Royal Musings
News and commentary about the reigning royal houses of the United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Luxembourg, Liechtenstein, the Netherlands, Spain, Monaco -- and the former European monarchies as well.
Wednesday, August 17, 2022
Tuesday, August 16, 2022
Prince Wauthier de Ligne (1952-2022)
Prince Wauthier de Ligne died in a hospital in Tournai, Belgium on August 15. He suffered from a "long and painful illness". He was 70 years old.
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Princess Anne and Prince Wauthier all photos are from the Marlene A Eilers Koenig Collection |
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Wauthier, Michel, Princess Alix with Princess Sophie, Princess Christine & Princess Anne: 1957 |
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Wauthier, Sophie, Michel and Anne |
HH Prince Wauthier Philippe Féliz Marie Lamoral of Ligne was born on July 10, 1952, at Schloss Beloeil, the second of seven children of the late HH Antoine Marie Joachim Lamoral, 13th Prince of Ligne (1925-2005) and HRH Princess Alix Marie Anne Antoinette Charlotte Gabrielle;of Luxembourg (1929-2019). His maternal grandparents were HRH Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg and HRH Prince Felix of Bourbon-Parma.
His marriage to Marguerite Régine Marie Françoise Xavière de Renesse took place at Elderen on May 1, 1976.
The Prince and his family lived in a house on the Schloss Beloeil estate. He is survived by his widow, Princess Regine, and their three children, Prince Philippe (1977) and his wife, Laetitia, Princess Melanie (1979) and her husband, Paul Weingarten, and Princess Elisabeth (1983) and her husband, Baron Baudouin Gillès de Pélichy and grandchildren, Prince Jean-Charles, Princess Aliénor, and Princess Constance of Ligne, Felix Weingarten, Baron Antoine, Baron Charles, Baroness Philippine Baroness Marguerite, and Baroness Marie Gillès de Pélichy.
He is also survived by his siblings, Michel, 14th Prince of Ligne, Princess Anne, Mrs. Charles de Fabribeckers de Cortils et Grâce; Princess Christine of Orleans-Braganza, Princess Sophie, Countess Nicolay, Prince Antoine, and Princess Yolande, Mrs. Hugo Townsend, and numerous nieces and nephews.
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Wauthier, Michel, Christine, Marie Astrid of Luxembourg, Princess Anne |
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A family portrait |
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The Prince and Princess of Ligne and their seven children |
The funeral will take place on August 22 at 11 a.m. in the Saint-Pierre church in Beloeil.
Sunday, August 14, 2022
Adelaide Cottage - a new home for the Cambridges?
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@Royal Collection |
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@ Royal Collections circa 1900 |
On the morning of March 12, 1831, King William IV "took an airing in Little Windsor Park in his pony phaeton, and inspected Adelaide Cottage," according to a report in the Norfolk Chronicle and Norwich Gazette. The newspaper described the cottage as a "romantic building." that has "a delightful effect from the road leading through the park from Datchet."
Queen Adelaide was born Princess Adelheid of Saxe-Meiningen on August 13, 1792. She married Prince William, Duke of Clarence at Kew Palace on July 11, 1818, in a double wedding with William's younger brother, Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, who married Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.
The King and Queen often spent time at the cottage, especially during the summers, when they could be driven there in a pony phaeton. Queen Adelaide would, on occasion, with her ladies, walk to the cottage for tea or other refreshments and then walk back to Windsor Castle\, sometimes strolling through the town.
In April 1831, the Queen, "with her attendants, gratified a numerous assemblage of nobility and gentry, by walking through the Terrace on Sunday afternoon, during the grand promenade. Her Majesty proceeded on foot through the slopes to Adelaide Cottage, and on her return attended the afternoon service at St. George's Chapel," according to the Windsor Herald.
In March 1838, it was reported that the Board of Woods and Forests were "engaged in forming a private carriageway from the north door of the Terrace Conservatory through the Little Park to Adelaide Cottage. This drive will be enclosed within a Ha! Ha! fence, and screened with shrubberies, etc.; and it is intended to form an easier mode of access for her Majesty to visit this delightful retreat, the occasionally rapid ascents of the walk through the slopes have already been fatiguing."
