weather, however, in wintry Stockholm was icy cold. A concerned guest turned to Princess Lilian, then in her 85th year, and asked ‘Are you not freezing?’ She smiled impishly and retorted, ‘Oh no, darling, I’m well prepared!’ and opened her coat to reveal several hot water bottles secreted in the lining.
Princess Lilian’s Memoirs 2000
When Lilian celebrated her 85th birthday in the summer of 2000, there was a great deal of attention from the press. Aftonbladet described her as ‘the Princess who steals the show.’ Lilian was filmed at Villa Solbacken (she practically skipped down the steps) receiving the gift of a copy of a newly-published book the Princess had written on her life with Bertil , co-authored by journalist Omar Magnergård and Elisabeth Tarras-Wahlberg, the Director of Information at the Royal Court. In it, Lilian singled out Queen Silvia for praise, recalling that she had come to her rescue during the final days of Prince Bertil’s life, even sleeping over several nights at the Villa Solbacken on a camp bed in the downstairs living room in order to provide her with support during those dark days. She also admitted to interviewers, ‘Yes, the Queen is my dearest friend.’ There were also happier revelations: Lilian’s favourite drink was a Bloody Mary; her favourite sportsman, tennis player Stefan Edberg. It is no wonder that Crown Princess Victoria is said to have ‘devoured it [the book] from cover to cover’ when she received her copy in person from her ‘Auntie Lilian’ at the Villa Solbacken, only days prior to its official release. And Lilian’s recipe for keeping fit as she approached her 86th year: ‘I work as hard as I can – it’s the only way to stay young’.
Princess Lilian at her final Noble Prize Ceremony 2006
A somewhat frail Princess Lilian attended the Gala Dinner at the Royal Palace to celebrate King Carl Gustaf XVI 60th Birthday on 30 April, 2006. She was also present at Crown Princess Victoria’s Birthday celebrations at Solliden Castle, Borgholm the following July. Lilian held the future queen in high esteem, telling the Swedish newspaper, Aftonbladet, ‘She will be an excellent queen, so ambitious, interested and talented.’ The Princess was also the VIP guest at the unveiling of the Princess Lilian Suite, named in her honour at Stockholm’s Grand Hotel. This year also marked her final appearance-her 29th-at the annual Nobel Prize festivities. Lilian had remained loyal to designer Elizabeth Wondrak who, each year, had been responsible making for yet another evening gown for the prestigious ceremony. That particular year the Princess wore a favourite diamond tiara by Boucheron, sometimes referred to as the ‘Laurel Wreath Diadem’ which had belonged to Bertil’s British mother, Crown Prince Margareta (‘Daisy’), who died tragically young in 1920, aged 38.
Yet, even at the grand old age of 90, and with her memory now failing, Lilian had not lost the ability to surprise. Her view of life remained touched by good humour: ‘I’m still hanging on [although] I’m not as young as I used to be but still…’ When two men called-by at the Villa Solbacken to present her with flowers, they asked an employee (who met them at the gate) if they could present them to the Princess in person. Although they were informed that the Princess was resting, the aide offered to speak to the the Princess. Lilian immediately agreed to meet them both and when the duo were shown into her presence, they found her to be both alert and happy to see them. Indeed, the Princess thought it was hilarious that two gentlemen in their 30s, not only knew where she lived, but had then taken the trouble to come and visit her. Lilian joked that the next time she must invite them to tea!
In 2008, the Princess fell and fractured her femur. An operation proved successful. Lilian then suffered another fall in February 2009 and was rushed to the private Sophiahemmet Hospital where another fracture (this time not of the femur) was confirmed. However no surgical intervention was necessary on this occasion. Nonetheless, she remained in the hospital for a period of recuperation. In June 2010 it was announced by the Princess’ Court Marshal that 95-year-old Lilian was afflicted with senile dementia (many of the Swedish newspapers reported it was Alzheimer’s disease) and would therefore be unable to attend Crown Princess Victoria’s wedding to Daniel Westerling. This must have been a particular blow for Victoria recalling her Aunt’s aforementioned approval of the romance. The Court Marshal also confirmed Lilian was currently being cared for at her home on Djurgården. Interestingly, at a press conference in connection with the announcement of her engagement to Mr Westerling, Victoria wore a brooch which Lilian and Bertil had given to her in the 1990’s, doubtless as a nod to ‘Auntie Lilian’.
The entire royal family was by her side when she died peacefully at her Stockholm residence on the afternoon of 10 March 2013. She had been most unwell for the last year and in need of constant nursing care. A communique from the King was issued by the Royal Palace:
‘It is with great sadness that my family and I announce that Princess Lilian passed away on Sunday 10 March. The princess was much loved by our family and we all remember her as a happy, funny and witty person. She was a true spreader of joy and had the ability to always create a good and cordial atmosphere around her. The young people of the family always appreciated the Princess’s cheerful antics and joking manner’. The King was also at pains to emphasise her loyalty to both the Royal Family and to Sweden. Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt noted that she was ‘liked and appreciated by many people.’ Meanwhile, journalist Sted Hedman recalls, ‘She was a charming woman, she was human and always had a twinkle in her eye. I liked her very much’. There was comment too from her homeland. Ben Glaze of Walesonline noted that hers was a ‘Cinderella story in real life.’
The Mayor of Swansea, Dennis James, said the Princess, ‘one of Swansea’s most famous daughters’ who stayed ‘proud of her Swansea links’ and helped to raise the Welsh city’s profile overseas.
Princess Lilian’s Funeral Service in the Chapel of the Royal Palace. Note the British Union Jack Flag.
Around a hundred invited guests had gathered in the Chapel of the Royal Palace in central Stockholm on 16 March to say a final farewell to Princess Lilian. Her coffin-surmounted by a crown which had belonged to Princess Eugénie, the daughter of King Oskar I of Sweden-was watched over by six royal guardsmen and the heavy scent of flowers filled the air. Outside, it was bright, sunny day and Slottsbacken was filled with people who had gathered to honour the princess, many of whom had lined the street well in advance of the funeral service commencing at 1.00pm. Others had already taken the opportunity to pay their respects the previous afternoon, when the doors of the Chapel were opened for three hours to allow people to pay their respects. Members of the Swedish Royal Family were visibly moved, as were Princess Astrid of Norway and Queen Margrethe of Denmark, Lilian’s niece by marriage (her late mother was Queen Ingrid). At one stage, Queen Silvia and her son Prince Carl Philip were observed holding hands. The Princess’ coffin was wrapped in the royal standard, with its distinctive three crowns, and adorned with a wreath of lily of the valley. Next to the coffin, hung a British flag, an acknowledgement of Lilian’s British heritage. The Reverend Nicholas Howe, a priest in the Anglican church in Stockholm (St Peter and St Sigfrid’s) participated in the service. Lilian had attended this church on special religious festivals. Also present in the Chapel was a relative of Lilian’s from Britain, Mrs Barbara Davis. However, there was no mention of Lilian’s half-sisters (they shared the same father), Janice Rees and Sonia Roberts attending from their home in Wales. The sisters-who were around thirty years younger than Lilian-had never met the Princess, although according to an article by the Swedish journalist Carl Juborg in the Expressen newspaper, they had sent Christmas cards to Sweden and Lilian had once replied to a letter sent to her, through her Court Marshal (and close friend of Lilian), Baroness Elisabeth Palmstierna, saying ‘I hope we will meet.’ Another Brit in attendance was Sir Roger Moore who was accompanied by his wife Kiki. The service-which was broadcast on Swedish television-was led by Bishop Emeritus Lars-Göran Lönnermark. He noted that, ‘Lilian Craig entered into the rules [of the Royal Family] for the sake of love.’ Shortly after the funeral service began, a 21-gun mourning salute was fired from nearby Skeppsholmen. Although most of the service was in Swedish, the psalm ‘Abide With Me’ was sung by the congregation in English. In a nod to her Welsh heritage, Vaughan William’s hymn ‘For All The Saints’ echoed through the chapel, as did Hubert Parry’s ‘Jerusalem’, a standard musical offering at most English funerals. The funeral concluded with the classic Scottish folk song ‘Auld Lang Syne’ played on the bagpipes. Crown Princess Victoria was literally moved to tears and could be seen dabbing her eyes with a hanky. The coffin was then transported by motorised hearse to the Royal Burial Ground in the Hagaparken where Princess Lilian was finally laid to rest next to her beloved Prince Bertil. Press photographers caught a glimpse of the King saluting his Aunt’s coffin as it was interred, with Queen Silvia and Queen Margrethe of Denmark standing to his immediate right and left.
In September 2013, the British Ambassador to Sweden, Paul Johnston, along with the Reverend Nicholas Howe, invited members of the Swedish Royal Family and friends of Princess Lilian to a memorial service at Stockholm’s Anglican church to celebrate her long life. Hymns were sung in English, with several other works of music performed by the violinist Hugo Ticciati and musicians from Lilla Akademien, a school which focuses on developing musical talent in children. Crown Princess Victoria and the British Ambassador both read poems, while Sir Roger Moore provided a fond tribute of reminisces. This was followed by a reception at the British Ambassador’s Residence. The service was deemed to be ‘private’ and no media attended.
Meanwhile, in November 2013, details of the Princess Lilian’s will appeared in the Swedish press thanks to a detailed account provided in an article by the Expressen newspaper. As was expected many of her possessions, art and jewellery went to the King and Queen and their three children. The Queen also received a monetary legacy of 5 Million SEK. There were smaller legacies to her two Swedish goddaughters; while the two housekeepers at the Villa Solbacken each received 50,000 SEK. Lilian’s chauffeur was bequeathed a Mercedes Benz car. Meanwhile, 10,000SEK was left to the Anglican Church in Stockholm and 100,000SEK to SOS Barnbyar. The Princess had also sponsored a child from overseas called Anita and she was bequeathed 10,000SEK.
Family members of Lilian in Britain were also remembered: Christine Robinson, the daughter of the Princess’ cousin, Jean Beaumond, inherited Lilian’s Mayfair flat in Chesterfield Gardens, along with a monetary legacy of 50,000SEK. Christine had already lived in the apartment for around 15 years and had been close to Lilian, whom she saw frequently during the Princess’ visits to London. Jean Beaumond, meanwhile, received a large legacy of 5 Million SEK (around £500,000) and a gold necklace with ruby and diamond medallions, as well as watercolour portrait of Princess Lilian. Nor did Lilian forget an old British friend: Rolla Campbell, the sister of the late actress Kay Kendall, received the gift of a portrait of Kay.
Although Lilian has been dead for around a decade now, she is certainly not forgotten. Queen Silvia of Sweden would recall that Princess Lilian had a very ‘dignified appearance’ and ‘lovely British sense of humour’; while a ‘twinkle in the eye’ indicated that she did not take herself too seriously. Yet, the Queen also reflected that ‘She was a very important part of our family, not least for me personally, and she participated to a large extent in our family life’. Lilian was also ‘an active person’ whether that be attending a large formal event or accompanying one of the young generation of royals to football practice on a rainy day.
In August 2015 an exhibition ‘Clothes for a Princess: the Lilian Look’ opened in the Pillar Hall at the Royal Palace. This featured day wear, evening gowns, hats and other accessories from the late Princess’ stylish wardrobe, many in her favourite pastel colours. The exhibition also featured sketches and correspondence between Lilian and the designers [notably Elizabeth Wondrak] who created her ‘look’. The Queen of Sweden made a speech at the opening during which she stated, ‘It is sometimes said that the clothes make the man. That is probably often true for both men and women. But with Princess Lilian it was the opposite. In her case, it was the woman who made the clothes.’ Thereafter, in October 2016, Princess Lilian’s British-designed wedding outfit was displayed in the Hall of State at the Royal Palace in Stockholm, as part of the exhibition, ‘1976-2015 Royal Wedding Dresses’. Again, in 2018, Britain’s Tatler magazine did a feature on the Princess and praising her as a style icon. The interest in Lilian, Sweden’s British Princess- the first British-born person to marry into the Swedish Royal Family since Princess Margaret of Connaught in 1905-remains enduring. This is unsurprising given that, as her nephew, King Carl Gustav noted during a speech at the time of her wedding to Bertil- the ‘recipe’ of his Aunt’s personality was a mixture of ‘charm’, ‘humour’, ‘wisdom’, ‘patience’ and ‘prudence’ combined with ‘lots of laughter.’
Robert Prentice is a royal blogger and has in the past contributed articles to Majesty Magazine and Royalty Digest Quarterly. He is the author of the biography: Princess Olga of Yugoslavia: Her Life and Times.
When Princess Marie of Romania married King Alexander of Yugoslavia in June 1922, she arrived from Bucharest to a court in need of a woman’s touch. However, Cecil Parrot, who would later serve as Marie’s eldest son, Crown Prince Peter’s tutor, observed that Her Majesty was not really interested in the minutiae of court life. Nonetheless, Marie was most definitely fascinated with anything to do automobiles. How did this situation come about at a time when few women-let alone a Queen-had even driven a car?
Prior to Marie’s arrival in Belgrade, there had been no real interest shown by King Alexander in automobiles, other than as a mode of reliable transport. State cars used included a Rolls Royce saloon and a Fiat purchased by his father, the late King Peter at a cost of $23,500. Only Prince George (Djordje) of Yugoslavia-Alexander’s brother-appears to have regularly driven a car for pleasure (including a Peugeot purchased for him in 1908 by his father). George was also almost certainly the first member of the Karadjordjevic dynasty to take to the wheel of an automobile. Although King Alexander had taken ownership of a Fiat in 1910, he did not care for driving. Conversely, Mignon (the Queen’s family nickname) had long had a passion for motoring, dating back to the days of her youth in Romania. It is said that she even drove her mother, Queen Marie of Romania, from Bucharest to Belgrade, prior to the announcement of her engagement to King Alexander. This hobby she shared with her younger brother, Prince Nicholas of Romania, who would subsequently help to advise her on future motor car purchases.
In Belgrade, Marie’s fervour for motoring was inspired by a wedding gift of a British Rolls Royce Phantom 80CE, a powerful machine in which she was sometimes pictured driving her husband. This drew her the accolade of her being the first woman driver in her adopted homeland. Her Majesty was also said to have been stopped for speeding. Rather than use her royal status to avoid paying the fine, she quietly settled it. Interestingly, many of the Queen’s cars carried her royal cipher on the driver’s door.
By the mid-1920’s Marie had also decided to purchase a nippy three-seater, a Fiat 509. Interestingly, the previous year, her kinswoman (and some say rival at court in Belgrade) Princess Olga of Yugoslavia purchased, at a cost of £160, a two-seater Fiat following a visit to the Italian company’s famous roof-top test track in Turin. Had Olga’s purchase-with funds provided by her husband Prince Paul-inspired Mignon to look to Italy?
