Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Andrew "booted out" of Royal Lodge


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 Under the cover of darkness, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor has left Royal Lodge and is now in temporary quarters on the Sandringham estate.  It is understood that he will stay at Wood Farm until the renovations on Marsh Farm are completed in April.

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 The Sun, which was the first to report his departure, quoted one of Andrew's friends: "Leaving was so humiliating for him that he chose to do it under the cover of darkness.  He didn't want to have a big emotional goodbye, even though Royal Lodge is a place where he had so many family memories.

"Theoretically, he could have stayed until Marsh Farm was ready, but the headlines were only getting worse. Also, the fact he's been driving around Windsor laughing and looking like he hasn't a care in the world hasn't gone down well with the Royal Household."

The former prince was seen on Monday horseback riding on Monday."

He is expected to return to Royal Lodge in a few weeks for the rest of his belongings, according to the BBC.

He was not accompanied by his former wife, Sarah Ferguson, as she hopes to find a nice bedsit in the Windsor area.  Plans for her to move into a small property on Princess Beatrice's Cotswolds estate have been scuppered.

Ferguson's international charity, Sarah's Trust, will be closed.  A spokesman said: “Our chair Sarah Ferguson and the board of trustees have agreed that with regret the charity will shortly close for the foreseeable future. This has been under discussion and in train for some months.”

Monday, February 2, 2026

The Crown Princess of Norway and Jeffrey Epstein

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 In a statement to Norwegian broadcaster, NRK, the Crown Princess of Norway said, "I deeply regret that, and this is a responsibility I must take. I showed poor judgment and regret ever having any contact with Epstein. It is simply embarrassing."

She also admitted she was responsible "for not having checked Epstein's background more closely and not understanding quickly enough  what kind of person he was."

This statement contradicts her email to Epstein in October 2011:  "Googled u after last email.  Agree didn't look good."  Her response included a smiley emoji.

Norway's Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store "agreed" that the Crown Princess had a lapse in judgment.

Crown Princess Mette-Marit is the wife of Crown Prince Haakon, heir to the Norwegian throne.

 The most recent Department of Justice release of Epstein documents, many of which were redacted, in which the Crown Princess was mentioned more than 1000 times.

Between 2011 and 2013, Epstein and the Crown Princess had extensive email contact and met several times.  She spent four days at his Florida home while on vacation in 2013.   Epstein was not present during her visit.

In one email exchange on October 12, 2012, Epstein writes: "I am looking for a wife. Paris is proving interesting, but I prefer Scandinavians."   A few hours later, Mette-Marit responded:  "Freezing.  Snow yesterday. Paris is good for adultery. Scandi better wife material. But then again Who am I to talk to?"

In another email, Epstein wrote: There are two Norwegians here, 24 and 25. I like Oslo."   

Mette-Marit responded the following morning.  "Oh, my God! You must be drunk.  Typo.  The girls are 24 and 25?  I like Oslo too.  Call me tomorrow."

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 The following emails will not have gone down well in Luxembourg. On October 20, 2012, the Crown Prince and Princess were guests at the wedding of Hereditary Grand Duke Guillaume and Countess Stephanie de Lannoy.





In the recent tranche release, the Norwegian media focused on an email exchange where the Crown Princess asks Epstein: "Is it inappropriate for a mother to suggest two naked women carrying a surfboard for my 15 yr old son's wallpaper?"

Epstein responded: “Let them decide, mother should stay out of it"

Mette-Marit's son, Marius Borg Høiby, now 28, is facing 38 charges, including raping four women.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cm2xj3ykpj4o

During their three-year correspondence, she told Epstein: "You are such a sweetheart." In another email,  Mette Marit wrote: "I miss you my crazy friend."

Mette-Marit ceased contact with Epstein in 2013. The palace stated that she believed he was "trying to use his relationship wth the crown princesas leverage with other people."

On January 31, the Norwegian royal family's communications manager,  Guri Varpe, released a statement to the press.  "During the period the Crown Princess had contact with Epstein, she was not aware of the extent and nature of the criminal acts he had admitted to and served time for.  The Crown Princess was, of course, not aware of the crimes that had subsequently been uncovered."

The Crown Princess was diagnosed with pulmonary fibrosis.  Her health has continued to deteriorate, and her doctors are considering a lung transplant.

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2025/12/update-on-crown-princess-mette-marits.html

 In an op-ed, Aftenposten's chief political editor. Kjetil Alstadheim poses the question: "Can Mette-Marit become queen after this?"   He does not offer an answer, although he notes that the emails surpass the scandals with Princess Märtha Louise and her shaman husband, and Marius's trial.

In 2019, Epstein, a convicted sex offender, committed suicide in prison.   


The fallout of the Crown Princess's emails with Epstein has begun.  She has been removed as patron of the Sex og Samfunn (Sex & Society), according to a statement released earlier today:

"The important thing for the foundation has been the consideration of our patients, of all victims of abuse and of all those who stand up to prevent sexual abuse, including several of the winners of the Skamløs Prize. It is with their consideration that we now wish to end our collaboration with HRH Crown Princess Mette-Marit, patron of the Skamløs Prize.