During the first summer of their marriage, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert would often walk from Windsor Castle to Adelaide Cottage and would return to the castle on a pony phaeton. The Cottage offered the young couple the chance to relax away from the pressures of court life at the Castle. In August 1841, Prince Albert celebrated his birthday at the cottage with a quiet lunch with his wife, where they were treated to a serenade. The cottage was also a place where the Queen's children could enjoy free time with their parents. The Queen herself would take "occasional refreshments at Adelaide Cottage, Frogmore or Shaw Farm in the Home Park," especially in the spring and early summer.
The cottage was also a place where the Queen and Prince Albert could entertain with less formality, often inviting family members, including the Duchess of Kent, the Princess of Hohenlohe-Langenburg (Victoria's older half-sister, Feodore), and Albert's brother, Ernst, and his wife. In September 1846, the Queen and Prince Albert, the Princess of Prussia, "and all of her Majesty's visitors, except the Queen Dowager, walked to Adelaide Cottage" after spending some time there, the royal party returned to Windsor Castle in pony carriages.
By the 1850s, Adelaide Cottage had become a grace and favor home. George Fleming, who began a career in Royal service at age 15, rose to become Victoria's Page of the Bedchamber. He and his family lived in Adelaide Cottage for 35 years. Victoria's children often spent time at the cottage with the Fleming children.
King George V and Queen Mary would also use the cottage for afternoon tea. They were fond of the "rose pergola at Adelaide Cottage," describing the pergola as "one of the great features of the Home Park Private."
The occupant who made the request was Peter Townsend, who moved into Adelaide Cottage in 1944 with his wife, Rosemary, and their young son Giles. Townsend, who served in the Royal Air Force during the second world war, was named as equerry to King George VI. The couple's second son, Hugo, was born at Adelaide Cottage a year later.
The Townsends were divorced in 1952 due to Rosemary's adulterous relationship with John Laszlo, son of the famed portrait painter, Philip de Laszlo. Townsend fell in love with Princess Margaret and they made plans to marry. Although he was not the guilty party in the divorce, Townsend was tainted by the stigma of the divorce and would not have been allowed to remarry in the Church of England. This proved to be a major hurdle in the couple's relationship and in October 1955, Princess Margaret ended the relationship.
For 22 years Adelaide Cottage was the home of Sir John Johnston and his wife, the Hon. Elizabeth "Libby" Hardinge, the younger daughter of the 2nd Lord Hardinge of Penshurst, who as Alec Hardinge, served as Private Secretary to King Edward VIII and King George VI.
Libby Johnston was a childhood friend of Queen Elizabeth. A year younger than the future queen, Libby joined Princess Elizabeth in the classroom in the palace.
Her mother, Helen Cecil, was a childhood friend of Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, who served as one of the bridesmaids at Helen's wedding. The Queen Mother was one of Libby's godparents.
Sir Hugh Roberts, former Director of the Royal Collection, and his wife, Jane, the former Librarian at the Royal Archives, resided at Adelaide Cottage.
Adelaide Cottage has a storied history, built for a much-loved Queen Consort, but is there a chance that the Cottage will finally become a full-time royal residence? The Cottage has never been a royal residence. It also doesn't have a large garden.
Friday, August 12, 2022
Princess Maria Laura of Belgium to marry on September 10
@Andrew Ferrer |
Princess Maria Laura of Belgium will marry William Isvy on September 10. The Roman Catholic ceremony will take place in the Cathedral of Saint Michael and Saint Gudula in Brussels.
The 33-year-old Princess is the second of five children of Princess Astrid of Belgium and her husband, Archduke Lorenz of Austria. Astrid's father, King Albert II issued a Royal Decree on November 10, 1995, creating Lorenz as Prince of Belgium.
The Princess, who uses the name Laura, is the niece of King Philippe of the Belgians.