In due course, Marie’s husband’s subjects became accustomed to seeing Her Majesty adeptly handling her latest powerful automobile acquisition on local roads around Belgrade and her country residence at Bled in Slovenia, often with King Alexander and a Lady-in-Waiting in the rear passenger seats. On occasion, the King could even be found sitting up-front with his wife. A queen driving powerful cars, without a chauffeur present, quickly attracted the attention of the press, both at home and abroad. Articles began to appear in newspapers and magazines informing readers of Marie’s ‘marathon’ journeys by car between Belgrade and Bucharest, not to mention the eight-hundred-mile drive between Bled and Paris.
Queen Marie’s Lincoln
Princess Olga of Yugoslavia drives her Rolls Royce
Auto Klub BadgeMarie driving Rolls Royce 80CEMarie driving Packard 1939 Belgrade Grand Prix .
Her Majesty’s passion for motoring was formally acknowledged when, in April 1924, Queen Marie was made Patroness of the Automobile Club (‘Auto-Klub’) of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. A large portrait of the Queen was later unveiled in the entrance hall of the institution’s Ljubljana branch office, where it remained until the 1940’s. During a speech at a meeting to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Auto-Klub in 1932 (the organisation had originally been established as the Automobile Club of Serbia in 1922) the Queen observed that she had owned no less than nine different cars since coming to Belgrade. One of the most recent had been a 1930 Lincoln Model L Roadster which featured what motor car aficionados refer to as a ‘beetle back’. However, the crowning glory of this period was her purchase of a 1931 Duesenberg Model J Convertible which had been displayed at the Paris Salon.
Meanwhile, Princess Olga was also driving a very up-market vehicle for, in 1928, King Alexander had given the Greek-born princess the gift of a magnificent Rolls Royce.
During one of Cecil Parrot’s first encounters with Queen Marie in 1934, at her newly-built holiday home at Miločer on the Dalmatian coast, Her Majesty (who had previously gravitated to Delâge cars) seems to have transferred her loyalties to cars from the United States. She owned a succession of Packard’s which were said to have a top speed of one-hundred miles per hour. However, Mignon also owned a Ford Roadster (which she referred to in English as the “bone shaker”) which was used for Mr Parrot’s outings with young Peter. Although the Queen had a chauffeur, Bóza, she still preferred to drive herself from Belgrade to Miločer . Mr Parrot, after a hair-raising encounter with some pedestrians, began to doubt his own driving skills on the winding Montenegrin roads, as did Court officials (fearing for the heir’s wellbeing) who now pressed Cecil to desist, so he made good use of the chauffeur’s service’s.
Marie was widowed in November 1934 when her husband, King Alexander, was assassinated in Marseille during a State Visit to France. Her son Peter now became King, although his father’s cousin, Prince Paul, acted as Prince Regent until the young man reached his majority. Nevertheless, even in widowhood, the Dowager Queen’s enthusiasm for automobiles remained undiminished. At the first-ever Belgrade Motor Show, held in from 5 to 15 March 1938, Her Majesty not only visited the show over many days, but she also arranged for her new Lincoln Zephyr 86x-probably purchased specially for the occasion-to be exhibited along with around 158 other motors which included brands such as Adler, Mercedes-Benz, Opel, Buick, Lancia and Fiat. There was certainly a need to boost car sales in the country for there were only around 12,000 cars on the roads in Yugoslavia at this time. Queen Marie’s Lincoln Zephyr would later be used by King Peter, who had been driving a motor car since 1937. He seems to have inherited his mother’s desire for speed. Peter owned an Adler and subsequently, during a holiday in Bled in 1940, he was photographed behind the wheel of an open-topped BMW 327/8. This may have been the same BMW car King Peter was observed purchasing at the 1938 show from the stand of Belgrade’s famous “Veleuato” car dealership owned by Sekula Zečević, while the Queen had settled on a Dodge Convertible from the same dealer.
In 1939 the Belgrade Grand Prix race was organized at a circuit in the Kalemegdan Park to honour of the birthday of King Peter II. However, the Queen’s influence was acknowledged when it was stated at the time that the youthful monarch’s love for (fast) cars and automobile races owed much to the influence of his mother. Her love for cross-country races now led to her being described as one of the few female rally drivers in Europe.
During and following World War 2, Queen Marie lived in England. However, this did not deter her desire to pursue a life of motoring. In May 1958, she arrived in Paris en route to Lucerne and lunched with Princess Olga and her husband Prince Paul. And the topic of conversation: the Queen’s acquisition of a new car!
There is a postscript to this story: Queen Marie’s grandson, His Royal Highness Crown Prince Alexander II attended the launch of a beautifully illustrated book “Cars and the Karadjordjevic Dynasty” by Miroslav Milutinovic at the Serbian Archives in May, 2014.
Robert Prentice is the author of the biography “Princess Olga of Yugoslavia: Her Life and Times” (Grosvenor House Publishing) available to purchase from Amazon etc..
On Wednesday 22nd September, Britain’s King Charles III commenced a State Visit to France, accompanied by his wife Queen Camilla. Although he had, as Prince of Wales, visited on 34 previous occasions, this was His Majesty’s first visit since his accession to the throne in September 2022. In the age of social media the President had already released a poignant message to his royal visitor: ”You visited as a Prince, you return as a King. Your Majesty, welcome”.
The visit started on a blustery note when the royal aircraft-an Airbus Voyager-flew into a windswept Orly Airport. First down the steps was His Majesty, dressed in a traditional suit. He was followed by his wife, Queen Camilla, who visibly struggled to keep her pink Philip Treacy hat from flying into the blue yonder, as she descended the aircraft steps. Fortunately, Camilla’s pink wool crepe coat dress by British designer Fiona Clare, refrained from adding to her obvious discomfiture.
Thereafter, there was to be a warm welcome throughout the stay, starting with an official greeting from the French Prime Minister, Elisabeth Borne. Also waiting patiently in line to shake hands with the royal couple were the British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly, the British Ambassador Dame Menna Rawlings and the French Ambassador to the United Kingdom, Hélène Tréheux-Duchêne. Twenty members of the Republican Guard formed a Guard of Honour.
The niceties over, the King and Queen then drove off in the State Bentley (which had been brought over to Paris from the mews at Buckingham Palace) to journey into central Paris surrounded by police outriders. Indeed, security was noticeably tight with French newspapers frequently mentioning ‘the ring of steel’ which had been put in place, with the aid of 8000 police, to help guard against any possible terrorist attacks or civil disturbance. The first engagement of the visit took place at the Arc de Triomphe where the King and Queen were warmly received by President Macron and his chic wife Brigitte. The President was seen to briefly giggle as Queen Camilla continued to struggle with her hat in the windy conditions. Yet soon all was serious as a service of remembrance commenced (attended by veterans and members of the military) during which the King re-lit the eternal flame of remembrance (in memory of those who died in the First and Second World Wars) using the Comite de la Flamme passed to him by Monsieur Macron. He and the King also laid a wreath together. In another symbol of togetherness, almost simultaneously, there was a joint flypast above the iconic monument by aircraft from Britain’s Red Arrows and their French counterpart La Patrouille de France.
After meeting British and French veterans, pupils from the British School of Paris as well as Scouts and Guides, the King joined the President to travel down the Avenue des Champs-Élysées in an official car. Security prohibited the use of an open top vehicle, but as a compromise the King and the President stood up and waved to waiting crowds through the car’s open sunroof. The Queen and Birgitte Macron travelled behind in a second vehicle.
Arriving at the President of France’s official residence, the Élysée Palace, the two couple’s paused briefly on the steps for a photographic opportunity. Once inside, protocol dictated that there by an exchange of gifts between the King and the President. Charles gave Monsieur Macron a set of the complete works of Voltaire, while the French President presented Charles with a specially commissioned gold coin from the Paris Mint which features the King’s image on one side and Highgrove, His Majesty’s Gloucestershire home, on the other. Charles was also given a rare edition of the Romain Gary novel, Les Racines du Ciel [The Roots of Heaven].
Subsequently, the King was in a visibly relaxed mood as he smiled and laughed with onlookers while walking with the President from the Elysee Palace to the nearby British Ambassador’s residence situated on the fashionable rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré. From above, people gathered on balconies and cried out “Vive Le Roi” [God Save the King] as Charles passed below them, guarded by protection officers. On arriving at the Residence (which was once the home of Napoleon’s sister Princess Borghese), the King and the President planted an oak tree. This was a tradition which was a particular favourite of the late Queen Elizabeth II.
In the evening, the King and Queen were guests of the President at a sumptuous banquet held in the historical setting of the Salon de Glaces [Hall of Mirrors] at the Palace of Versailles. The palace was built by France’s King Louis XIV and is situated some 19 kilometres from the city centre of Paris. All eyes were Queen Camilla as she stepped from the royal car wearing a blue navy cape evening dress by Dior, accessorised by a superb Victorian sapphire and diamond necklace which had been a wedding gift from King George VI to his elder daughter, the future Queen Elizabeth II, in 1947. Sadly, Queen Camilla chose not to wear the sapphire and diamond tiara which her late mother-in-law had purchased in 1963 to compliment this necklace. 160 guest were invited to attend and included singer Sir Mick Jagger, actor Hugh Grant and former Chelsea boss Arsene Wenger. They dined on lobster, crab, Bresse chicken, thirty-month-old Comté cheese and renowned French pastry chef Pierre Hermé’s signature pudding Isfahan Persian Macaron which contains rose water, raspberries, and lychees.
In his speech, the King recalled the “profoundly moving gestures” in France, including the flying of the Union flag at the Elysée Palace at the time of his mother’s death, in September 2022. Charles continued by observing that “your invitation to visit France and your exceptionally generous hospitality, are symbols of the enduring relationship between our two countries.” The King also recalled the Entente Cordiale which had been promoted between the two countries 120 years ago, thanks to the support of his great-great grandfather, King Edward VII. As he proposed a toast to the President, His Majesty noted, “Whatever lies ahead, may it endure, faithful and constant, for centuries to come.”
Although it had been a late night, the King and Queen were up bright and early to undertake a busy day of engagements. Charles had the honour of being the first British monarch to address French parliamentarians in the Senate. The speech he made was political: His Majesty was particularly focused on Ukraine and environmental matters. Russia’s “unjustified aggression” against Ukraine was condemned and the King talked-up Britain and France’s “unwavering” joint determination to ensure Ukraine “will triumph.” Where the environment was concerned he was equally robust: “Just as we stand together against military aggression, so must we strive together to protect the world from our most existential challenge of all: that of global warming, climate change and the catastrophic destruction of nature.” Charles received a standing ovation for his efforts.
The Queen, meanwhile, was at an event at France’s recently renovated National Library to inaugurate a new UK-France Literary Prize, Le Prix de l’Entente Littéraire, for young adult fiction. Camilla is passionate about all things literary and she is patron of several British charities including BookTrust and the National Literacy Trust. Her Majesty also presides over an online book club, “The Queen’s Reading Room.” Interestingly, Madame Macron is a former teacher of literature. On display for the VIP guests to peruse in the Salon d’honneur were works by Shakespeare, a first edition of Victor Hugo’s historical novel Les Misérables and an original artwork from a comic strip featuring Astérix le Gaulois [Asterix The Gaul]. Subsequently, at a reception in the imposing Salle Ovale of the library, the Queen mixed with British authors Ken Follet and Sebastian Faulks, as well as the Editor-in-Chief of France’s popular Point de Vue magazine which regularly features articles on European royalty.
Thereafter, the King and Queen, accompanied by Madame Macron, ventured to the northern Paris suburb of Saint-Denis. The royal visitors visited the Saint-Denis’s historic basilica (the burial place of French monarchs) and the town hall. The King also ventured to the local Rugby World Cup village (France is currently hosting this event) where he met rugby players, sports commentators and others associated with sport including FC Paris Saint-Germain’s defender, Presnel Kimpembe. Charles was also introduced to the football club’s Qatari president, Nasser al-Khelaifi (who presented him with the a No 3 player’s top featuring name of Charles). However, Camilla and Madame Macron also had their moment in the limelight when they indulged in a game of table tennis at a local community centre. The Queen quickly realised her limitations and laughed at her attempts, “This is embarrassing”. This ability to laugh at herself is endearing, as is her lack of pomposity.
Charles and Camilla subsequently returned to the city centre to visit the Paris flower market, situated on Île De La Cité, Marche Aux Fleurs Reine Elizabeth II. This was renamed in honour of the King’s mother at the time of her State Visit to France, in June 2014, during which Her Majesty visited the market and unveiled a sign bearing the new name. The King and Queen were re-joined by President Macron and his wife as they inspected the ongoing restoration work at the Notre-Dame Cathedral which was devastated by a fire in 2019. It is hoped the cathedral will reopen at the end of 2024. The visitors met firefighters and craftsmen involved in the rebuilding works.
On the final day of the three-day State Visit, the King and Queen flew to Bordeaux for a packed schedule of engagements. They were originally meant to have travelled by the TGV high-speed train but details of this were leaked in advance, creating security concerns. This south-western city is home to around 39,000 Brits. Their Majesties first made a stop at le Palais Rohan (the city’s Hotel de Ville/Town Hall) on Place Pey Berland where they were received by the Mayor of Bordeaux, Pierre Hurmic. While the royal couple signed the visitors’ book, they were serenaded by a local youth orchestra, before venturing into the garden to plant a loquat leaf oak tree. Meanwhile, hundreds of enthusiastic bystanders lined the streets outside to wave Union Jack and Tricolore flags in greeting. While some clapped and cheered, others were heard to shout “Vive le Roi” . A particularly moving (and spontaneous) event occurred when the King encountered the Fiji National Rugby Team at a festival on the Place de la Bourse and they serenaded him with ‘Au Rai Vei Kemuni’, a hymn traditionally sung at Fiji rugby games. The King’s mother, Queen Elizabeth II was highly revered and was recognised in Fiji as Tui Viti [“supreme tribal chief”] by the Great Council of Chiefs. When the country became a republic in 1987, Her Majesty’s official portrait remained on the walls of Government House, looking down on successive Presidents of Fiji as they swore-in government ministers.
Later, Charles and Camilla attended an official reception on board the Royal Navy Frigate HMS Iron Duke. On arrival the royal couple were greeted by a Royal Guard of Honour (who were inspected by the King) and the National Anthem was performed by the Band of His Majesty’s Royal Marines Lympstone. During the event, Their Majesties spoke to Royal Navy personnel, as well as to their French counterparts from the Marine Nationale [French navy] in order to discover how the two nations are collaborating on defence matters. Also present were local dignitaries and members of local veterans groups.
The royal couple were then given an exclusive tour of the Chateau Smith Haut Lafitte vineyard by owners Florence and Daniel Cathiard during which Charles and Camilla sampled some ‘very good’ red wine (dating from 2005, the year of their marriage) and were introduced to one of the Llamas which are used to help weed the fields. The vineyard is known for its sustainable approach to wine-making and is said to be completely organic. It also produces solar energy.