Sex and Society is aware that we do not know everything in this matter, but at the same time, we believe that what has already been made known is incompatible with what the  Skamløs Award stands for."

The Norwegian Red Cross is also reconsidering its ties with the Crown Princess.  Andreas Bjørnstad, the communications director, said:  "It is crucial to clearly distance ourselves from the abuses for which Epstein was convicted. Children and young people must be reassured that society has zero tolerance for sexual abuse."

He considers it important that the Crown Princess has acknowledged her poor judgment in her correspondence with Epstein.   Mette-Marit has been the Red Cross' patron since 2005.

A survey by Norway's TV2 shows 47.6% of 834 respondents who do not want Mette-Marit to be Queen.

Earlier today (February 2), the Crown Prince and Crown Princess left their home, Skagaum, in a car, perhaps heading to an Eastern Norway hospital, where Marius was examined by a doctor.  They were joined by Princess Ingrid Alexandra.  The newspaper, VG, published a photo of the Crown Prince and Princess and Princess Ingrid Alexandra in the hospital's doorway.

Last Wednesday, the Crown Prince Haakon told the media, "The Crown Princess and I have decided not to be present in the courtroom. We also do not plan to comment or make statements during the trial. Both the King, the Queen, and I have planned an official program during the period and plan to carry it out."  

There are unconfirmed reports that she will be out of the country for the duration of her son Marius's trial.

Also, earlier today, Marius Borg Hoiby was ordered held in custody for four weeks following his arrest on Sunday evening in Oslo.   According to NRK,  Hoiby was "charged with assault, threats with a knife, and violation of a restraining order."

The detention order stated: "The court believes that there is reasonable cause for suspicion for the three counts in the indictment. It is therefore more likely that the accused is guilty than not guilty according to the charges."

The alleged attack took place this past weekend in Oslo.  Marius' trial starts on Tuesday.



Sunday, February 1, 2026

Crown Haakon visits Stavanger




 On January 14, Crown Prince Haakon opened Stavanger University Hospital. 






The photos were taken by a friend of mine's brother.    He is the copyright holder.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Landgrave of Hesse considers donating properties to Hesse

 

Schloss Friedrichshof


HRH Donatus, Landgrave of Hesse, and Benedikt Kuhn, head of the Hessian State Chancellery, are in discussions for a transfer of Hessian properties to the German state of Hesse.  The properties include Schloss Fasanerie and Schloss Friedrichshof in Kronberg.

He is the eldest son of the late Moritz, Landgrave of Hesse, and Princess Tatiana of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg.

The Frankfurt Allgemeine (FAZ) was the first to report the possible transfer of historic lands and artwork to Hesse.  

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 The Landgrave of Hesse said, "For almost 100 years, since 1928, we have been fulfilling a quasi-sovereign duty through our foundations.  Originally,. This was done solely through the Hessian House Foundation (Hessisches Hausstiftung); in 2012, we established the non-profit Cultural Foundation as a separate entity from the House Foundation.  Our sovereign duty is to preserve the castles and art objects and make them accessible to the public.  However, these obligations have become too great because costs have risen dramatically in recent years, especially since the pandemic.  We are reaching our financial limits."  

He was adamant that the properties are not in dilapidated conditions. 

"No, the properties are in truly excellent conditions. Especially Schloss Fasanerie, there aren't many comparable buildings in Germany. But of course, maintaining such buildings is an ongoing process; they're never truly finished.  And that's where we've reached our limits.  That's why we approached the state government to see if it would be willing to assume responsibility for the cultural foundation."

May 24, 1900 Back row: Princess Irene of Prussia, Princess Victoria of Schaumburg-Lippe, Crown Princess Sophie of Greece and her children, Alexander, Helen & George, Empress Auguste Viktoria,  Empress Friedrich, the Hereditary Princess of Saxe-Meiningen (Charlotte), Princess Margarete of Hesse
Front row: Prince Adolf of Schaumburg-Lippe, Prince Friedrich Karl of Hesse, Prince Heinrich of Prussia, Kaiser Wilhelm II, Crown Prince Constantine of Greece, Hereditary Prince Bernhard of Saxe-Meiningen, and Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig of Hesse and By Rhine

The two "crown jewels in the list of properties are Schloss Fasanerie in Eichenzell, near Fulda, and  Schloss Friedrichof in Kronberg.  


Schloss Fasanerie


 Fasanerie has often been described as the "Hessen Versailles."   Schloss Friedrichshof was built between 1880 and 1893 following the death of Emperor Friedrich III.  The castle was named for the late emperor who was married to Princess Victoria, the eldest child of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.  Empress Friedrich, as she was styled after her husband's death, lived in the castle until her death in 1901.   She left the estate to her youngest daughter, Princess Margarete, who was married to Prince Friedrich Wilhelm of Hesse.  In 1925, hesucceeded as the Landgrave of Hesse.