On January 31, the King approved the marriage, which allows the Princess, currently in 9th place in the line of succession, to remain in line to the throne. Her children will also have succession rights, but they will not have any royal titles.
https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2021/12/a-belgian-royal-engagement.html
William and Princess Laura met in London where they live and work. The Princess is not a working royal. He is an analyst with Millenium Capital. The princess works as a climate analyst with the Children's Investment Fund Foundation.
Another QVD engagement: Harry Sewall to Bobbie Garbutt
Henry "Harry" Alexander Sewell is engaged to marry Roberta Lois Carla Garbutt, a 4th generation nutmeg farmer in Grenada.
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@linked in |
Henry is the elder son of Charles Percy Sewell and Alice Louise Esther Margot Huntington-Whiteley. He was born on May 4, 1988, at Horton Maternity Hospital, Banbury, Oxfordshire. He is known as Harry.
Louise is one of the three children of the late Sir John Miles Huntington-Whiteley VRD, 4th Baronet (1929–2019), and Countess Victoria Adelheid of Castell-Rüdenhausen. She is also the granddaughter of Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin of Bewdley, whose daughter, Lady Margaret Baldwin married Sir Hebert Maurice Huntington-Whiteley, 2nd Baronet.
Countess Victoria Adelheid lives for several years with her paternal aunt, Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone at Kensington Palace.
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@Sustenance Collective |
Bobbie Garbutt has Grenada and Irish nationality. She was born in Norwich in March 1993. She is the daughter of Leo Garbutt and Lilian Ramdhanny. Her family lives in Grenada, where her father owns Calabash Luxury Boutique Hotel. In January 2021, Leo Garbutt, MBE was voted President of the Grenada Hotel & Tourism Association.
Leo Garbutt and his family |
Bobbie has two sisters. She runs the Sustenance Collective. According to the website, Bobbie is "a food activist, educator and advocate of good food from good places shared with good people.
She works to create sustainable supply chains within the food industry. Living on both sides of the Atlantic between London and Grenada, she has taken on the task of transforming her family’s 200-year-old organic cocoa and nutmeg plantation on the island."
Her mother's family owns L’Esterre, " a 200-year-old estate, consisting of a plantation house surrounded by 70 acres of lush, fertile agricultural land bounded by a peaceful river."
Bobbie's great-grandfather, Lawrence “Ram” Ramdhanny, a pharmacist, bought the L’Esterre Estate in 1949. Ram was the son of East Indian immigrants.
Harry, who attended Harrow School and Oxford Brooke University, works as a Residential Sales at Strutt & Parker, Kensington.
Harry's line of descent from Queen Victoria:
Victoria - Leopold - Carl Eduard (Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha), Caroline Mathilde - Victoria Adelheid - Louise - Harry.
https://www.thesustenancecollective.com/about
https://www.otherness.co/post/a-call-back-to-the-land-a-vision-for-an-islands-future
https://why-food.simplecast.com/episodes/bobbie-garbutt-4th-generation-nutmeg-farmer-4_vr89M4
https://www.calabashhotel.com/blog/how-it-startedamp-how-its-going
Monday, August 8, 2022
Louis Cunningham -- all the right genes to play Louis XVI
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@Tavistock Wood |
One of the Daily Mail's diarist Richard Eden's most recent columns included a nugget about Louis Robert Dominic Marie Cunningham, an up-and-coming young actor. The latter appeared as Lord Corning in an episode of the popular Netflix series Bridgerton. He has been cast as King Louis XVI of France in a new BBC series, Marie Antoinette.
Eden noted that the 24-year-old actor is the grandson of Prince Charles of Luxembourg, who died of a heart attack in 1977 in Italy.