The influential French newspaper, Le Monde, opined that the visit of Charles III had “launched a reboot” of the relationship between Britain and France. But was the aim of highlighting the closeness and friendship between France and the United Kingdom, despite the shockwave of Brexit, achieved? Time will tell. Certainly, despite the security, the crowds found a way of telling the King and his wife that they were welcome, both in the City of Light and in Bordeaux. Many of the French people clearly have a place in their hearts for royalty and, in particular, for British royalty. The memory of Elizabeth II-so often alluded to directly or indirectly throughout the visit-has gone a long way to ensure this is so. Yet, the King and Queen shone bright in their own right, undertaking engagements after their own fashion. Furthermore, the press commented on the warmth between the royal couple and the presidential couple. Indeed, the whole tone was so different from the more formal State Visits of the past. It is to be hoped, as the King said in his speech in the French Senate, that the United Kingdom and the France will always remain “best friends” of an “absolutely vital partnership” as “together we face the challenges of the world”.
Le 20 septembre 2023, le Roi Charles d’Angleterre a entamé une visite d’État de trois jours à Paris. Au cours de la visite (la 35ème visite de Charles en France, mais sa première visite d’État depuis son accession au trône) le roi était accompagné de son épouse, la Reine Camilla. La visite qui a été repoussée à cause des violences qui ont accompagné l’adoption de la réforme des retraites. Avant l’arrivée du roi et de la reine, le président Emmanuel Macron a partagé un message de bienvenue poignant, écrivant sur les médias sociaux: « Vous avez visité en tant que prince, vous revenez en tant que roi. Votre Majesté, bienvenue. » La visite d’État a été considérée comme une chance de reconstruire les liens qui se sont effilochés depuis la sortie de la Grande-Bretagne de l’UE en 2020.
La première ministre Elisabeth Borne, a salué les souverains à leur arrivée à l’aéroport d’Orly juste avant 14h00. L’ambassadrice britannique, La Dame Menna Rawlings, et son homologue française en Londres, Hélène Tréheux-Duchêne, étaient également présentes. Une haie d’honneur est formée par vingt hommes de la Garde républicaine. La Reine Camilla portait une robe en crêpe de laine rose sombre de Fiona Clare et un chapeau en forme de béret rose avec un motif de feuille de Philip Treacy.
Le roi et la reine ont été conduits dans la limousine Bentley officielle du roi au centre de Paris avec une escorte de policiers. Cela faisait partie d’une opération « anneau d’acier » qui visait à protéger le couple royal et à se prémunir contre les attaques terroristes et les troubles à l’ordre public. Environ 8000 policiers ont été amenés pour garder Charles et Camilla lors d’une pour une cérémonie de ravivage de la flamme et de dépôt de gerbe sur la tombe du Soldat inconnu à l’Arc de Triomphe. Les Red Arrows de Grande-Bretagne et la Patrouille de France ont fourni un spectacle acrobatique common qui a attiré les halètements de la foule ci-dessous. Le roi et la reine ont rencontré des représentants d’organisations locales d’anciens combattants, ainsi que d’organisations scoutes et guides, et des élèves de la British School of Paris. Après, Le roi et le président ont descendu les Champs-Elysées dans une limousine officielle, saluant du toit ouvrant du véhicule.
Par la suite, le roi et le président se sont ensuite rencontrés en face à face au palais de l’Elysée où les sujets abordés comprenaient le climat et la biodiversité. Le roi et le président ont également échangé des cadeaux. Charles a donné à Macron une édition complète des écrits de l’auteur français Voltaire. En retour, M. Macron a donné au roi une pièce d’or de la Monnaie de Paris représentant le portrait de Charles. Après la rencontre, le roi était d’humeur joviale, souriant et riant alors qu’il marchait du palais de l’Elysée à la résidence de l’ambassadeur britannique. Les passants-certains sur les balcons au-dessus de la rue-criaient « vive le roi». Suivant une tradition établie par sa mère, la Reine Elizabeth II, le roi a ensuite rejoint le président Macron pour une cérémonie de plantation d’arbres dans le jardin de la résidence de l’ambassadeur britannique.
Le soir, le roi et la reine ont dîné avec le président et son épouse Birgitte dans la galerie des Glaces du château de Versailles. La reine portait une robe Dior bleue accessoirisée d’un collier en saphir et diamants ayant appartenu à la Reine Elizabeth II. On leur a servi un somptueux banquet composé du homard, du crabe et du comté vieilli pendant 30 mois. Un dessert sucré a été créé par le célèbre pâtissier Pierre Hermé. Un plan de table méticuleusement préparé par les services protocolaires de l’Élysée et Brigitte Macron indiquait aux 150 invités estimés (politiciens, diplomates, acteurs et chanteurs) où s’asseoir. Parmi les invités britanniques présents figuraient le chanteur Mick Jagger et l’acteur Hugh Grant. Dans son discours au banquet, Charles s’est exprimé principalement en français, revenant sur la longue histoire et l’alliance durable des deux nations (« notre Entente Cordiale») qui a été inspiré par son arrière-arrière-grand-père, le Roi Édouard VII. Charles a également parlé de l’amour de sa défunte mère pour la France et a rappelé le dîner d’Elizabeth II à Versailles en 1972, lorsque le président Pompidou était l’hôte.
Au cours de la deuxième journée de la visite, le roi a prononcé un discours devant les parlementaires au Sénat. Il a été le premier monarque britannique de l’histoire à l’avoir fait. Le souverain a parlé de l’amitié étroite entre le Royaume-Uni et la France. Charles a également souligné sa vision environnementale et de la nécessité d’aller de l’avant avec espoir et courage. Il a reçu une ovation debout. Entre-temps, la reine (qui est un fervent partisan de nombreuses organisations d’alphabétisation et organisations caritatives au Royaume-Uni) a inauguré un nouveau prix littéraire franco-britannique (Le Prix de l’Entente Littéraire) à la Bibliothèque nationale de France en compagnie de l’ex-professeure de lettres Brigitte Macron. Dans le salon d’honneur, Camilla et Madame Macron ont vu plusieurs trésors appartenant à la collection de la bibliothèque qui ont un lien avec le Royaume-Uni et la France. Ceux-ci comprenaient des manuscrits anciens tels que Les Misérables, Shakespeare et Astérix le Gaulois. Lors d’une réception à la Salle Ovale, la reine a rencontré le rédacteur en chef du magazine français Point de Vue, ainsi que les auteurs britanniques Ken Follet et Sebastian Faulks.
Par la suite, Charles et Camilla se sont rendus à Saint-Denis, au nord de Paris, pour rencontrer des groupes sportifs communautaires et des joueurs célèbres alors que la France accueille actuellement la Coupe du monde de rugby. À un moment donné, la reine et Madame Macron joué une brève partie de tennis de table dans un centre communautaire. De plus, le roi et la reine ont inspecté les travaux de rénovation à l’emblématique cathédrale Notre-Dame. Le Président Macron et son épouse accompagnaient Leurs Majestés. Pendant son emploi du temps chargé, Charles trouva le temps de visiter le Marché aux fleurs Reine Elizabeth II, ainsi nommé, en 2014, en l’honneur de sa défunte mère. Enfin, l’intérêt de longue date du roi pour l’environnement a de nouveau été souligné lorsque Charles a assisté à une réception et à une table ronde sur la biodiversité au Muséum national d’histoire naturelle. Ainsi s’est terminé la deuxième journée de la visite d’État du roi et de la reine en France.
Le 22 septembre, le roi et la reine Camilla ont atterri à Bordeaux le dernier jour de leur visite d’État en France. Leurs Majestés sont arrivées Place Pey Berland, où se trouve l’Hôtel de Ville de Bordeaux, le Palais Rohan. Ils y ont été reçus par le maire de Bordeaux, Pierre Hurmic et ont signé le livre d’or tout en étant sérénadés par un orchestre de jeunes. Des centaines de personnes se sont alignées dans les rues de la ville et ont agité des drapeaux de l’Union Jack et des drapeaux français. Beaucoup ont crié « Vive le roi ». Au cours de la visite, le couple royal a assisté à une réception sur un navire de la Royal Navy, HMS Iron Duke, avant de se rendre au centre-ville pour rencontrer des membres de la communauté britannique qui avaient établi des entreprises dans la région. Puis, ils se sont aventurés dans un vignoble bio à Martillac, château Smith Haut Lafitte, à la fois l’une des plus anciennes propriétés viticoles de Bordeaux et l’une des plus pionnières dans son approche du terroir.
L’influent journal français, Le Monde, a conclu que la visite de Charles III mettent en lumière une relation apaisée entre la France et le Royaume-Uni. Un autre sujet qui a été commenté était la relation chaleureuse entre le couple royal et le couple présidentiel, si différente des visites royales plus formelles du passé. Il faut espérer, comme l’a dit le roi dans son discours devant le Sénat français, que le Royaume-Uni et la France resteront toujours « les meilleurs amis » d’un « partenariat absolument vital » car « ensemble nous faisons face aux défis du monde ».
When King Charles III is crowned on 6 May at Westminster Abbey -the site of coronations for over 900 years-the actual crown used during the ceremony is known as St Edward’s Crown. This coronation crown is regarded as the centrepiece of the Crown Jewels (or Crown Regalia) of the United Kingdom and is of a traditional design, being composed of a gold circlet supporting four jewelled cross pattée (a symbol of Christianity used, inter alia, by the Knights Templar during the Holy Land Crusades) as well as four jewelled fleur-de-lys. Rising from the crosses pattée are four half-arches, set with precious stones, depressed in the centre and at the point of intersection is the ‘monde’ (French for ‘world’). This is an orb which represents, as the name suggests, the world that the monarch rules over. This is topped by a single cross pattée (again representing the Christian world) from which hang two platinised-gold drops. The purple velvet cap is trimmed with ermine. Two rows of gold beads border the circlet and outline the arches of the crown.
St Edward’s crown was apparently made using gold from an older crown (probably that of Edward the Confessor who reigned in the 11th century and is buried in the Abbey) for the coronation of another Charles-that of King Charles II in 1661. The crown, which was commissioned from the then royal jeweller, Robert Vyner, is 26 inches (66 centimetres) in circumference, stands 12 inches (30 centimetres) in height and is very heavy, weighing 4 pounds 12 ounces (or just over 2.15 kilos) as it is made of solid gold. In the earlier years, the stones which adorned St Edward’s Crown were hired (in 1661 the cost for this alone was a mighty £500), but this practice was changed for the coronation of the present King’s great-grandfather, King George V, in 1911, when Garrard, the Crown Jewellers, reset the Crown with 444 semi-precious stones including rubies, amethysts, sapphires, garnets, topazes and tourmalines. 16 of these stones are large collets set into the band of the crown. The crown is normally on display at the Jewel House of the Tower of London, although it was removed from there to allow for ‘modification’ work to be undertaken prior to the Coronation.
Interestingly, although St Edward’s Crown is today regarded as the official coronation crown, only six monarchs have actually been crowned using it (the last being Queen Elizabeth II in 1953). For instance, Queen Victoria thought it too heavy and preferred to make use of the lighter Imperial State Crown in June 1838. Her son, the ailing King Edward VII, followed suit in August 1902. In addition, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II, St Edward’s Crown was used as a heraldic symbol of royal authority, being incorporated into a multitude of emblems and insignia such as those used by the military and the police. However, King Charles III has instead chosen to make use of the old Tudor Crown of State (which was destroyed in 1649 following the execution of King Charles I) as the royal cypher (also sometimes referred to as King Henry VIII’s Crown). In doing this, he is following in the footsteps of Edward VII, George V, Edward VIII and George VI.
It is also worth noting that the United Kingdom is unique amongst European monarchies for making use of its regalia for the consecration ceremony of the crowning of the Sovereign. The actual placing of the Crown on the Sovereign’s head is seen as the climax of the service and during which the entire assembly stand as the Archbishop of Canterbury (the Primate of the Church of England) first raises high St Edward’s Crown which is then ‘reverently’ placed upon the Sovereign’s head. This done, all the prince and princesses, peers and peeresses put on their coronets and a great shout goes up from the congregation, ‘God Save the King.’ Trumpets then sound in the Abbey while outside, as a Royal Salute, the great guns of the Tower of London are fired by the Honourable Artillery Company, while those in Hyde Park are set off by The King’s Troop, Royal Horse Artillery.
On 1 May 1920, a ten-year-old girl dressed all in white marches through the streets of her native Stockholm behind a coffin draped in a flag accompanied by her four siblings. All around her in the procession are the great and good from among the royalties of Europe. In the coffin were the mortal remains of the child’s mother, Crown Princess Margareta of Sweden (born Princess Margaret of Connaught, the elder child of Britain’s Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught {third son of Queen Victoria} and his wife Princess Louise of Prussia.) The child in question was ten-year-old Princess Ingrid of Sweden. She was the third child and only daughter of Crown Princess Margareta’s marriage to Crown Prince Gustav Adolf, the eldest child of King Gustav V of Sweden. The royal couple had met in Cairo, in early 1905, and it seems to have been something of a coup de foudre. Prince Gustav Adolf (as he then was) proposed to Princess Margaret at a dinner party given by the British Consul-General in Egypt, Lord Cromer, and they were married at St George’s Chapel in Windsor on 15 June 1905, in the presence of Britain’s King Edward VII, who was pleased by his niece’s union to the Swedish prince, for it was indeed a happy love match. Interestingly, Margaret was not the only English princess to venture to northern Scandinavia that year, as her cousin Maud (a daughter of King Edward VII) arrived in neighbouring Norway as Queen, being the spouse of Prince Charles of Denmark, who was elected as King of Norway following the recent dissolution of the union between Norway and Sweden. He took the title of King Haakon VII.
Ingrid was born in the Royal Palace in central Stockholm on 28 March 1910. A twenty-eight gun salute rang out from the battery at Skeppsholmen to announce the arrival of a princess. She was christened on 10 May in the Royal Chapel. The Crown Prince couple had four other children-all boys: Gustav Adolf (b. 1906), Sigvard (b. 1907), Bertil (b. 1912) and Carl Johan (b. 1916). Being the only daughter, Ingrid and her mother-who unusually for the time breastfed her children-soon formed a close bond, as Margareta preferred to be closely involved in the upbringing of her children, rather than rely heavily on help from a nurse or nanny, as was the case among most European royalties. A visiting Spanish Princess, Eulalia wrote that the Crown Princess gave the Swedish court ‘just a touch of the elegance of the Court of St James’s [in London].’ And here lies the key to Ingrid’s personality: the English influence that was imbued in her from birth by her mother. Soon the young child was immersed in reading English-language nursery books such as Kate Greenway’s “Under the Window” or “Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens” by Arthur Packham. Margareta was also a keen gardener and photographer. She indulged herself by taking some wonderful rare colour photographs (for this was after all 1912) of her English-style garden at the family’s summer home, Sofiero Palace, near Helsingborg. These later featured in two books which were published in Sweden and accompanied by illustrations and drawings by the English princess, who counted artists such as the English sculptor Clare Frewen Sheridan as a friend. Often by her side in that wonderful garden was young Ingrid, doubtless entranced by the tripod camera which her mother used to capture such clear images. Another English trait was the use of nicknames en famille. Ingrid became known as ‘Sessan’ or ‘San’, abbreviations of the Swedish word for princess, prinsessan. It goes without saying that English was also widely spoken at Sofiero, although Margareta had been able to speak fluent Swedish within two years of her arrival in Sweden. This fluency in English-without the drawback of a heavy foreign accent-would serve Ingrid well in her future role as Queen of Denmark, as the Scandinavian languages are not widely understood in an international context.