 During the Second World War, Margarete's son, Prince Wolfgang, hid the family jewels in a zinc-lined box in a sub-cellar of the castle.  After the war, Friedrichshof was commandeered as a US Army officers' club.  The club's manager, Captain Kathleen Nash, found the jewels.  With her future husband, Captain Jack Durant, and Major David Wilson, the jewels were broken into pieces and sold.  It was not until 1946 that Princess Margarete discovered the theft. She had planned to lend the jewels to her widowed daughter-in-law, Princess Sophie, who was going to marry Prince Georg Wilhelm of Hanover.

The two women reported the theft to US officials.  

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 In 1951, the three Americans were arrested, tried, and sentenced to jail time.  Only 10% of the jewels were found. 

In 1954, the Schloss became Schlosshotel Friedrichshof.  I had the pleasure of staying at the hotel for two nights in the late 1980s as the guest of HRH Moritz, Landgrave of Hesse.  I had the run of the place and got a private tour from the Landgrave, which included Empress Friedrich's suite.  

https://schlosshotel-kronberg.com/en/hotel/geschichte

The value of the properties is "internally estimated" at 450 million Euros.   The Hessian collection includes tens of thousands of artworks.

Benedict Kuhn said, "This offer from the House of Hesse represents a great show of trust in the state.  We see it as an opportunity to jointly preserve our state's cultural treasures.  There is, after all, a long and established history between the House of Hesse and the state of Hesse.  Much of what we exhibit in the State Palaces and Gardens is on loan from the House of Hesse.  We can build upon this shared heritage. Therefore, it goes without saying that we will examine this offer very closely and determine whether and how we can realize this opportunity together."

Donatus acknowledged that we will have to "submit applications to the Hessian House Foundation to our supervisory authority, the Fideicommis Court, a senate of the Higher Regional Court."  This will be followed by submitting a "further application to the Regional Council for the Cultural Foundation of the House of Hesse."

The purpose of the Fiedeicommiss Court is to make sure the Hessian Foundation is not "depleted and unable to fulfil its duties."  The Landgrave plans to transfer "assets of comparable size", which will include properties in Munich and Frankfurt.   According to Donatus, the "aim of this transaction is to stabilize both the charitable Cultural Foundation of the House of Hesse and the Hessian House Foundation."

There would still be "significant challenges," Donatus said.  "To fulfil these challenges, we need financial resources, and we have to generate them."

The Hessische Hausstiftung's holdings comprise Schloss Wolfsgarten, in Langen, the art collection at Wolfsgarten, the art and cultural collection at the Schloss Museum, and the Die Großherzoglich-Hessische Porzellansammlung (Porcelain Museum) in Darmstadt, Kronberg Castle's chapel and cemetery, the cemetery at Schloss Rumpenheim's chapelin Offenbach, Schloss Panker and properties in Schleswig-Holstein.

Schloss Rumpenheim was bombed during World War II.  In 1965, the town of Offenbach purchased the castle and park from the Hausstiftung and converted them into luxury apartments.

With the exception of Schloss Friedrichshof, these properties will remain with the House of Hesse.   The palace and the hotel will be transferred to the Cultural Foundation, established in 2012 as a "spin-off" of the Hausstiftung.  The other properties in this foundation include Schloss Fasanerie and its museum, artworks, park, and forests; Schloss Friedrichshof's artworks and collections; the palace's park and golf course; a golf course and buildings in Hanau-Wilhelmsbad; and the two mausoleums in Rosenhöhe in Darmstadt.

The income from the Munich properties will be used to "maintain the cultural assets in Hesse" that remain with the Hausstifung.

Wolfsgarten, the Darmstadt properties, and the Mausoleums were part of the Hesse and By Rhine inheritance.  In 1960, Prince Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine adopted Prince Moritz as his heir.  Ludwig was the last male in the Hesse and By Rhine line.  He and his wife, the Hon. Margaret Campbell Geddes, had no children.



Ludwig was the younger son of HRH Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig of Hesse and by Rhine and his second wife, Princess Eleonore of Solms-Hohensolms-Lich.   

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 His elder brother, HRH Hereditary Grand Duke Georg Donatus, was married to Princess Cecilie of Greece and Denmark, an older sister of Princess Sophie, whose first husband was Prince Christoph of Hesse.  Georg Donatus, Cecilie, their two sons, Ludwig and Alexander,  Grand Duchess Eleonore, and several others, were killed in a plane crash in Belgium in November 1937, en route to Ludwig and Margaret's wedding.   Left behind at Wolfsgarten was their year-old daughter, Johanna Marina, who was adopted by Ludwig and Margaret.  She died from meningitis in June 1939.  


The mausoleums and burial ground at Rosenhöhe include the graves and tombs for the Grand Dukes of Hesse and By Rhine and members of their family.   Queen Victoria's second daughter, Princess Alice, who in 1862 married Grand Duke Ludwig IV of Hesse and by Rhine, is interred in the Mausoleum. 

When I visited Darmstadt in the late 1980s, I had the privilege of entering the Mausoleum, where I saw the graves of Alice and Ludwig.  Outside the Mausoleum are the graves for Georg Donatus and his family,  Prince Ludwig and Princess Margaret, and Princess Elisabeth of Hesse and by Rhine, who was Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig's daughter from his first marriage to Princess Victoria Melita of Edinburgh, Princess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.