The Ampleforth-educated (2016) actor has British and Luxembourg nationality. He is the second of three sons of HRH Princess Charlotte Phyllis Anne Joelle Marie of Luxembourg and Mark Victor Cunningham. He was born on March 9, 1998, at the Hospital of St. John and St. Elizabeth in London. He has an older brother, Charles Douglas Donall Marie Cunningham (1996), and a younger brother, Donall Mark Philippe Marie Cunningham (2002)
Harrogate-born Mark Victor Cunningham met Princess Charlotte at Oxford University where they both were students. The Princess, who prefers to be known as Charlotte Cunningham. received a degree in modern languages. Mr. Cunninngham has worked for 30 years in corporate finance and private wealth management. In 2010, he co-founded Cunningham Loewenstein Asset Management with Dora Loewenstein (HSH Princess Maria Theodora Marjorie of zu Loewenstein-Wertheim-Freudenberg, whose late father, Prince Rupert was the financial manager for the Rolling Stones.
In 2013, the firm name was changed to Holbein Partners LLP. In the summer of 2021, the firm was acquired by Tiedemann Constantia. Holbein Partners is described as "an independent investment manager and wealth advisor for high-net-worth individuals, family offices, trusts, foundations, and endowments."
Mark Cunningham is also the chairman of the Rainbow Trust Children's Charity.
https://www.rainbowtrust.org.uk/
Princess Charlotte and Mark Cunningham were married in a civil ceremony in Mouchy, France on June 26, 1993. Their religious wedding took place in Saint-Rémy-de-Provence on September 18, 1993. Grand Duke Jean gave away the bride.
Charlotte is the co-founder and Artistic Director of Turtle Key Arts founded "in 1989 as a unique and ground-breaking accessible space, and accessibility for all continues to be a key philosophy of the company."
The Cunninghams have homes in London and Yorkshire. Charlotte and Mark purchased Potter Hill Farm, near the village of Coulton, North Yorkshire in April 2020 for £9,900,000.
They also spend summers at the Dillon family home on Isleboro Island in Maine.
https://www.turtlekeyarts.org.uk/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kva8JQ1Jgsw&ab_channel=TomGross
HRH Prince Charles Frédéric Louis Guillaume Marie of Luxembourg, Prince of Bourbon-Parma, Prince of Nassau (1927-1967) was the fifth of six children and the second son of HRH Grand Duchess Charlotte of Luxembourg (1896-1985) and HRH Prince Felix of Bourbon-Parma (1893-1970). He was the heir presumptive to the Grand Ducal throne until the birth of Grand Duke Jean's eldest son, Henri, now Grand Duke, in 1955. The present Grand Duke and Princess Charlotte are first cousins.
There was a bit of controversy when Prince Charles fell in love with Joan Douglas Dillon (1935.) She was an American commoner, but politically and socially well-connected. Her family was also very rich. This would be Joan's second marriage.
In 1953, at age 18, Joan married James Brady Moseley, a nephew of Nicholas F. Brady, who served as Secretary of the Treasury during the Reagan and Bush administrations. Brady joined Dillon. Read & Co in 1954, eventually rising to the position of chairman. Joan was living in Paris where her father was the American Ambassador to France.
She gave birth to a daughter Joan Dillon Moseley in 1954. A year later the marriage was dissolved by divorce and in 1963, the marriage was annulled by the Roman Catholic church. Moseley was Roman Catholic and Joan was Protestant.
Joan's parents. Clarence and Phyllis Dillon announced her engagement to Prince Charles on February 10, 1967. The wedding was scheduled to take place in early spring. Six days after the engagement announcement, Grand Duke Jean issued a decree that gave dynastic status to Charles' marriage. His new wife would be styled as HRH Princess Joan of Luxembourg
The Roman Catholic wedding took place at the Church of St. Edward the Confessor in Guildford, England on March 1, 1967. Grand Duke Jean and Clarence Dillon were witnesses to the ceremony, which was attended by close family relatives, including the bride's parents. Grand Duchess Charlotte and Charles's four sisters. Elisabeth, Marie Adelaide, Marie Gabrielle and Alix.
Seven months after the wedding on September 15, 1967, Princess Joan gave birth to Charlotte in New York City. The couple's second child, Prince Robert Louis François Marie was born on August 14, 1968, at Schloss Fischbach in Luxembourg.