During Ingrid’s formative years, Margareta encouraged her children to participate in amateur dramatics. In one play, Ingrid was tasked with playing a princess and was quite insistent that she must have a tiara, ‘otherwise you are not a real princess.’ Ingrid’s brothers were also willing players in these productions, although they were more likely to dress up as sailors. However, all of the children liked nothing better than a game of cowboys and indians in the summer palace garden, with a white conical-shaped tent serving as a tepee. These images were caught for posterity by Margareta on her new cine camera. The camera also captured Ingrid being led on a horse and cart or learning to ride or feeding swans on the boating pond. She was also a bit of a tomboy, happy to indulge in a little football with her brothers or watch a game of curling with her mother and brothers in winter. Yet, Margareta also made sure Ingrid received an education. In old age, Ingrid would recall that ‘I had classes at the [Royal] Palace. My mother …thought [as the only girl] I should have [female] companions’ to study alongside her ‘as she did not think it was a good idea for children to be on their own.’ Some commentators have mentioned that the Princess may have been dyslexic. Like her mother, Ingrid showed an aptitude for art and would later enjoy photography. The family, on occasion, made visits to their grandfather at his home, Bagshot Park, in leafy Berkshire. This further imbued Ingrid with an understanding of English ways and gave her an understanding of her place in the British Royal Family. A particular focus of the day-whether it be at Sofiero, in Stockholm or at Bagshot Park-was afternoon tea. This wonderfully English feast usually consisted of tea, sandwiches, scones and cakes and was served around 4pm-5pm each afternoon.
Nonetheless, there was another side to Crown Princess Margareta which Ingrid must have observed. As a British princess, she always understood (for it had been drilled into her) that with privilege came duty. During World War I, Margareta set up a knitting guild to provide garments for the Red Cross. She also put her name to a scheme to encourage women to work on the land. Margareta was also interested in matters involving the welfare of mothers and their children and set up a charity to promote this. She was also Honorary President of the Association for the Blind in Sweden.
In 1918, Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark paid a visit to Sofiero, which was not unusual as the links between the Danish and Swedish royal families were close, both through marriage and descent. At that time Frederik was a mere nineteen and Ingrid but a child of eight. This was also the year that King Gustav V celebrated his 60th birthday and there was a large gathering of the extended royal family, including Ingrid, at Tullgarn Palace. Indeed, images from that time make it clear that there were not many royal family events where Ingrid was not present. Of this period, Ingrid would note that ‘We were children who were happy. Everything was joyful and we were happy in a warm family atmosphere.’ Meanwhile, Ingrid was asked to be a flower girl at the wedding of her mother’s sister, Princess Patricia of Connaught, in 1919. Patsy married the a British naval officer, Captain Alexander Ramsay and relinquished her royal title, being known thereafter as Lady Patricia Ramsay.
In early 1920, 38-year-old Crown Prince Margareta was pregnant with her sixth child when she had endured a bout of measles which aggravated an ear, which had also proved to be troublesome the previous year. An operation then took place for the removal of diseased mastoid air cells. There seem to have been complications, as she died of sepsis (blood poisoning) on 1 May of that year. Ingrid’s father was devastated with grief (‘It was so unexpected’ Ingrid remembered) but gathered his children around him for comfort. Thereafter, he never spoke about their mother to them again, which must have been very difficult for all concerned. The joy had suddenly gone from all of their lives. Ingrid summed it up succinctly, ‘It’s a grief you never overcome. Never, never,’ adding ‘I stopped being a child.’ Crown Princess Margareta’s funeral took place in Stockholm’s Storkyrkan and she was buried in the Royal Cemetery, within the Hagaparken, Solna, with Ingrid looking on. Ingrid would later recall, ‘My mother was a lovely person. Very gifted, also artistic. Also a very practical person and full of energy. She achieved much in her very short life.’
The appearance of Lady Louise Mountbatten (born a Princess of Battenberg, although her father, Prince Louis renounced his German title during World War I and Anglicised the family name to Mountbatten) must have been something of a shock to Ingrid, who had become something of a surrogate mother figure to her young brothers, as Prince Sigvard recalled. Louise and Gustav Adolf met in London in 1923 when the Crown Prince came over for London ‘season’ with his two eldest children. They had previously met, in August 1914, when Louise and her mother Alice passed through Stockholm on their return journey to England from St Petersburg (where the duo had been on a visit to Alice’s sisters, Tsarina Alexandra and Grand Duchess Elizabeth Feodorovna of Russia [Ella]) at the outbreak of World War I. The British press commented on the fact that Gustav seemed to be paying special attention to Louise as she and Gustav paid visits to the races and spent time at the home of Louise’s brother George, the Marquess of Milford Haven. Louise was apparently nervous and uncertain as to what she should do if the Crown Prince proposed, although her mother urged her to accept, observing that Gustav could offer her a good home and a ready-made family life in a pleasant country. Even after she accepted the proposal, her doubts lingered. At one stage, Louise told a Greek relation that she was too old (she was thirty-four) and too thin to be a bride. Although Prince Gustav Adolf and Prince Sigvard, being in England, were told in person that their father had decided to remarry, their younger siblings, including Ingrid, who had remained at home in Sweden, were given the news by their paternal grandmother, Queen Victoria of Sweden, to whom they were not particularly close. To say that they were surprised would be a gross underestimation. They were not alone, as so were the majority of the Swedish public who had never heard of Louise, despite the fact that she was a great-granddaughter of Britain’s Queen Victoria, as Louise’s maternal grandmother was the late Princess Alice of Great Britain and Ireland, Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine, the second daughter of the old Queen Empress. The bride-to-be was a thus a first cousin once removed of the late Crown Princess Margareta. Although somewhat set in her ways, Louise had been a nurse during World War I and was deemed a respectable bride for the royal widower due to her royal links and maturity. She also had a democratic outlook which would doubtless appeal to the Swedes. Ingrid is pictured with her father and brother Prince Bertil around this time in England’s “Sphere” magazine of November 1923 and titled “Royal Marriage at St James’s.” This is a reference to the wedding ceremony which took place on 3 November at the Chapel Royal, St James’s Palace in central London. After a honeymoon in Italy, Louise arrived with her husband by train into Stockholm on a wintry day, 11 December, the guns of Skeppsholmen providing a welcoming salute to Sweden’s new Crown Princess.
The Crown Prince and his new bride spent the first Christmas at Drottningholm Palace, on the outskirts of Stockholm, with Gustav’s children. King Gustav and Queen Victoria did their best to act as good hosts to their son, his new wife and their grandchildren. As in past times, a giant Christmas tree dominated the room where the children’s presents were arranged on small tables. Games of badminton were played in the ballroom. Otherwise, the newlyweds occupied the same apartments in the Royal Palace as those used by Ingrid’s mother and father during their marriage; there was a similar arrangement at Sofiero (which they still used in the summer). However, Louise and Gustav also refurbished and modernised many rooms at Ulriksdal Palace, during which they were able to put their own stamp on the place. The family made use of this residence in the spring and autumn. It was in many ways neutral ground, for it was not so identified with Margareta. Louise was described as ‘gifted and determined and wanted things her own way.’ She was not perceived as ‘motherly’ and certainly did not have the captivating beauty of Margareta. Ingrid’s youngest brother, Prince Carl Johan, described Louise in his memoirs as shy and a little edgy in manner. But the one who was ‘hesitant’ and had the hardest time receiving this new addition to her family was thirteen-year-old Ingrid who, despite being only ten years old when Margareta died, had become accustomed to taking on the role as her father’s dutiful and diligent mainstay. It may have helped that, although born in Germany, Louise had been raised in England and so was accustomed to English traditions. Her introduction into this close-knit family cannot have been easy and was not helped by the trauma of delivering a still-born child in 1925. Yet, by 1930, she was first lady of Sweden following the death of her mother-in-law, the decidedly pro-German Queen Consort, Victoria. Pictures of this period often show Ingrid accompanying her father and step mother at engagements. Tactfully, Ingrid remains somewhat in the background but has invariably been given a bouquet of flowers similar in size to that of her stepmother. Yet Ingrid was also independent, living life in Stockholm as a modern, active woman. She rode, skied and skated, and was an accomplished tennis player. She learned to drive in 1928. Ingrid was also something of a royal style icon, draped in ostrich plumes, rubies and silk lames when for gala dinners. There was also a serious side, when accompanied by her friend, Brita Laurin (who had also lost her mother at a young age) Ingrid undertook charity work, particularly focusing on the blind and the deaf. The Princess also established the “Ingrid Club”, where she and other young ladies gathered at the club’s premises in central Stockholm to sew and collected money for charitable causes.
The late 1920’s and early 1930’s were a further time of royal Swedish marriages. Ingrid’s father’s cousin Astrid married Belgium’s Crown Prince Leopold in November 1926, while Astrid’s sister Märtha married Crown Prince Olav of Norway in March 1929. Ingrid was a bridesmaid at both of these weddings, travelling to Brussels and Oslo for the festivities. She had often been in the company of these sisters prior to their marriage and still often met up with them during their visits home to Sweden, usually at Fridhem, the country home of Astrid and Märtha’s parents, Danish-born Princess Ingeborg and her husband Prince Carl of Sweden, Duke of Västergötland. In 1932, Ingrid’s eldest brother, Prince Gustav Adolf (‘Edmund’), married Princess Sybilla of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Sybilla’s father, Charles Edward, was the British-born son of Queen Victoria’s eighth child and youngest son, Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany. Although raised in England until the age of fifteen, Charles eventually moved to Germany, where he subsequently inherited the Dukedom of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in 1900. As the 1930’s progressed the Duke became increasingly admiring of and involved with Hitler’s Third Reich, rising to the rank of SS Obergruppenführer in 1936. He continued to maintain close links with the British Royal Family. His sister was Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone, a sister-in-law of Britain’s Queen Mary. Interestingly, Ingrid was to serve as a bridesmaid at the wedding of Princess Alice’s daughter, Lady May Cambridge to Henry Abel-Smith in October 1931. Her future sister-in-law, Sybilla, was also a bridesmaid. Meanwhile, in 1934, Ingrid’s elder brother Sigvard was stripped of his royal rank when he married Erica Maria Patzek, the daughter of a German businessman. The same would apply when Ingrid’s younger brother Carl Johan married journalist Elin Wijkmark in 1946.
But what of Ingrid’s future? She was certainly ideally placed to make an excellent dynastic marriage. When the heir to the British throne, the Prince of Wales (‘David’) and his brother Prince George visited Stockholm in 1932, Ingrid’s name was briefly linked romantically with the former. In 1933, Ingrid, who was on a visit to her English family, was pictured at Wimbledon alongside David’s mother, Queen Mary. The latter would certainly have approved of such a marriage, given the close dynastic links between the British and Swedish royal families. Yet it was not to be: The future King Edward VIII, would fall into disgrace when he abdicated his throne, in December 1936, to marry the American divorcee Wallis Simpson. Talk of a royal romance was temporarily put on the back burner, when in late 1934, Ingrid undertook a five-month journey to the Middle East by sea and plane, in the company of her father, Crown Princess Louise and her younger brother Bertil, visiting archaeological sites (the Crown Prince was a keen archaeologist throughout his life) and examining priceless artefacts in Greece, Turkey, Iraq, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, Jerusalem (Palestine) and Jordan.
Shortly after Ingrid’s 25th birthday, it was announced, by the Swedish and Danish Royal Courts that she was to marry Denmark’s Crown Prince Frederik (‘Rico’). Ingrid and Frederik seem to have been involved romantically for around two years, although the press had not picked up on this. Frederik and his mother, Queen Alexandrine, had travelled over to Stockholm for the announcement on 15 March, but eluded the waiting press by leaving his train beforehand at Södertälje, where Ingrid was waiting in her car to drive the Crown Prince to the Royal Palace. Frederik was very much a man of the sea. Unlike most incumbents to the Danish throne, he had joined the Danish navy, as opposed to taking a commission in the armed forces. He underwent an exacting four-year spell at the Naval Cadet School in Copenhagen’s Gernersgade, together with periods spent on board the cadet ships Heimdal and Valkyrien. At his parents’ insistence, he was treated the same as any other naval cadet. Frederik was outgoing and cheerful and at ease with himself and the man in the street. He smoked a pipe and had a deep love of music and tattoos! By the time of his marriage, he had risen to the rank of Captain. It has been said that after her marriage to Frederik, Ingrid-who could be strict with herself and others-softened somewhat under his influence. The wedding in Stockholm saw a gathering of the Swedish, Danish and Norwegian royal families with some Prussian ex-royals, such as Crown Princess Cecilie also present. In addition, many of Ingrid’s British relations attended including her mother’s sister, Lady Patricia Ramsay (‘Patsy’), her mother’s cousin, Princess Helena Victoria (‘Thora’) and her mother’s sister-in-law, Princess Arthur of Connaught. The latter was also Margareta’s first cousin once removed (and thus Ingrid’s second cousin), as she was the eldest daughter of the late Louise, Princess Royal and Duchess of Fife, the eldest daughter of King Edward VII (and niece of the Duke of Connaught). Stockholm was filled with joy and cheering crowds as Ingrid entered the Storkyrkan, on 24 May, on the arm of her father wearing a wedding veil of Irish lace which had belonged to her mother. Instead of a tiara, she wore a crown of English myrtle grown in Margareta’s garden at Sofiero. The ceremony, attended by some one thousand guests, was broadcast on Swedish radio. Six hundred policeman lined the streets or were involved in protecting the royal guests.
Following the wedding, the plan had been that the newlyweds would travel south through Sweden by rail and then cross over to Copenhagen by sea in a Danish navy vessel. The Danish Royal Yacht, Dannebrog, had brought the Danish King and Queen and Crown Frederik to Stockholm for the wedding (the Danish suite being received with great fanfare and brought ashore in the ornate Vasaorden, the Swedish Royal Barge.) The Dannebrog was normally only used to transport the Danish Sovereign. It had certainly not, up until now, been put at the disposal of the Crown Prince. However, Ingrid thought it would be wonderful if she and her husband could travel to Denmark together aboard the Royal Yacht. Crown Prince Frederik was sceptical, feeling it unlikely that King Christian would grant such a request. However, such was Ingrid’s determination and charm that she won over her father-in-law, who graciously consented to permit this. A gun salute greeted the new bride as the Dannebrog arrived in Copenhagen. Even better, both King Christian and his wife, Queen Alexandrine, were waiting on the quayside to greet the new Crown Princess of Denmark as she landed in her adopted homeland and passed under a bridal arch festooned with flowers. After receiving a large bouquet, the Crown Prince and Crown Princess were taken in an open carriage to the Amalienborg where they appeared on the balcony to the acclaim of the large crowd below. A banquet was held that evening at Christiansborg Palace. Meanwhile, the country’s bakers sold Ingrid cakes and Ingrid confectionery, and many citizens had put pictures of Ingrid on display in the windows as a salutation to their new Crown Princess.