I was given the tour by Dr. Manfred Knodt, a Lutheran Pastor, who was also an authority on the Grand Ducal family.  He was one of several people with a key to the Mausoleum.

Kuhn says the offer will be examined "very carefully."  There are questions about the state government owning a historic five-star hotel.   The Schloss, according to Kuhn, "has enormous significance in shaping our identity. And it also has potential future development."

One of FAZ's writers, Carsten Knop, considers the Hessian state "operating a five-star hotel in a listed castle is a high-risk venture."

Landgrave Donatus is confident that the acquisition would be a win-win situation for Hesse and for his family.  "I believe we could get a bit closer to the same level as Bavaria. Just think of the antiquities collection of the Cultural Foundation, one of the most private collections of its kind north of the Alps, but also the collections of porcelain, furniture, and paintings."

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2017/11/the-hesse-air-tragedy-november-16-1937.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2020/11/the-curse-of-november-16.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2011/11/prince-ludwig-marries-after-air-crash.html 

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2020/12/sophie-of-greece-weds-prince-christoph.html 

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2017/10/former-grand-duke-of-hesse-has-died.html 

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2017/04/princess-margarete-identifies-hessian.html 

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2013/01/royal-marriage-prussia-hesse.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2010/06/landgrave-friedrich-karl-has-died.html

https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2011/07/von-hesse-family-sells-holbein-madonna.html

https://schlosshotel-kronberg.com/en

https://www.schloss-fasanerie.de/startseite/


https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2013/11/looking-back-1984.html


I am one of the experts on the jewel heist in this program.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CxZIgCY7fv4

Monday, January 26, 2026

Princess Désirée's Wedding


 I have a clip file on the four Hagassorna Princesses.  The material helped with the research and writing of my article on the late Princess.  I was finally able to access newspaper databases for other material as well as the recent articles in the Swedish press.

This is one page from a four-page article on the princesses' weddings, which was published in 2013 in Svensk Damtidning (Nr. 21),

Désirée's wedding gown was first worn by her sister, Princess Birgitta, at her marriage to Prince Johann Georg of Hohenzollern.  Designed by Märthaskolan, a Swedish dressmaking school, the gown was a "thick, pale ivory silk Duchesse, featuring a wide neckline, cinched waist and a full skirt, finished off with a 4-metre train thick, pale ivory silk Duchesse, featuring a wide neckline, cinched waist and a full skirt," with a 13 feet train. 

"There is No Finer Person:" Princess Désirée, Baroness Silfverschiöld (1938-2026)

The Royal Palace announcement

 21 January 2026


"Princess Désirée has passed away.

HM The King’s sister Princess Désirée, Baroness Silfverschiöld, passed away peacefully in her home at Koberg in Västergötland on Wednesday, 21 January 2026, surrounded by her family. The Princess was 87 years old.

On the occasion of the death of Princess Désirée, the following statement is made by HM The King: 

With great sadness, I have today received the news that my sister, Princess Désirée, has passed away.

Many warm family memories were created in the home of the Silfverschiöld family in Västergötland – a place in Sweden that came to mean a great deal to my sister.

Together with my family, I send my condolences to Princess Désirée’s children and their families."


Marlene A Eilers Koenig collection (all images with the exception of the Getty photos)





Princess Désirée  Elisabeth Sibylla of Sweden was born on June 2, 1938, at Haga Palace, the third daughter of Hereditary Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden, Duke of Västerbotten,  and Princess Sibylla of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. She and her three sisters, Margaretha (1934), Birgitta (1937-2024), and Christina (1943) were known as the Hagasessorna (the Haga Princesses).  The princesses did not have succession rights to the Swedish throne, which was limited solely to males.

The line of succession in June 1938 was Crown Prince Gustav Adolf (grandfather), Hereditary Prince Gustaf Adolf (father), Prince Bertil, Carl Johan (uncles), and Prince Wilhelm (great-uncle), Prince Carl, Duke of Västergötland, and Prince Eugen.   The last two princes were the younger brothers of King Gustav V. Eugen never married, and Carl's only son, Prince Carl, renounced his rights upon marriage.  Prince Sigvard (son of the Crown Prince) and Prince Lennart (son of Wilhelm) had also renounced their rights when they married.  A Swedish prince could not marry a "private man's daughter" without losing his title and succession rights.  

In February 1946, Carl Johan also forfeited his rights and titles upon marrying a commoner.   The majority of males with succession rights were elderly, except for the Hereditary Prince and his younger brother, Prince Bertil.   

Five years after Désirée's birth, Sibylla gave birth to a fourth daughter, Christina.  At the time, there were no serious discussions in Sweden about allowing female succession.   On April 30, 1946, the nation breathed a sigh of relief when a son, Carl Gustaf, was born.   


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 The princess's baptism -- in the Lutheran Church -- took place on June 30, 1938, at the Solna Church in Stockholm.  The name Désirée was for the infant princess's great-great-great-great-grandmother, Bernardine Eugénie Désirée Clary, wife of Jean-Baptiste Jules Bernadotte, who in 1818 became the King of Sweden and Norway.   