During their summer honeymoon, the couple stayed in Rome for a period of time, and invariably returned to the city almost every autumn when they could move around the streets or eat in backstreet trattoria unrecognised and undisturbed. However, they were returning to a country that was suffering, like others in Europe, from the economic downturn. There was also the cultural difference to consider. Danes were much more open and did not much care for formality, as had been the case in Stockholm. However, Ingrid (who quickly mastered Danish and took lessons in Danish history) was soon, as Crown Princess of Denmark, at the forefront of many royal engagements, such as the Silver Jubilee celebrations for King Christian X in 1937. She was greatly helped by her new Lady-in-Waiting, Sybille Reventlow Bruun, who would remain with Ingrid until 1998. It is fair to say that Ingrid helped improve relations between her husband and his ageing father, who could be irascible. Queen Margrethe remembers that, ‘My mother wasn’t afraid [of the King as many members of the family were], she was used to dealing with older, slightly stiff gentlemen – there were so many old gentlemen in the Swedish family. It didn’t occur to her that she should be afraid of him, and in turn, he actually adored her,’ Ingrid’s charitable patronages at this time focused on those concerned with children and youths. Ingrid was involved too with the Girl Scouts and attended a summer camp. A Lady-in-Waiting Sybille Bruun was appointed to assist her. Sybille’s father had been the Danish envoy to Sweden at the time of her marriage. Meanwhile, for relaxation, Ingrid and Frederik built a small hunting lodge by Bjørnsholm Bay, at Trend in Vesthimmerland municipality using funds donated in 1937 from a ‘folk gift’ as the Crown Prince loved to hunt.
Ingrid and Frederik often travelled outside of Denmark on official business. In 1937, they made an official visit to Paris. Thereafter, in 1939, they undertook a two-month tour of the United States, visiting San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington and New York, where they attended the World Fair. Ingrid charmed President and Mrs Roosevelt, with whom she and her husband dined, which was fortuitous as one of the main objects of the tour was to foster closer relations with the United States government, as the possibility of war in Europe grew ever nearer. The rise of Hitler and his Third Reich had long cast a long shadow over the continent, particularly after his annexation of the Sudetenland in October 1938. En route home from the United States, Ingrid and Frederik stopped off briefly in London to see her eighty-nine year old grandfather, the Duke of Connaught. It was fortuitous that she did as soon international travel would soon become impossible.
When wore broke out in Europe, in the autumn of 1939, Denmark declared itself to be neutral. However, German forces (around 40,000 men) invaded in the early hours of 9 April 1940. Crown Princess Ingrid, heavily pregnant with her first child, was ‘furious’ and apparently let out a rare expletive to give vent to her feelings, as she lay in her bedroom at the Frederick VIII Palace of the Amalienborg, the Crown Princely couple’s residence in Copenhagen. Some of the fiercest fighting took place nearby in the Amaliegade and Bredgade. Many of the royal guards were injured as they bravely sought to hold off the intruders. In the end the King negotiated a cease fire, for he must have realised that otherwise many more of his guards would have been killed, for they were outnumbered. Officially, Germany claimed to be protecting Denmark from a British and French invasion. Danish-language leaflets were dropped from Luftwaffe planes to spread this propaganda to the masses. With the German military now firmly on the ascendant, a coalition government now chose to ‘cooperate’ with the occupying power to protect the country from the consequences of the war. Some would argue that what followed was more a process of ‘negotiation’ than cooperation for, whereas in other occupied countries an independent German administration was established, in Denmark it was still the Danish authorities who had the formal responsibility for governing. Nonetheless, German troops continued to maintain a highly visible presence and Danish citizens’ rights were restricted.
During these dark times of World War 2, Copenhageners became accustomed to Ingrid and Frederik taking walks through the capital with their newly-born daughter, Margrethe, who was born just a week after the German incursion, an event which was seen as a positive symbol of light in the darkness. Danish spirits were also lifted by the sight of Frederik’s father, King Christian X, taking morning rides, in military uniform, through the streets of Copenhagen, cheered on by crowds of well wishers. It is something that Ingrid encouraged him to keep doing. The Crown Prince and his wife also took to using bicycles whenever possible, again as an emblem of solidarity with the man-in-the-street. These were symbols of a determined defiance to the government policy of ‘cooperation’, which officially the King supported. Ingrid, meanwhile, joined the Danish Women’s Preparedness organisation. Of this war period, Ingrid would later tell her daughter, Margrethe, that she and Crown Prince Frederik felt ‘so ashamed.’ The Crown Princess was no fan of the Nazis and would recall that, a few years earlier, she had been required to dine with Hermann Göring, and thought him dreadful. Apparently, King Christian X and Queen Alexandrine (who was born and raised in northern Germany in the Duchy of Mecklenburg-Schwerin) also felt aggrieved by the situation. Yet, no matter what their personal feelings were, the royal family all had to put on a polite public face for the sake of their countrymen and countrywomen. One telling image shows Ingrid and her husband at a animal show in the company of Prime Minister Vilhelm Buhl. The normally kind and outgoing Crown Prince looks decidedly ill-at ease, although Ingrid, who is seated next to Buhl, manages to look politely interested in the proceedings, as she holds on to a bouquet of flowers. Ingrid and her husband also visited areas where there had been bomb damage. In the autumn of 1942, the Danish Prime Minister gave his famous ‘anti-sabotage’ speech, urging the Danes to desist from acts of sabotage (which were on the increase). It is fair to say that his words would not have found favour with the Crown Prince and his wife. After a fall from his horse on 19 October 1942, King Christian X was more or less an invalid throughout the rest of his reign, so an increasing amount of the burden fell on Crown Prince Frederik (who acted as Regent for periods thereafter) and Ingrid. Interestingly, the Danes had now taken princess to their hearts. She was no longer referred to as ‘the Swedish Princess’ but as ‘our Crown Princess.’
It was not until 29 August 1943, when the Germans declared a ‘Military State of Emergency’, that the policy of cooperation between the Danish government and the Germans broke down. This development came about as a result of a change in public sentiment in Denmark which manifested itself in further sabotage activity (for instance the Danish navy sunk many of its own ships at Holmen rather than see them seized by the Germans; while civilian acts of sabotage were directed against companies that supplied or worked with the Germans). Civil unrest (including strikes and riots) was also on the increase in several major cities. Then, on the night of October 2, the occupying forces tried to round up Danish Jews. However, more than 7,000 Danish Jews were helped to escape by the Danish resistance to Sweden, although around 470 were rounded up and sent to concentration camps. It has recently emerged that, in all probability, King Christian gave money to assist with costs involved in the transportation of the Jews to safety, after an appeal was made to him by two nurses sent from a local hospital from where this evacuation effort was coordinated. Meanwhile, under what was effectively martial law, the King and his family were placed under house arrest at Sorgenfri Castle by the German authorities. The Danish parliament ceased to function and the government resigned rather than agree to a German ‘request’ to introduce the death penalty for saboteurs. Queen Margrethe feels that, ‘from that point on, I don’t think father and mother were ashamed of Denmark.’ Jon Bloch Skipper, royal historian and author, who wrote a biography of King Frederik IX, states that Ingrid and her husband were certainly aware of the activities of the Danish resistance at this time and, in all probability, met with some of them at the Amalienborg.
The Crown Princess and her husband had a second child, Benedikte in April 1944. Meanwhile, opposition to the German occupiers continued apace with further strikes in Copenhagen and other towns in Zealand, Lolland-Falster and South Jutland. Then, in September 1944, several thousand Danish police were sent to concentration camps by the increasingly embattled occupiers. In addition, Ingrid faced the same problem as other Danish women in relation to finding suitable clothes for her children to wear. She decided to make use of her wedding dress from which she made baby jackets with hoods for her daughters (a third daughter, Anne-Marie was born in August 1946).
On 5 May 1945, Denmark was officially free of German control. Citizens all over the country took down the black blinds that had been used to cover their windows during bombing raids and made bonfires of them in the streets. Two months later, Ingrid’s father and stepmother came over from Sweden for a stay at Fredensborg. The Swedish Crown Prince was delighted to see his daughter, son-in-law and his granddaughters Margaretha and Benedikte. However, both he and Ingrid were devastated by the death, in an air crash, of Prince Gustav Adolf,Duke of Västerbotten in January 1947. He was only forty years of age and left behind a widow (Sybilla) and five children, the youngest of whom, an only son Prince Carl Gustav, would one day ascend the throne of Sweden. The accident occurred on Danish soil, near Copenhagen’s Kastrup airport, following a stopover there. The prince was flying home to Sweden from a hunting holiday in the Netherlands with Prince Bernhard. The plane stalled almost immediately after take off and ploughed nose first to the ground. The six crew and sixteen passengers were all killed. A heavily-veiled Ingrid attended the funeral in Stockholm on 4 February. 100,000 people were said to have lined the streets.
Just as Ingrid was recovering from the trauma of the her brother’s funeral, King Christian X died on 20 April. Ingrid was now Queen Consort of Denmark. Her husband, the new King, Frederik IX, was so proclaimed from the balcony at Christiansborg Palace and gave a brief speech: ‘The two of us will now take over and continue in the same spirit as the former royal couple.’ Then he gave Queen Ingrid a hearty kiss on the cheek. One cannot imagine King Christian and Queen Alexandrine behaving in such a spontaneous manner. It was perhaps apt that one of their first official guests, in 1948, was Danish-born King Haakon VII of Norway (‘Uncle Charles’). Like his nephew Frederik, Haakon had previously served as a naval officer in the Danish navy. Then, in April 1952, the royal couple would host Ingrid’s father, who had ascended the Swedish throne on 29 October 1950 as King Gustav VI Adolf, and his wife Louise on a State Visit to Denmark. A State Banquet, attended by 165 guests, was held at Christianborg Palace. Overseas State Visits also abounded, including one by Frederik and Ingrid to London in May 1951 and then to Vienna in 1952.
Although the heir to the throne was now Frederik’s younger brother, Hereditary Prince Knud, discussions were taking place to change the rules of succession. In Denmark, these changes were enacted via The Succession to the Throne Act of 27 March 1953 which introduced conditional female succession in Denmark as of 5 June. This meant that a female descendant of the current reigning sovereign could now inherit the throne, providing that there was no male heir, which, of course, in King Frederik IX’s case, there was not as all his children were daughters. Ingrid and Frederik’s eldest child, Margrethe, was now referred to as Crown Princess Margrethe. This changed occurred just as the role of Danish women were becoming more prevalent in the workplace. Some press sources noted that the (now) Prince Knud referred to his sister-in-law as ‘King Ingrid’ as it was she who really pulled the strings at the Amalienborg. Other commentators say Ingrid was a (or the) motivating force behind the change. However, it is highly unlikely that this change in the succession would have incurred without support from the average Dane in the street.
Queen Ingrid, meanwhile, helped her husband to transform the monarchy from a distant, aloof institution into an outward-looking, accessible institution. In particular, she was aware of the need to promote the monarchy in a fast-changing world, while also adapting it to suit new circumstances. Photographers (such as Britain’s Patrick Lichfield [the mother of whom married Prince Georg of Denmark]) were given access and invariably produced images of a loving family of three daughters watched over by a doting father and loving mother. Nevertheless, in these pictures, the steely side of Queen Ingrid also shines through. A former guard at the Palace once told the writer that while the princesses were relatively relaxed and informal, Ingrid was decidedly more formal. Nevertheless, the King was said to have the ability to make his wife relax; while she contributed greatly to Fredrik appearing more dignified and confident in his role as monarch. In effect, the duo complimented each other perfectly. The Royal Court also allowed the cameras into the palace to film at teatime. In doing this, Ingrid gives a nod to her English mother, Princess Margaret of Connaught, in a wonderful film sequence of her acting as ‘Mother’, in the traditional English way, pouring and distributing afternoon tea to her husband and daughters. Princess Benedikte recalled that the hour between 4pm and 5pm was almost sacrosanct and if, for any reason, the Queen was delayed for reasons of duty, the palace staff ensured that everything was made ready for her to take tea on her return home. Teatime also provided the family with a rare opportunity to indulge in some candid conversation, as no staff were present. Another occupation with English overtones was Ingrid’s love of gardening, particularly at Graasten Palace-her summer home until the end of her long life and of course at Fredensborg.
Queen Ingrid now expanded her official duties. She showed a great interest in matters relating to Greenland, following her visit with the King in the summer of 1952 aboard the Dannebrog. Ingrid was particularly concerned to learn that many of the Greenlanders were affected by tuberculosis. Thereafter, partly thanks to her interest, a new hospital was built and opened in 1954 in Nuuk (then Godthab) bearing her name (originally this dealt with pulmonary diseases but has now expanded into a general hospital). The King and Queen paid several visits together to Greenland (1952, 1960 and 1968) and the Faroe Islands (1959, 1963, 1969). Meanwhile, in Copenhagen there were several high-profile engagements concerned with European and international affairs: In May 1950, Ingrid attended a meeting of the International Olympic Committee in Copenhagen. In February 1953, the King and Queen were present at a meeting of the first Scandinavian Council held at Christiansborg, during which closer political ties in Europe were discussed. Ingrid then assisted her husband in hosting an important lunch at Fredensborg Palace for foreign ministers attending a NATO conference. There continued to be a plethora of incoming State Visits. A particularly poignant one, given the recent history of Denmark, was the visit by the President of West Germany, Gustav Heinemann and his wife Hilda, in 1970. One with a more family feel was an earlier visit by Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip in 1957. The Danish royal couple also made many more visits overseas. In 1960 they again visited the United States, followed in 1962 by a visit to Thailand. They travelled to Africa too, visiting Emperor Haile Selassie in Addis Ababa in 1970. There was also a visit to Iran, in 1971, in connection with the celebrations at Persepolis to commemorate 2500 years of the founding of the Persian Empire. Ingrid and her husband also paid a visit to the Vatican, in 1959, during which they were received in audience by Pope John XXIII.
On 21 July 1962, Ingrid attended the confirmation service of her nephew Crown Prince Carl Gustav at Borgholms Church on the island of Öland. She liked to visit her homeland and kept in close touch with her father and her late brother’s children, as well as his widow Sybilla. Forays continued also to England, where her birthday was frequently mentioned by The Times newspaper. In 1952, Ingrid took her three daughters on a visit to London, said by the press to be the children’s first overseas visit. She was also photographed, in 1957, with Queen Elizabeth II and her family watching a game of polo at Smith’s Lawn in Windsor. Ingrid’s closeness, not to mention loyalty, to her British relatives was emphasised by the fact that she was the sole foreign royal to attend the 1960 wedding of Princess Margaret to the photographer, Anthony (‘Tony’) Armstrong-Jones. Other European royalties stayed clear of this unequal marital union of a king’s daughter to a commoner.
Queen Louise of Sweden died on March 7, 1965 in Stockholm. Ingrid was present during the Swedish Queen’s final illness and kindly kept Louise’s brother, Lord Louis Mountbatten (who was on a trip to Australasia) appraised of the situation. A further development around this time was that Crown Princess Margaretha had met and fallen in love with a French aristocrat and diplomat Henri de Laborde de Monpezat, who at the time was on the staff of the French Embassy in London. The couple married at the Holmens Kirke in Copenhagen on 10 June 1967. Margrethe wore a diamond daisy brooch which was a nod to her English grandmother, Margareta, who had been known by the family nickname of ‘Daisy’. Interestingly, her Danish granddaughter, Margrethe was also already known en famille as ‘Daisy’.
On 3 January 1972, King Frederik, who was suffering from a bad attack of flu, had a heart attack. Fortunately his doctor happened to be at the Amalienborg at the time, so he was hospitalised immediately and seemed to improve after a few days, but then his condition deteriorated and he died on the evening of 14 January. Ingrid had visited him faithfully every day at the Kommunehospitalet. Aged only sixty-two, she was a relatively young, fit and healthy widow facing a future without her husband of thirty-six years. Queen Ingrid (as she continued to be known) remained at her home in the Amalienborg complex, but moved out of the main palace at Fredensborg into the Chancellery House, a long, low wing, which is connected to the main palace buildings via the adjoining stable block and royal chapel. She also continued to have the use of Graasten Palace in South Jutland, where she loved nothing better than to do her embroidery or work in the English-style garden she had helped to create ever since she and her husband had first taken over the palace as their summer residence in the 1930’s. Visits from her children and their families were particularly welcome and Ingrid soon started to travel overseas, attending events in Oslo, in August 1972, to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the birth of the late King Haakon VII (who had been born at Denmark’s Charlottenlund Palace in 1872). At home, she attended the opening of the Annual Meeting of the World Bank in Copenhagen in 1973. Queen Ingrid would serve many times as regent during her daughter’s absences abroad. Until then, this function was traditionally reserved for those in line to the throne.
The death of her father, King Gustav VI Adolf, on September 15, 1973, was hardly unexpected given his great age. She had been by his side when he died in Helsingborg Hospital and was pictured leaving afterwards with her nephew, the new King Carl XVI Gustav and her niece Princess Christina. She later walked immediately behind the new King during the funeral procession in Stockholm. This meant that in just over a year Ingrid had lost the two men who had meant the most to her. Yet, she still faced the future with gusto. This included giving the benefit of her experience, if required: When her nephew, the King of Sweden found a future queen in the delightful and talented Silvia Sommerlath (they had met during the summer Olympics in Munich in 1972), Ingrid welcomed Miss Sommerlath to Denmark for three days to discuss her future role as a Queen Consort of Sweden and all that this would entail. Ingrid even drove herself out to the airport at Kastrup in her Jaguar car to greet Silvia off her flight. Some of the press referred to these discussions as ‘Queen Lessons.’ Silvia would later speak of Ingrid’s ‘tremendous wisdom’ noting too that ‘I could always telephone her if I had a question.’ Furthermore, ‘She had a lot of warmth but also a certain distance. She was easy to talk to and awe-inspiring. You weren’t afraid of her, but you had a lot of respect for her.’ Ingrid attended the couple’s wedding in Stockholm in June 1976, seated between King Olav of Norway and her brother Prince Bertil. With his nephew now settled, Bertil now decided to marry his long-time love, a Welsh actress, Lilian Craig. Ingrid attended the wedding in Stockholm on 7 December. Unlike his two surviving brothers, he retained the title of His Royal Highness.
A source of worry during this period was the fate of her youngest daughter, Anne-Marie, who had married King Constantine of the Hellenes in 1964. Greece had always been a politically volatile country and the Greek royal family had been accustomed to spending long periods in exile in the first half of the 20th century. On 21 April 1967, a group of army colonels overthrew the caretaker government a month before scheduled elections in which Georgios Papandreou’s Centre Union was favoured to win. At one stage, tanks surrounded Constantine and Anne-Marie’s home at Tatoi, outside Athens. Following an unsuccessful attempt at a counter-coup, planned over many months by the King and officers loyal to the crown, Anne-Marie and her husband, accompanied by their children, as well as the dowager queen Frederika and Constantine’s sister Irene, had made a sudden dash by air to Rome, in December 1967, with barely any fuel left in the tank of their small plane. The family lived initially at the Greek Embassy, then in a villa on the outskirts of Rome. Ingrid had a chance to have a catch up with Anne-Marie when she arrived in Copenhagen, in January 1968, to attend the wedding, on 3 February, at Fredensborg’s Royal Chapel of her older sister Benedikte to the German Prince Richard Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg. King Constantine did not attend this event (neither had he nor Anne-Marie been able to attend Crown Princess Margrethe’s nuptials the previous year, for it had been made clear [‘advised’] by the Danish government that Constantine should stay away. Queen Ingrid had responded to this ‘advice’ by placing pictures of the Greek King and Queen throughout the rooms of Fredensborg Palace where Margrethe’s wedding reception was held). Greece was declared a republic in 1973. Following the restoration of a democratic government in 1974, a referendum was held to decide the future of the Greek monarchy: 69% of Greek citizens were in favour of a republic; only 31% were in favour of the restoration of the monarchy. When the Greek royal family eventually relocated to England in 1974 and settled in a roomy home in Hampstead, Ingrid was able to make regular visits over to London, where she spent much of her time gardening. Queen Ingrid must have reflected back to a warm September day in 1964, when she and King Frederik had sailed into Piraeus, the port for Athens, on board the Dannebrog with Anne-Marie at their side, to be greeted by a flotilla of local ships hooting their horns accompanied by a twenty-one-gun salute to welcome their future queen consort.
In the meantime, Ingrid’s growing band of grandchildren were a source of pleasure. She was particularly close to Crown Prince Frederik, Margrethe and Henrik’s eldest son, who was born in 1968. She also saw a lot of his younger brother, Prince Joachim, who followed in 1969. Anne-Marie and Constantine had a very large family over an extended time scale. Their first-born (and Ingrid’s first grandchild) was a daughter Alexia, born in Corfu in July 1965. The royal couple then went on to have four more children, Pavlos (born in 1967), Nikolaos (1969), Theodora (1983) and Ingrid’s youngest grandchild, Prince Philippos, who was born in London in 1986. In 1973 Ingrid was pictured on a boating lake, during an excursion to Legoland in Jutland. with her daughter Benedikte’s two eldest children Gustav (born in 1969) and Alexandra (born in 1970). Benedikte would go on to have a third child, Nathalie, in 1975.
As the 1980’s dawned, Ingrid could not help but be concerned by the behaviour of her son-in-law, Prince Henrik. The latter had to establish a role for himself at the Danish Court as he was the first male consort in Denmark’s history. Not an easy matter when there are no established boundaries, no dedicated funds, initially, with which to run an office and you are also constantly criticised in the press for speaking indifferent Danish with a foreign accent! Henrik eventually stated, in public, that he wished to have his own dedicated civil list allowance, instead of relying on handouts from the Queen’s allowance. Danes were outraged with the ‘French prince’. Ingrid was concerned enough to send for a copy of an English newspaper which had carried a report on the situation, according to Nigel Dempster, a well-known gossip columnist of the time, based in London.
Ingrid appeared on the balcony alongside her daughter Margrethe to celebrate her 80th birthday in March 1990. The following year, she paid to a visit to Japan, accompanied by Queen Anne-Marie, where she was pictured admiring a collection of orchids in the company of the Japanese royal family. During the 1990s, Ingrid suffered from scoliosis and there was a gradual deterioration in her general health. In her final years, she sometimes made use of a walking frame to move around, and then often one that matched whatever she happened to wearing at the time – her sense of style was still very much intact. Ingrid never forgot her origins or stopped taking an interest in Sweden. Her daughters recalled, for instance, that she persisted in reading Svenska Dagbladet every morning throughout her life.
It was unusual for Ingrid to give public speeches and when she did it was with a written script which she followed to the letter, a no-nonsense pair of glasses all the better to read it with. But on the occasion of Margrethe II’s 25th anniversary as Queen of Denmark, in January 1997, she surprised everyone by making a rare exception at a banquet to celebrate this milestone. The closing words of the speech were: ‘And Daisy [Margrethe’s nickname], you have two wonderful sons, so I think I can now safely close my eyes, because they will do their best for Denmark.’ A realist, Ingrid knew in her heart that her days were numbered. Yet, she was able to travel over to London to attend the wedding of her eldest grandchild, Alexia, in July 1999, even attending the wedding ball in a cerise pink ensemble. For her 90th birthday, she was photographed in a family group at the Chancellery House with her children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren and her brother Carl Johan Bernadotte. On November 7, 2000, Ingrid died aged 90 (the same age at which her late father had died) at the Chancellery House, surrounded by her large family (three children and ten grand children), including her beloved Crown Prince Frederik, who arrived in the nick of time from a visit to Australia where he had been attending the Olympic Games.
Ingrid was laid to rest alongside her late husband, King Frederik IX at Roskilde Cathedral on 14 November, having made the final journey by train from Copenhagen. Highly revered, her funeral was attended by the King and Queen of Sweden, the Queen of the Netherlands, the King and Queen of Norway, the King of the Belgians (the younger son of the late Queen Astrid of the Belgians), Britain’s Prince Charles (representing his mother, Queen Elizabeth II), the Grand Duke and Duchess of Luxembourg (the latter was the late Queen Astrid of the Belgian’s daughter) and Queen Sofia of Spain.
Robert Prentice is the author of the biography the Greek-born Princess Olga of Yugoslavia: Her Life and Times. Available as a hardback from Amazon UK, Amazon.com and Amazon Deutschland. Olga was a Princess of Greece and Denmark and was briefly engaged to the future King Frederik IX in 1922.
Princess Margrethe Alexandrine Þórhildur Ingrid was born on 16 April, 1940, at Frederik VIII’s Palace in Copenhagen, the eldest child of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark (elder son of the reigning King Christian X) and his Swedish-born wife Ingrid, the only daughter of the Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden (later King Gustaf VI Adolf). In addition to the Danish and Swedish royal houses, Margrethe also had strong links to the British Royal Family (her late maternal grandmother, after whom she was named, was Princess Margaret of Connaught, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria.) Margrethe was born at a time of great national crisis in her Danish homeland as, only a week earlier, troops of the German Third Reich had occupied Denmark. The princess’s birth would later be referred to as ‘a touch of sunshine.’ in an otherwise bleak landscape. Nevertheless, the new-born did not even feature in the line of succession, despite the fact that Crown Prince Frederik was the current heir, as it was not possible for a woman to ascend the Danish throne.
Margrethe was christened on 14 May at the Holmens Kirke in central Copenhagen by Provost Dr Michael Neiendam. Given the circumstances, it was hardly a time for a large celebration. Indeed, the occupation period was a dramatic time for the Danish royal family, who had to walk a difficult path in relation to the German occupying power. King Christian X seemed to catch the mood of the moment when he set out resolutely, most mornings, to ride through the streets of Copenhagen, to be greeted with great enthusiasm by his subjects. He soon became a national icon among the population for this symbol of opposition. Meanwhile, both the Crown Prince and Crown Princess had difficulty accepting Denmark’s ‘cooperation’ with Germany but soldiered on with their life. Some would argue that it was more a process of ‘negotiation’ for, whereas in other occupied countries an independent German administration was established, in Denmark, it was still the Danish authorities that had the formal responsibility for governing. However, matters changed in late August 1943, when extensive sabotage activity (for instance the Danish navy sunk many of its own ships at Holmen) and unrest (including strikes and protests) in several Danish major cities led to the imposition of martial law by the Germans. The King was placed under house arrest for around six weeks and the Danish parliament ceased to function. The birth of another daughter, Benedikte, in April 1944, provided a welcome addition to the royal family, not to mention a playmate for Margrethe who was now often pictured with her parents. Meanwhile, opposition to the German occupiers continued apace with further strikes in Copenhagen and other towns in Zealand, Lolland-Falster and South Jutland. Then, in September 1944, several thousand Danish police were sent to concentration camps by the increasingly embattled occupiers.
Denmark was finally liberated on 5 May 5, 1945, at 08:00, by British forces led by Field Marshal Montgomery. An exception, however, was Bornholm, which was liberated by Soviet forces. In August 1946, Ingrid gave birth to a third daughter who was named Anne-Marie. She was seen by many Danes as a symbol of a liberated Denmark. The three sisters would form a tight bond which survived marriage and many decades later would provide comfort in widowhood. Ingrid was a relatively strict mother who liked order and routine. For instance, the children had their meals earlier than their parents and went to bed at a reasonable hour. What has recently been revealed, and briefly discussed by Margrethe herself, was the future king had a problem with alcohol. However, his wife was an invaluable support to him in the battle to fight this addiction which he eventually overcame. Margrethe would later reflect that ‘there was something or other’ but it certainly did not seem to impact greatly on the equilibrium of a happy childhood home. One occurrence which did make an impression was a car crash in the summer of 1948, when Margrethe’s mother was at the wheel of her Ford Mercury and hit a tree near Graasten Palace. Anne-Marie and her eldest sister were in the front seat next to their mother. Margrethe recalled, ‘Suddenly there was a loud bang. The next thing I know, I woke up in a hospital bed at Sønderborg Hospital with a bandage around my head.’ This may account for the present-day Queen of Denmark’s preference to be driven rather than to drive herself.
On 20 April, 1947 Margrethe’s grandfather, King Christian X died and her father was proclaimed King Frederik IX. Although the heir to the throne was now Frederik’s younger brother, Hereditary Prince Knud, Margrethe would recall that when she was aged twelve, she was aware of discussions taking place to change the rules of succession in her favour. Interestingly, this period coincided with the ascension of her kinswoman, 26-year-old Queen Elizabeth II, to the throne of the United Kingdom (and numerous other realms), following the death of her father King George VI in February 1952. In later years, Margrethe would also remember how, some five years earlier, the then Princess Elizabeth had made a speech to the people of the British Empire from Cape Town, on her 21st birthday, dedicating her ‘whole life whether it be long or short’ to ‘your service.’ This broadcast made ‘an enormous impression’ on the young princess. In Denmark, changes were eventually enacted via The Succession to the Throne Act of 27 March 1953 which introduced conditional female succession in Denmark as of 5 June. This meant that a female descendant of the current reigning sovereign could now inherit the throne, providing that there was no male heir, which, of course, in King Frederik IX’s case, there was not as all his children were daughters. The princess was now referred to as Crown Princess Margrethe. Interestingly, in 2009, this Act was amended such that the eldest child, regardless of gender, will inherit the throne.