The princess and her two older sisters joined the Swedish Girl Scouts in December 1946.   Désiree's early education took place in the palace before she and her sisters attended private school.  She was a good sportswoman, a "school champion in slalom skiing."  As a teenager, she also enjoyed Dixieland Jazz.

 Désirée was only eight years old when her father, Hereditary Prince Gustaf Adolf, was killed in a plane crash on January 26, 1947, at Copenhagen's Kastrup Airport.  The prince was returning home after attending a hunting party in the Netherlands, hosted by Prince Bernhard.

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On October 29, 1950,  King Gustav V died, and Désirée's grandfather succeeded to the throne as King Gustaf VI Adolf.  Her little brother, only nine months old when his father was killed, was now the Crown Prince of Sweden.  The family lived in the Royal Palace, a comfortable and familiar place for Princess Sibylla and her children.


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 Désirée and her sisters all enjoyed winter sports, often spending holidays with their Danish first cousins,  Margrethe, Benedikte, and Anne Marie.   

The future Queen Margrethe II once said of her cousins: "One more beautiful than the other."  She also thought they were "very advanced with nylon stockings and décolletages at the time, when the three of us from Denmark certainly were not. I can well remember our holy indignation over here."  

The three Danish princesses, however, had succession rights to the Danish throne, following a change to their constitution in 1953.

In December 1952, the 14-year-old princess and her two older sisters were invited to the opening of the movie, The Greatest Show on Earth.  One assumes the young princess was delighted to be included. Unfortunately, "the film was forbidden to youths under 15."  At the last minute, to no avail, the film company tried to obtain a special permit for the princess.   A "red-faced film official" had to call the palace to explain why Désirée could not join her sisters.   She returned home while Margaretha and Birgitta remained, and no doubt, told their crestfallen sister about the movie.

Désirée's confirmation in the Lutheran Church on July 2, 1954,  was marred when her mother, Princess Sibylla, drove over a railroad crossing when the red lights were flashing at Färjestaden Station on Öland.  Two months later, Sybilla, who admitted her action, was fined $300 for "reckless driving" by a local court.  She acknowledged she was driving to her daughter's confirmation.

She was known as the "pedalling princess" because she enjoyed riding her bike from Haga Palace to Stockholm, where she and her sisters would see movies or the theater.   On her 18th birthday, she graduated from the Franska School.  A photograph of the Princess was released, showing her wearing the "school hat," looking into a mirror.  One caption described her as "quite a grown-up and an attractive young lady."

A profile of the three eldest Haga Princesses in the Ottawa Journal in March 1957 noted that Désirée was "almost the exact opposite of her sisters in looks as in every other respect."  She had inherited "the French Bernadotte blood," and "is dark, graceful and lively -- very much a tomboy at times, so her friends say."

The writer noted that the princess "speaks with her hands," enjoys dancing, and has "sparkling good looks."





The international press, including the Associated Press, noted that there were more eligible princesses than princes in the late 1950s, but the statistics did not stop the speculation about who these princesses would marry.  In September 1957, there were reports that Désiree and the exiled King Simeon of Bulgaria were "linked romantically" because they were photographed together at an elk hunt in Oland, Sweden.  One U.S. gossip columnist wrote that the princess and the former king "may be readying an announcement."  He also described the princess as "dee-sirable."  

More than a year later,  there were reports that Désirée would marry the future King Constantine II of the Hellenes.  These reports were published in August 1958 when the princess joined the Greek Royal Family for a holiday in Corfu.  Unfortunately, Désirée, who was accompanied by Constantine's sister. Princess Irene suffered a fractured arm and dislocated knee when the jeep she was driving overturned.

  Embed from Getty Images



The rumors of an engagement persisted.  A few days after the accident, newspapers published a photograph of Désirée, with Constantine standing behind her at a fiesta on Corfu.  Neither royal house would confirm or deny that the future king and the Swedish princess were engaged ... or about to become engaged.  Several days after the accident, the princess returned to Sweden.    

In August 1959, the Swedish newspaper, Expressen, reported that the engagement between Désirée, 21, and 19-year-old Tino was about to be announced.  Palace sources told the paper that Princess Sibylla had agreed to the engagement "within the next few weeks.  The princess and two of her sisters, Margaretha and Birgitta, were about to leave for Greece, according to the Associated Press.

The three princesses spent two weeks on Corfu with Constantine and his family.  According to gossip columnist Cholly Knickerbocker, Queen Frederica's adviser, Mr. Pipinelli, traveled to Sweden to discuss the wedding, scheduled for June 1960, when Constantine turned 21.  Although it was rumored that Queen Frederika encouraged a marriage between her son and the Swedish princess, she did not include this in her memoirs.

[In 1964. King Constantine II married Désirée's first cousin, Princess Anne Marie of Denmark.]

In January 1958, the princess completed a nurse training course in Stockholm, where she learned child care.   Eleven months later,  the Palace announced that Désirée had enrolled in a two-year course to become a kindergarten teacher.  She joined 19 other young women at a cooperative training college and passed the final exams on her 22nd birthday.   The princess worked briefly as a preschool teacher in  Stockholm

She also earned a degree in textiles from Konstfack University of Arts, Crafts and Design. 