Margrethe received a good education but it was not that of a typical Danish girl of the period. From 1946-1949, she was tutored privately, along with six other girls, at the Amalienborg. She then spent a spell at the well-known N Zahle’s School for Girls. She found it hard to concentrate at school and admitted to being shy. Subsequently, during the 1955-1956 school year, the (by now) Crown Princess was a pupil at the North Foreland Lodge, a reputable girls-only boarding school in Hampshire, England. She returned to Copenhagen to complete her schooling, again at the Amalienborg, where teachers from several local high schools gave her instruction in their particular subjects. By the age of 17, the Crown Princess had started to smoke cigarettes, after having been offered one by her parents, who were both avid smokers (the King preferred a pipe, while Queen Ingrid used a tortoiseshell cigarette holder) although it has been said that they perhaps hoped that having tried some, she would not care to pursue the habit. When Margrethe graduated in 1959 with excellent grades, the press photographed her wearing the traditional matriculation cap which is worn in Denmark, accompanied by her (only) classmate Birgitte Juel. But even at this time the future queen had led a relatively sheltered life. For instance, at the age of 14, Queen Ingrid arranged for her daughter to participate in dancing classes which were held in private homes. The group was specially selected and composed of twelve girls and twelve boys.
On her 18th birthday, 16 April 1958, Margrethe was admitted to the Council of State, a body mainly composed of government ministers of cabinet rank, which meets around fifteen times a year for the coordination of government policy and the granting of royal assent to bills, the purpose of which are explained by the relevant minster. If required, she was now able, as heir to the throne, to chair meetings of the Council, in the King’s absence. Like her male predecessors, it was felt that the future queen should have a military education and so she enrolled for a period of training in the Danish Air Force.
Given her academic talents and future role, it was decided that the Crown Princess should proceed to university. In 1959, Margrethe studied philosophy at the University of Copenhagen before enrolling, in 1960, at Girton College, Cambridge from where, in 1961, she received a Diploma in Prehistoric Archaeology. She later studied political science at Aarhus University (where she lived on campus, often cooking for herself.) and, in 1963, attended the Sorbonne in Paris. She later moved to England in 1965 to complete her studies at the London School of Economics. However, archaeology would remain her enduring interest and she later admitted in a documentary that had circumstances been different, ‘If you had asked me when I was an 18-19 year old, there was no doubt; Then I would have studied archaeology. I would have spent ten years doing that and hopefully obtained a good job.’
While Margrethe was still undergoing her academic studies, her youngest sister, Princess Anne-Marie, became engaged to her third cousin, Crown Prince Constantine of Greece. He was also a Prince of Denmark, his great-great grandfather being King Christian IX of Denmark. The couple married on 18 September 1964 and, as Constantine had by then ascended the throne as King Constantine II of the Hellenes, following the sudden death of his father on 6 March, Anne-Marie was now known as the Queen of the Hellenes. This event caused the Danish press to speculate on who Margrethe might marry (and when!) They would have to wait a further two years for the answer. During her period at the London School of Economics, Margrethe was introduced at a dinner party to a charming French diplomat (then accredited to the French Embassy in London) of aristocratic lineage, Henri Comte de Laborde de Monpezat. They met again at a wedding of a friend in Scotland, in April 1966, when he invited her out to lunch. The Crown Princess had never been out on a ‘date’ with a member of the opposite sex and found that, although she had little appetite for the meal itself, the sparks were certainly flying between the two lunch partners. On September 2, 1966, Ekstra Bladet’s correspondent Sven Peter Sabroe revealed that an engagement was imminent. On 5 October, the engagement was formally announced and the duo appeared together on the balcony of the Amalienborg. The couple were married on the 10 June 1967 at the Holmens Kirke, with a reception for four hundred guests afterwards at Fredensborg Palace. Henri was now styled as His Royal Highness Prince Henrik of Denmark. The newlyweds soon settled into an apartment in the Amalienborg’s Christian IX’s Palace. They were also given the use of Marselisborg Castle, near Aarhus which was renovated using monies received from a ‘folk fund’ raised at the time of their nuptials. Henrik was already a talented linguist (he had lived in French Indochina) and spoke French, English, Vietnamese, Mandarin Chinese and now focused on learning Danish, although he and Margrethe invariably spoke French together in private.
The following year, on 26 May, the Crown Princess gave birth to a son, Frederik. His arrival was soon followed by another boy, Joachim, on 7 June 1969. These developments in Margrethe’s life galvanised her for the future, she feeling that ‘the home front was ready and there.’ She was fortunate in that the boys enjoyed a good filial relationship, as she acknowledged in a 2022 interview with Billed Bladet, ‘Since the boys were very young, they have been aware that there is a difference in their roles. However, this has not posed any problem in the brothers’ upbringing.’ She added, ‘Frederik and Joachim have always been a great support for each other. I remember thinking how incredibly lucky I was to have two boys who got along so well and who didn’t suffer from any jealousy.’
On 31 December 1971 Margrethe’s father made his New Year speech at 6 pm prompt. He looked tired and unwell. Immediately thereafter he took to his bed at the Amalienborg with suspected influenza. The traditional New Year receptions due to take place on 5 and 6 January were cancelled by the Court Marshall’s office. On 3 January King Frederik was admitted to hospital after suffering a heart attack. Margaretha was appointed Regent the following day, although by 5 January her father’s health had improved somewhat and this change for the better would continue over the next few days. Unfortunately, on 12 January, the King’s condition deteriorated and preparations were in hand for the transition. His Majesty died at 7.50pm on 14 January with Queen Ingrid and all his children and sons-in-law at the bedside. Later that evening the flags of the Royal Guard were moved from the late King’s home, the Frederik VIII Palace to Christian IX’s Palace, the new Queen’s residence, a neat way of signifying the new reign of the latest incumbent of one of the oldest royal houses in the world, stretching back some 1000 years to the times of Gorm the Old.
On 15 January, Queen Margrethe appeared on the balcony of Christiansborg Palace alongside Prime Minister, Jens Otto Krag who proclaimed, as tradition dictated, three times, ‘King Frederik the Ninth is dead. Long live Her Majesty Queen Margrethe the Second.’ The Queen was clearly affected as she made a brief speech to her subjects. Her Majesty was then joined on the balcony by her husband who bowed and kissed her hand. Both waved to the crowds before retreating indoors. The uncertainty she had displayed as a child now seemed to disappear as she had a kingdom to run and she admitted, ‘It was as if everything my father had taught me came into its own.’ His memory and example were of tantamount importance to her, for as she admitted in 2012, ‘He was a wonderful father and I loved him very much.’ There was no time for unnecessary self-reflection, ‘You pull yourself together.’ She also believed firmly that, ‘The least one can do is one’s best.’ There was certainly a hill to climb for at time of her accession, the monarchy had an approval rating of around forty-five per cent. However, Margrethe acknowledged that where the monarchy was concerned, ‘nothing can be taken for granted,’ and she was certainly of the view that ‘you give your life to your country.’
From the beginning of her reign, Margrethe’s year has always been planned well in advance. The Amalienborg Palace (more specifically Christian IX’s Palace) is Her Majesty’s official base in Copenhagen and is used mainly in the winter months, although the Queen usually appears on the balcony on her birthday, 16 April. This is also the setting for the Queen’s New Year televised broadcast to her people. However, in spring and in the autumn, the Queen is in residence at Fredensborg Palace, located some 24 miles north of Copenhagen. This palace is often used for State Banquets and other official occasions. Christmas and Easter is usually celebrated at Marselisborg Castle, as are periods in the summer.
From the outset she was accessible to the public. For instance the Queen holds an audience at Christiansborg Palace on a number of Mondays throughout the year for members of the public who register in advance to attend. This is to give the Queen’s subjects the opportunity to personally thank Margrethe, for example, for the award of a royal order or medal, a royal appointment or for the Queen’s participation at an event or a visit. Throughout the conversation, only the person seeking the audience and the Queen are present. This tradition dates back the reign of Christian V. During these public audiences Margrethe wears a brooch bearing the insignia of the Order of the Elephant. This was a gift from her father on her 18th birthday in 1958.
The Queen also reaches out to her subjects when she makes her traditional New Year speech on Danish television. This is usually viewed by 2.5 million of her people. As a general rule, they are based on a draft speech provided by the Prime Minister’s office. Next, the Queen, with the help of her Private Secretary, personalizes the speech. During the filming of a 2010 Danish TV documentary “The Royal Family from Within” she states, ‘I’ll take it up and work on it and maybe add more from my own side. I’m trying to make it a speech that I can really vouch for myself.’ This process can take some time as she thinks it all through. It has to be the correct balance for as her then Private Secretary, Henning Fode noted, ‘Here the Queen has a political space that she uses and where it is fully acceptable and fully accepted that she uses that space in her New Year’s speech to express some opinions on essential societal problems.’ These can include immigration or climate change. Appropriately, in 31 December 2021, she sent thanks to those who had helped in the fight against the coronavirus. Margrethe delivers the speech ‘live’; it is not pre-recorded.
The Queen makes use of the Royal Yacht Dannebrog for expeditions to various Danish towns and cities in order to carry out an extensive range of official engagements (with dates varying from June right through to September.) The Dannebrog is also used as a base for visits further afield, particularly to Greenland and the Faroe Islands, the Queen having visited both on 10 occasions using this mode of transport. The Crown Princely couple have also used Dannebrog to travel to these destinations. Yet some engagements are more spontaneous such as her visit to Afghanistan in March 2011 to visit the Danish Battle Group of Task Force Helmand at Camp Price, where she was pictured alongside officers in a green jumpsuit and trainers.
Queen Margrethe regularly speaks to the press. This extends to international news organisations such as Britain’s ITV or CNN in the United States. She can be outspoken, certainly more so than say Britain’s late Queen Elizabeth II. In a recent interview with Weekendavisen, she gave a damning assessment of Vladimir Putin (whom she had met in 2011 and 2014) ‘I remember thinking he was not pleasant. I have never seen such cold eyes in my life.’ Yet, royal historian Lars Hovbakke Sørensen acknowledges that in speaking so frankly, Margrethe is being more political than in past times.
Margrethe receives important overseas guests such as heads of state, heads of government or foreign ministers in private audience which usually take place in Christians IX’s Palace at the Amalienborg. The monarch also receives foreign ambassadors to the Kingdom of Denmark either at Fredensborg Palace or Amalienborg who, before they can perform their duties as an official envoy, must hand over their credentials. They are conveyed to the relevant palace in a covered carriage accompanied by a court chamberlain. Often other members of the embassy staff, such as the military attache are included. The Queen also receives outgoing ambassadors in audience before they leave Denmark.
As a constitutional monarch, the Queen’s role is particularly limited. She certainly does not wield political power-at least not overtly-although she doubtless has influence. There is certainly an ample opportunity for dialogue between Margrethe and her Prime Minister (and Foreign Minister) when these politicians meet with Her Majesty to report on the latest political developments. Nevertheless, Margrethe openly admits that she was ‘brought up to be outside [day-to-day] politics.’ Ultimately, she has observed that ‘I should be able to be completely impartial.’ As head of state, she participates in the process to form a government, taking soundings from representatives of the various political parties. According to the website of the Danish Royal House, ‘the monarch [then] calls on the party leader with the most seats in parliament to form a government’. Furthermore, although the monarch signs acts of parliament, such legislation only becomes law when it is countersigned by the government minister of the relevant department responsible for the law.
The Queen, although more than content to undertake her public role to the full, has been keen to emphasise the need for a private life free from media intrusion, especially in these times when there is ‘more pressure’ from the press and social media: ‘We do need to have a home base which is unassailed where we can be at peace and where we can recuperate.’ She has been at pains to emphasise that this had nothing to do with maintaining the mystique of the monarchy; rather it is a case of ‘You can’t work if you aren’t able to relax.’
Prince Henrik, meanwhile, had to establish a role for himself at the Danish Court as he was the first male consort in Denmark’s history. Not an easy matter when there are no established boundaries, no dedicated funds initially with which to run an office and you are also being criticised for speaking indifferent Danish with a foreign accent! Nevertheless, he soon became involved with many organisations including, in 1972, assuming the role of President of the World Wildlife Fund in Denmark. He was also Patron of the Danish Red Cross and Honorary President of the Royal Danish Yacht Club. Furthermore, in 1974, the Queen and the Prince bought the Château de Cayx, located in the Cahors district of France. Although this would become a much-loved holiday home for the family, it had also been acquired for a commercial purpose as the Prince went on to successfully produce and sell wine for a period of more than 40 years. And of course it maintained the Prince’s links with his homeland and could act as a bolt hole if required. Certainly, there were many rumblings over the years about Henrik’s dissatisfaction over his role and place in the royal hierarchy. It certainly did not help that when the Queen was unable to attend the traditional New Year reception in 2002 for ambassadors and diplomats, it was Crown Prince Frederik who was called upon to deputise for his mother rather than Prince Henrik. Perhaps in attempt to make his role more defined, in 2005 he was given the title of Prince Consort. Press reports indicated that this still did not meet with his total approval. Some sources stated he would liked to have been known as King on the basis that if a King’s wife is known as Queen, then why should a Queen’s husband not be known as King? In a recent interview with Weekendavisen’s Editor-in-Chief, Martin Krasnik, the Queen blames herself for not paying more attention to Prince Henrik’s challenges in connection with his role and calls her younger self ‘ hilariously naïve’, for not anticipating these hurdles. Perhaps she is being a trifle hard on herself as, after all, while he was learning to play ‘second fiddle’ (as she puts it), Margrethe was herself adjusting to her new role as Sovereign.
In widowhood, Queen Ingrid remained a strong presence in her eldest daughter’s life. She certainly knew of the aforementioned difficulties with Prince Henrik, even sending, according to the British diarist Nigel Dempster, for a copy of an article which had appeared in the British press on the subject. Although she became increasingly frail, Ingrid’s mind remained sharp to the end. To Margrethe, her mother was, ‘a constant support and joy for me.’ Her death, on 7 November 2000, at her home, the Chancellery, in the grounds of Fredensborg Palace, was a blow, for Ingrid’s advice and wise counsel (always given quietly but firmly behind the scenes) had been a source of comfort to her daughter. Fortunately, all of the family (including Crown Prince Frederik, who had been in Australia for the Olympic Games but rushed home for he and his grandmother had always been very close) were at her bedside. The funeral took place in Roskilde Cathedral and was attended by the Kings and Queens of Sweden, Norway and Belgium, the Queen of the Netherlands, the Queen of Spain, Grand Duke Jean and Grand Duchess Josephine Charlotte of Luxemburg and Britain’s Prince Charles. Also present were many members of the extended Swedish Royal Family including Ingrid’s brothers Carl Johan and Sigvard Bernadotte. In keeping with tradition, Queen Ingrid was laid to rest next to her husband, King Frederik IX.
However, as in all families, new family members were welcomed into the fold. In May 2004, Crown Prince Frederik married an Australian marketing executive, Mary Donaldson in a ceremony held at the Cathedral Church of Our Lady in Copenhagen. The couple had met at the Olympics in Sydney in September 2000. Frederik’s mother formally gave her consent to the marriage at the a State Council meeting on 8 October 2003. The Queen and her daughter-in-law established a good rapport. Margrethe informed CNN in an interview in 2012 that she thought Mary, with whom she had a ‘warm relationship’, was ‘very competent’ and that she was ‘very confident in her.’ It perhaps helped that the new Crown Princess tactfully often asked her mother-in-law for advice on her public role. The couple have four children: Christian (who is second-in-line to the throne), Isabella and twins Vincent and Josephine.
Prince Joachim had actually been the first of the brothers to marry in 1995. His first wife was Alexandra Manley, a marketing executive, who was born and raised in Hong Kong. The couple had two sons, Nikolai and Felix. However, the marriage foundered (some say she preferred city life; while Joachim preferred living in the country). The duo separated in September 2004 and divorced the following year, with Princess Alexandra taking the title of Countess of Frederiksborg on her remarriage in 2007. Prince Joachim also remarried in the same year. His second wife is a Frenchwoman Marie Cavallier who had worked in advertising and finance. They have two children, Henrik and Athena and currently live in Paris where Prince Joachim, a Brigadier-General, is Military Attaché at the Royal Danish Embassy. The Queen’s face was said to light up when any conversation involved a mention of her two daughters-in-law and, during the 2022 interview with Billed Bladet, Margrethe emphasized that she enjoyed a very close relationship with both Crown Princess Mary and Princess Marie.
It has been said that the Scandinavian royalties had a more informal lifestyle than their British counterparts. This was perhaps true, but only to a point. For instance it is hard to imagine Queen Elizabeth II hanging out of a window at Windsor Castle, her hair somewhat unkempt and wearing night attire, to be serenaded by staff and family. Yet this is exactly what Margrethe and Henrik did at Marselisborg Castle on the 25 anniversary of their marriage. However, Margrethe is also a stickler for good manners, not to mention protocol. “I don’t think we went to school together,” she once rebuked a young journalist, who did not address her correctly. Nevertheless, she still has the ability to laugh at herself, as was proved when the Queen made a surprise appearance at a farewell performance by actor Ulf Pilgaard in 2021. For some forty years he had appeared in Denmark’s famous Circus Revue, often parodying Queen Margrethe with a queenly-style dress, tiara atop his head, dangly earrings and cigarette at a jaunty angle in his mouth. Margrethe gamely came on stage and presented Ulf with a small gift-said in the press to have been an ash tray-as a memento of this occasion.
The Queen has for many years been involved designing sets and costumes for television and theatre productions. This she acknowledged, came for ‘a need to express myself.’ Her natural talent was augmented by help and supervision from those with more experience and expertise. For instance, in 1987 she was in charge of costume design for the Danish television production of the Hans Christian Andersen tale “Hyrdinden og skorstensfejeren” [The Shepherdess and the Chimney Sweep] and as recently as November 2022, at the age of 82, she was at work on a production of the “The Nutcracker” at the Tivoli Theatre (with which she has a long association stretching back some thirty years-this is her fifth production there). The hope was at that time expressed that Margrethe might be involved in the Tivoli’s 2023 production “The Snow Queen.” As videos of her at work reveal, she is literally very hands on in her approach. The Queen is paid for the work she does and this money is given to her charities. She has found this to be ‘hard work’ but ‘great fun.’ In addition, Margrethe has embroidered copes for the clergy, made a decoupage drinks tray (‘pieces of imagination’) for use in a guest room and fashioned a zany floral raincoat out of a waxcloth tablecloth. This is perhaps not surprising from an individual who once admitted that she dreamed in vivid technicolour. Indeed, her talents seem almost without limit: What other Queen Regnant has translated works by Simone de Beauvoir into their native language? She herself acknowledges that one needs ‘a certain amount of confidence and perhaps, madness!’ It has to be said that it must also be a wonderful diversion from her everyday role as sovereign.
In terms of holidays, later in the summer the Queen will spend time at Graasten Palace, often in the company of her sisters, as this palace is filled with memories of their childhood and time spent privately with their parents (King Frederik and Queen Ingrid had adopted this as the family’s summer home as far back as 1935, when they were still Crown Prince and Crown Princess). The Queen usually takes a holiday, in February, at Gausdal in Norway and, in August, she enjoys a break with family members at the Château de Cayx. Her Majesty can also make use of a hunting lodge at Trend near Bjørnsholm Bay, Limfjorden. This was purchased by her parents in 1935 using monies received as a ‘folk gift’ at the time of their marriage.
During her New Year’s Eve speech in 2015, Margrethe indicated that Prince Henrik was to retire from public life. On 14 April 2016, he renounced the title of Prince Consort and was thereafter to be referred to as Prince Henrik. According to the Danish Royal House’s head of communications, this decision had been made on the basis that this title was better suited to the Prince’s new life in retirement. In the summer of 2017, it was revealed in the press that Prince Henrik did not wish to be buried beside the Queen at Roskilde Cathedral as he had never been treated as an equal in life, so he should not be treated as an equal in death. This view which was greeted with a mixture of incredulity and annoyance. Apparently, Margrethe had known of her husband’s decision for some time. There seems little doubt that by this stage the Prince was stricken by dementia. A close friend of Margrethe throughout her long life, Birgitta Hillingsø, states in a recent book by Thomas Larsen, that the diagnosis of Henrik’s dementia came somewhat late, the implication being that it had affected his reasoning over a longer period of time than was perhaps realised. Birgitta added that, ‘it was really a hard few years for her…but she never complained.’ Indeed, she would later praise him for his ‘love and support.’
2022 was a very special year for both of Europe’s reigning Queens. The senior monarch, Queen Elizabeth was celebrating an amazing seventy years on the throne, while Queen Margrethe was celebrating a reign of fifty years. Although the 96-year-old British Queen appeared very frail and was largely confined to ceremonial duties at Windsor Castle, her Berkshire home, Her Majesty managed to make an appearance on the balcony of Buckingham Palace, on 5 June, during a weekend of celebrations for her Platinum Jubilee (although her actual day of ascension had been 6 February, 1952). Margrethe was in awe of her sister sovereign, telling Britain’s ITV that, ‘the way she has faced her duties, the way she is dedicated-also she does it with a smile.’ The Danish monarch also commented on Elizabeth II’s ‘clear’ voice and ‘marvellous sense of humour.’ Margrethe also opined that, although Elizabeth had only the previous year lost her husband Prince Philip, ‘She is still bearing up beautifully.’ Indeed, at this time there seemed no reason to think that she might live to attain her centenary, as had her mother, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, who lived to be 101. Then suddenly, on the evening of 8 September, a news flash over the BBC and other networks stated that Elizabeth II had died peacefully at her Scottish summer home, Balmoral Castle. Although not many people realised it at the time, this left Margrethe as the sole Queen Regnant in the world. Furthermore, she had also assumed the (admittedly informal) position as the doyenne of the European monarchical scene being the longest-reigning monarch in Europe. In terms of the world-at-large, only the Sultan of Brunei has currently ruled longer.
On 11 September 2022, there was what can only be described as a televised dinner (attended by 1000 guests) with music-some would say ‘a party’ at Christianborg Palace as part of the celebrations for Queen Margrethe’s Golden Jubilee. This was attended by Scandinavian royalties and presidents, as well as distinguished guests from all over Europe. Yet, Margrethe was somewhat pensive when she rose to make her speech to those gathered. She asked that everyone in the Great Hall stand and observe a minutes silence to the memory of her kinswoman, friend, and mentor Queen Elizabeth II whose recent death ‘has made a big impact on us’. However, it was very much Margrethe’s evening and Crown Prince Frederik made an emotional speech concerning ‘generations with the same mission’ taking ‘the helm’ of the Kingdom: ‘I follow you as you followed your father and as Christian will follow me.’ Yet, he also emphasised to his mother that currently, ‘You alone have the helm.’ On 19 September, the Crown Prince accompanied his mother to London to attend Elizabeth II’s funeral at Westminster Abbey. Margrethe was also later part of a select group of royalty who attended Elizabeth’s interment at St George’s Chapel in the grounds of Windsor Castle, led up the steep steps to the West Door by her nephew, Crown Prince Pavlos of Greece (Crown Prince Frederik had to leave earlier to fulfil prior engagements overseas).
On 28 September, to the bewilderment of the Danish nation (who had only recently given their sovereign an 80% approval rating) and most members of her own family, Queen Margrethe announced her decision to slim down and modernise the Danish monarchy by stripping her youngest son Prince Joachim’s four children, Nikolai, 23, Felix, 20, Henrik, 13, and Athena, 11, of their titles as princes and princess of Denmark which they had held since birth. Furthermore, they would also no longer be referred to as ‘His (or Her) Highness.’ This was to take effect from 1 January 2023. ‘It is a consideration I have had for quite a long time,’ Margrethe told reporters after the decision was announced. ‘I think it will be good for them in their future.’ The four grandchildren are now styled as His (or Her) Excellency the Count (or Countess) of Monpezat. Prince Joachim publicly criticized his mother for her action relating to his ‘sad’ children asking, ‘Why should their identity be removed? Why should they be punished in such a way?’ Apparently eldest grandchild Nikolai, who spoke of his ‘shock’ at the decision, also now wondered what name would be placed on his passport. The Queen subsequently conceded in a further statement that, ‘I have made my decision as Queen, mother and grandmother, but, as a mother and grandmother, I have underestimated the extent to which much my younger son and his family feel affected.’ There has been speculation that the Queen made the decision about the titles to avoid Crown Prince Frederik having to deal with such things when he becomes king, a fact Margrethe recently confirmed in Martin Krasnik’s Weekendavisen interview.
The Queen spent Christmas Eve of 2022 privately in the company of her sister Benedikte and some friends on the Djursland peninsula. Crown Prince Frederik and his family were on a Christmas visit to the Crown Princess’ family in her native Australia; while Prince Joachim and his family (wife Marie and all four children) were also ‘overseas’, doubtless licking their wounds. As usual, on the last evening of the year, 31 December, the Queen was back at the Amalienborg, to make her traditional New Year’s speech at 6pm. Queen Margrethe once again opened up about ongoing drama relating to Prince Joachim’s children losing their royal status, a decision which was due to come into effect in a matter of hours: ‘Difficulties and disagreements can arise in any family, including mine,’ adding ‘That the relationship with Prince Joachim and Princess Marie has run into difficulties causes me hurt.’ Yet, within days she was back at work, attending a diplomatic reception on 3 January.
Nevertheless, regardless of this recent development, both sons joined their rather frail mother and Princess Benedikte in Athens for the funeral, on 16 January 2023, of King Constantine of the Hellenes who had died on 10 January of a stroke (although his health and mobility had been in decline for many years.) At the graveside at the royal burial ground at Tatoi, Margrethe stood stoically behind her mourning sister, Queen Anne-Marie, her hand gently placed on the widow’s arm to provide reassurance, while to the rear, Princess Benedikte kept a careful watch over both her siblings. Margrethe and all of the Danish royal party later lunched with the Greek Royal Family at the Grand Bretagne Hotel. Frederik and Joachim then travelled together out to the airport, where they amicably parted ways-Joachim to fly back to Paris to his job at the Danish Embassy, while Frederik returned to Copenhagen as, the following day, he had official duties to undertake in relation to the UNESCO-UIA World Capital of Architecture 2023 events. Margrethe and Benedikte returned to Denmark next day, giving them a chance to provide comfort to their youngest sister. Yet, the media, Denmark’s TV2, even found a reason to find a link between this sad occasion and the stripping of titles from Prince Joachim’s children with the headline, ‘The Queen has cleaned up the Royal Family, but Constantine’s descendants are still princes and princesses of Denmark.’ TV2 pointed out that, ‘This is despite the fact that they have very little affinity with the country.’ Historically, the link goes back to when a Prince William of Denmark, the younger son of the future King Christian IX of Denmark, was selected in 1863 by the Great Powers to be Greece’s new monarch. He was to be known as King George I of the Hellenes. This decision was ratified by the Greek Parliament at the Danish prince’s insistence. According to historian Emma Paske, the King of Denmark, realising the volatile political situation in Greece, arranged a ‘safety net’ whereby the descendants of George I should bear the titles of princes and princesses of Denmark, so that they always had Denmark to come back to. Whether that will now change remains to be seen but Paske argues that this is a matter for the head of the Greek family, not Queen Margrethe.
On 8 February the Royal House issued a statement indicating that Margrethe was about to undergo surgery on her back (some twenty years ago she had an operation for spinal stenosis.) Then on 16 February, the Queen’s interview with Martin Krasnik received widespread coverage in the Danish press and on social media. Margrethe had been in a reflective mood (perhaps not surprising given that she was about to undergo surgery and had only recently buried her brother-in-law), noting that ‘The crucial thing is that you grow heartily with your country and become deeply connected to it. That has been my ideal.’ She also spoke of Ukraine. While some of her subjects still commented on the royal titles question on Det Danske Kongehuse Instagram page, most praised ‘ our super, cool Queen’ and frequently mentioned her ‘intelligence’ ‘skill’ and ‘wisdom’.
On 22 February Queen Margrethe underwent what was describe as ‘extensive back surgery’ at the Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen. Her condition was described as ‘good and stable under the circumstances.’ Her Majesty now required a longish period of convalescence and rehabilitation. Crown Prince Frederik (and during his absence abroad in India Princess Benedikte) acted as Regent. By the end of February, Margrethe was already out of bed and walking a little. On 3 March the Danish Royal House website indicated that she had been discharged from hospital and was back in residence at the Christian IX Palace. There are certainly tentative plans afoot for the Queen to embark the Dannebrog, in early June, for yet another summer tour in the Bornholm Municipality and Ertholmene archipelago, followed by visits to Nordsjælland and Halsnæs Municipality.
As Queen Margrethe recently explained in the interview with Weekendavisen, ‘The crucial thing is that you grow deeply with your country and become deeply connected to it. That’s been my ideal.’ There is little doubt that she has achieved this and more. Like Queen Elizabeth II there will be no abdication by Margrethe from her duties as sovereign (as has been the case in the Netherlands and Belgium) although doubtless Crown Prince Frederik will, as he is currently doing, take on an increasing amount of the day-to-day work.
We wish Her Majesty a speedy recovery.
Update as of 31 December 2023: On Danish TV tonight, during her New Year broadcast, Queen Margrethe announced her decision to abdicate from the throne as of 14 January 2024.
Robert Prentice is the author of the biography Princess Olga of Yugoslavia Her Life and Times Hard Copy available from Amazon.