In the late 1950s, there was much speculation about whom King Baudouin of Belgium would marry.  The very eligible young king's invitation to 12 princesses to his ball on April 19, 1958, came as a "happy surprise for his people." Two of the princesses were Princess Birgitta and Princess Désirée.   Baudouin's late mother, Astrid, a princess of Sweden by birth, was a first cousin of Birgitta and Désirée's late father, Gustaf Adolf.   None of the dozen distaff royals charmed Baudouin, who married a Spaniard, Fabiola de Mora y Aragón, in 1960.

Although the press contributed to speculation about a royal marriage, Princess Désirée had found love with Count Greger “Teddy” Lewenhaupt, whose younger brother, Count Carl Adam "Noppe", was one of Carl Gustaf's lifelong friends.   Teddy and Noppe's father, Count Gösta Lewenhaupt, had served as Princess Sibylla's chamberlain.

Teddy and Désirée dated for several years, and the family believed they would marry.  Tragically, on  March 14, 1960, Teddy, 22, was killed in a skiing accident in Åre, Sweden.  

On March 12, two days before Teddy's death,  Princess Désirée and her three sisters, Margaretha, Birgitta, and Christina, were the belles of the ball hosted by King Gustav VI Adolf and Queen Louise.  The ball was "the most lavish social affair Stockholm ever staged.  The royal guests included Princess Sophie of Greece, Princess Astrid of Norway,  Princess Alexandra of Kent, Princess Irene of Greece, Princess Beatrix of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, Princesses  Beatrix and Irene of the Netherlands, Crown Prince Constantine of Greece, Crown Prince Harald of Norway, Prince Edward, Duke of Kent,  Prince Kraft of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, Prince Ludwig of Baden,  Prince Karl of Hesse, Prince Moritz of Hesse, Count Carl-Veit of Toerring-Jettenbac, King Simeon of Bulgaria and Duke Max in Bavaria.  Besides the European royals. 227 guests "in the same age group as the Swedish princesses and hailing from high Swedish society."  

The names of the Swedish aristocrats who attended the ball were not made public.

In November 1960,  Princess Désirée and her older sister, Princess Birgitta, paid an official 10-day visit to the United States.  In New York City, "protocol broke briefly" when a little girl kissed Prince Désirée.  The "unscheduled kiss was given -- and returned -- at the Bank Street School."  The princess, accompanied by her lady-in-waiting, embassy attaches, and school officials,  Meryl Schaffer, who, according to the New York Times, "too young to be awed," ran to the Princess, her "arms outstretched for a kiss."  Princess Désiree obliged.  Meryl's mother told the New York Times:  "Ever since she got up this morning, she's been saying, 'I'm going to kiss a princess because it's my birthday and I'm 4 years old.'"

They also gave their first news conference, acknowledging they had gone shopping, not for clothes but for phonograph record albums."

The two princesses also visited Philadelphia, Wilmington, Delaware, and Chicago,

A year after Teddy's death, she was introduced to Baron Niclas Silfverschiöld by one of her cousins, Marianne Flach, the daughter of Colonel Nils-Magnus von Arbin and Countess Dagmar Bernadotte of Wisborg.  Niclas owned two of Sweden's largest estates in Koberg. The first report of an engagement between Désirée was in September 1961, when Expressen published a story stating that the engagement would take place shortly after the Christmas holidays.  The American news agency, UPI, picked up the story, which was published in newspapers around the world.



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 The official engagement announcement was made on December 19, 1963.  The night before the wedding, King Gustaf VI Adolf hosted a ball for the couple and 250 guests.  More than four million people watched the wedding live on Swedish television.



Princess Désirée's marriage to Baron Niclas Silfverschiöld took place on June 5, 1964, at the Stockholm Cathedral.  She was escorted down the aisle to the altar by her grandfather, King Gustav VI Adolf.  Her gown was made of white ivory duchesse and was first worn by her older sister, Princess Birgitta, when she married Prince Johann Georg of Hohenzollern in May 1961. 




 Her bouquet included lilies of the valley and white orchids. She was the first "to wear the Bernadotte family veil", holding the Cameo tiara -- also worn by Princess Birgitta -- in place.

It was not a surprise that Birgitta shared her gown with her "darling sister."   

The 1000-plus guests included members of the Swedish Royal Family and "several members of the Government and Parliament.   Désirée's aunt, Queen Ingrid of Denmark, and their three daughters,  Princesses Margrethe, Benedikte, and Anne Marie, were also among the guests, as was Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone, who was described by The Times as the sister of Princess Margaret of Connaught, the first wife of then Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf. 

[Yes, The Times made this mistake.  Alice was Margaret's first cousin, not her sister.  More importantly, she was Princess Sibylla's paternal aunt.]

Four blind children from the school where the Princess had taught were given prominent seats in the cathedral."

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 The newlyweds posed briefly outside the cathedral, where Niclas kissed her on the cheek.   A wedding luncheon was held at the palace, where the king toasted his granddaughter and her husband, telling them that marital happiness was not only based on love, "but also on mutual confidence and mutual respect for each other as individuals."

When her grandfather, King Gustaf VI Adolf, asked what jewelry she wanted as a wedding present, Désrée replied: "Thank you, grandfather, but I think Niclas needs a tractor instead."

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 The honeymoon was spent at her uncle, Prince Bertil's villa in Sainte-Maxime on the French Riviera.

After the wedding, Désiree ceased to be HRH Princess Désirée of Sweden and a member of the Royal House.   According to several sources, she wanted to renounce her title, as she had not married a royal. Her grandfather insisted that she be styled Princess Désirée, Baroness Silfverschiöld.

She settled into a comfortable life at Koberg Castle in Västergötland.  Her brother often enjoyed hunting parties hosted by his sister and her husband. 




Her marriage and raising a family allowed the princess to relish her anonymity.   She once said: “I now see myself only as a mother and wife and do not attach much importance to my princessship. In principle, I also think it is wrong to rely on origins and kinship."

1965: Princess Margaretha holding her daughter Sibylla, & John Ambler.  Princess Désirée with her son, Carl, and her husband, Baron Niclas Silfverschiöld



The Princess had three children: Carl Otto Edmund (1965),  Christina Louise Ewa Madelaine (1966), and Helene Ingeborg Sibylla (1968). 

Although she rarely attended official engagements aside from the Nobel Prizes and family events, Princess Désirée and her husband visited the United States in the spring of 1976  as part of a 35-member group of Swedish landowners touring American agricultural facilities.   The group spent 18 days on a cross-country tour in the United States.

When she turned 70, the princess agreed to an interview with Svensk Dam newspaper.  She spoke about walking her Labrador Bojan, family life, and cooking. 

"And I'm financially sound. Actually, almost a little silly that I'm going to use everything. What you cook from leftovers almost always turns out really delicious, and I always find something in the garden to use. The other day, I picked rhubarb and made a pie."

The reporter asked her what her dinner plans were for that day.  The princess responded: "I'll check the fridge and freezer and see what happens."   

She was also thrifty with her wardrobe.  The gown she wore to her cousin, Queen Margrethe II of Denmark's wedding in 1967, made another appearance at a gala event 50 years later.

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Baron Niclas Silfverschiöld died at Koberg on November 4, 2017.   He had suffered from cancer for several years.

In 2023, Princess Birgitta said her sister had suffered from meningitis, "so she should probably be happy that she's still alive."  One of Désirée's last public appearances was at Birgitta's funeral in December 2024.  

The four sisters were very close.  In 2016, Princess Désirée said, "We sisters talk with each other about such things that one cannot share with anyone else."

Princess Désirée lived at Koberg for more than 60 years.  She once said, "I am lucky. I am truly grateful to be healthy. And then there is joy in the children and grandchildren. I love my grandchildren, and I think they love their grandmother too."

She died at Koberg Castle with her family at her bedside.   

Princess Désirée is survived by her three children, Baron Carl, Baroness Christina, Mrs De Geer, and Baroness Helene, five grandchildren: Baroness Anna Silfverschiöld, Estelle, Ian, Fred De Geer, and Charles Dieterle. She is also survived by her sisters, Princess Margaretha, Mrs. Ambler, Princess Christina, Mrs. Magnuson, and her brother, King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden, as well as eleven nieces and nephews, including her goddaughter, Crown Princess Victoria.

A local woman in Koberg, who did not want to be named, described the princess to a reporter: "There is no finer person."


If you liked this article,  I would love a coffee or a hot chocolate.  So cold here - and will be inside for several days as the roads are awful.


Victoria - Arthur - Margaret - Gustaf Adolf - Désirée

Victoria - Leopold - Charles Edward - Sibylla - Désirée

Divine Service at Wolferton, Norfolk

 

@Ken Stone


King Charles III and Queen Camilla were joined by the Princess Royal and Sir Tim Laurence for Divine Service at St. Peter's Church, Wolferton,







The King with the new Archbishop of Canterbury, Dame Sarah Mullally.  She will be formally installed in March


The church is not far from Marsh Farm, the new home of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.

Thank you to Ken Stone for allowing me to use the photos.  He is the copyright holder.


It has been crazy here.  Not just the weather, but I have had several internet outages.  The last one was on Saturday.  I called Cox Complete Care and was told there are no outages. The tech and I began to think the same thing: could the 10-month-old Netgear Modem Router be the issue?   A major storm is brewing, so I decide to bring the modem-router to Best Buy.  It is under warranty.  I exchange it, buy a warranty for the new one, and head home.  

As I was attending an ordination for our deacon in an hour, I knew I would not be attaching the new Nighthawk to EVERYTHING ... not really ...until later that evening.

As I am heading to my car, I notice two Cox trucks.  Turns out there was an outage that started about 8:30 am.  I did not need to go to Best Buy, but I was concerned about not having wif-fi durin the storm and aftermath.  

Everything is back to normal, except for my HP printer (6 months old). The new wi-fi is listed, but this is what HP Smart shows me


It's ready, active, but what's not installed?  Calling HP tomorrow as I cannot print or scan.    My Princess Désirée article is ready to go, but I want to add photos from my collection.


Friday, January 23, 2026

Prince Bernhard and Princess Annette Divorce

 Communication from the Government Information Service on behalf of His Highness Prince Bernhard and Her Highness Princess Annette

After 25 years of marriage, we have decided to divorce. We are doing this by mutual agreement and with mutual respect. We will continue to care for our three children together. Despite this, it remains a difficult step. We therefore ask for everyone's understanding and respect for our privacy.

Bernhard van Oranje and Annette Sekrève

HH Prince Bernhard of Orange-Nassau, von Vollenhoven, is the second of four sons of HRH Princess Margriet of the Netherlands and Pieter van Vollenhoven.  He was born on December 25, 1969, in Nijmegen.  Margriet, who was the third of four daughters of Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard, was the only one of Beatrix's to retain her right of succession to the Dutch throne.

[Princesses Irene and Christina lost their rights when they did not ask Parliament for permission to marry.]

Bernhard and King Willem-Alexander are first cousins.

Bernhard spent a year at Georgetown University, where he studied economics.  In 1995, he graduated with a degree in economics from Groningen University.  It was at Groningen University that he met Annette Sekrève, who graduated the following year with a degree in psychology.   She has been a practicing psychologist, spending most of her career working with people with disabilities.  She is now focused on charity work.

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They annouced their engagement on March 11, 2000.  Annette was said to be "overjoyed" with her future husband.

 The civil wedding - the legal ceremony in the Netherlands - took place in Utrecht.  Two days, the couple were married in a Dutch Reformed service at the Cathedral of St. Martin in Utrecht.

At the time of his marriage, Bernhard was a member of the Dutch Royal House and was in line for the throne.  The day before his civil marriage, Beatrix issued a Royal Decree stating that his children would have the surname van Vollenhoven.  

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 The Dutch constitution limits succession to the throne to three degrees of kinship to the Sovereign. Thus, Isabella Lily Juliana (2002), Samuel Bernhard Louis (2004), and Benjamin Pieter Floris (2008) van Vollenhoven have never had succession rights to the Dutch throne.  When Queen Beatrix abdicated in 2013,  Bernhard and his older brother, HH Prince Maurits, ceased to be members of the Dutch Royal House and dynasts.  [Their two brothers, Prince Pieter-Christiaan and Prince Floris, lost their rights when they married without seeking Parliament's approval.]

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 Bernhard and Annette did not have official duties, although they did attend national events, including King's Day in April 2025.

With the divorce, Annette loses her marital status and title, HH Princess Annette of Orange-Nassau, and reverts to her maiden name.




Monday, January 19, 2026

SERBIAN ROYAL COUPLE AT THE FUNERAL OF PRINCESS IRENE OF GREECE

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 Belgrade, 19 January 2026 – TRH Crown Prince Alexander and Crown Princess Katherine attended today the funeral of HRH Princess Irene of Greece, the Royal family of Serbia’s dear cousin, and friend, at the Metropolis Cathedral of The Annunciation followed by the Tatoi Royal Cemetery burial, where Her Royal Highness was laid to eternal rest together with other late members of the Royal family of Greece. 

The church service was performed by His Beatitude Ieronymos II, Archbishop of Athens and All Greece, at the Orthodox Metropolitan Cathedral of Athens. Members of the Royal families of Europe and many prominent people gathered to say their last goodbye to the late Princess and set her off to her eternal rest. HM Queen Sophia of Spain, Princess Irene’s sister, as well as HM Queen Anne-Marie, and HRH Crown Prince Pavlos, together with other members of the Royal Family of Greece, led the procession and accepted condolences and words of deepest sympathy for their loss.  

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 “My wife and I are both deeply saddened by the passing of our dear friend and cousin, HRH Princess Irene of Greece. We have known each other for decades and shared numerous beautiful moments together. Just as an example of how deep our friendship goes, it was with the late Princess Irene that HRH Crown Princess Katherine began her humanitarian work in the 1980s, when they joined hands to help the children of India.

During these most difficult moments, we share the grief and pain of our dear cousins, the Royal family of Greece, and we send our prayers to the Lord to remember the late Princess in His mercy. When this time of grieving passes, only those beautiful memories of a great and kind woman, a true and honest friend, will remain fondly kept by all of us who knew her, as well as of all the beautiful and joyful moments we have shared together, for which we are truly grateful”, said HRH Crown Prince Alxander on this occasion.

Together with the Royal Couple of Serbia, the Royal families of Europe were present, including: HM King Felipe VI and HM Queen Letizia of Spain, with their daughters TRH Infanta Elena, and Infanta Cristina, TRH Princess Alexia, Prince Nikolaos, and Princess Theodora of Greece with their spouses, and HRH Princess Sophie of Romania.

Relations between the Royal families of Greece and Serbia have always been marked with sincere and cordial friendship and deep family bonds. HRH Crown Prince Alexander’s maternal grandfather, HM King Alexander of Greece, was the brother of HM King Paul of Greece, HRH Princess Irene’s father.