Charlotte and her descendants are not in the line of succession to the Luxembourg throne as the succession law until 2011 limited succession to the male line descendants (approved marriages) of Grand Duke Wilhelm of Luxembourg's daughters. He did not have any sons. In 2011, a new gender equal succession law was passed, but the gender equal part applies only to Grand Duke Henri's descendants. All other eligible male line descendants of Grand Duke Wilhelm remain in line. This includes Henri's youngest brother, Prince Guillaume, and his sons, and his first cousin, Prince Robert, who is married to an American, Julie Ongaro, and they are the parents of three children, Charlotte, Alexandre, and Frederik.
A year after Prince Charles' death, Princess Joan married for the third time to Philippe François Armand Marie de Noailles, Duc de Mouchy (1922-2011). Charlotte and Robert were sent to boarding school in England.
Joan, now 85, is styled as the Dowager Duchess de Mouchy. She has been described as "a larger-than-life lady, with an indefinable, cultured, mid-Atlantic accent."
Charlotte is a first cousin of Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg. She has a younger brother, Prince Robert (1968) who is the head of Domaine Clarence Dillon, which "has the unique privilege of producing five rare and exceptional estate wines: two red wines and two white wines from First Growth, Château Haut-Brion and its sibling Château La Mission Haut-Brion." Prince Robert succeeded his mother as president in 2008.
Louis's royal ancestry has many interesting lines. He is a descendant of King Louis XIV of France, and Queen Maria I of Portugal. His paternal grandfather's family tree includes Bourbon Parmas, Bourbon-Two Sicilies, Hohenlohe-Langenburg, Loewenstein-Wertheim, Austria, and Spain ---probably all the way back to Edward III.
Louis' great-great grandfather Clarence Dillon (1882-1979) was a financier who, according to Forbes magazine, was one of America's richest men with a fortune between $150-200 million. He attended Harvard and became an investment banker. In 1912, he began working for a Wall Street firm, William A Read & Compay in Chicago. He moved to the New York office in 1914. Two years, after the death of William Read, Clarence Dillon bought a major interest in the firm and became head of the company.
The firm's name was changed to Dillon, Reed & Company in 1931. Dillon was a Francophile and an oenophile. He bought an apartment in Paris in 1929, where he spent time every year. Chateau Hau-Brion was his favorite wine so he decided to buy the company for 2,300,000 francs in 1935.
https://www.domaineclarencedillon.com/en/identite/
He attended Harvard University where he earned a degree in American history and literature. Before seeing service in the Pacific in the second world war, Clarence was the Vice President and Director of Dillon, Read & Company. He returned to the firm after the war where he was named Chairman, where he was able to double the firm's investments by 1952.
Dillon, Read & Company was sold to Barings in 1991 for $122 million. The former family-owned investment firm was sold several times after Barings went bankrupt and was closed in 2007.
Louis Cunningham's American roots can be traced back to the 1600s in Maryland and Virginia. This connection comes through Clarence Dillon's wife, Anne McEldin Douglass. Through his maternal grandmother, the young actor has French, Scottish, English, German and Polish ancestry.
Clarence Dillon was born in San Antonio to Clarence Lapowski, the son of Samuel Lapowski, a Polish Jew who had immigrated to Texas after the American Civil War, and Berta Stenbock, whose Swedish father, Gustav Stenbock, a prospector searching for lead and silver in Colorado.
The Lapowski family was naturalized in 1891. A decade later, they changed their surname to Dillon. This was the anglicized surname of Michele Dylion, a Frenchman, whose daughter, Paulina married Joshua Lapowski, the parents of Samuel Lapowski.
The family also converted to Christianity.
Joan Dillon's father dropped one S from his middle name Douglass, becoming Clarence Douglas Dillon, known as C. Clarence Dillon.
If you liked this article, perhaps you can buy me a cup of coffee
Friday, August 5, 2022
19 million and counting
At some point today, Royal Musings reached 19 million readers. I started this blog in July 2008, but I never expected that the blog would be read by so many people around the world.
I love writing about royalty past and present. I also enjoy sharing travel stories and news about the kitties and chatting with my readers.
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You can type and scratch my tummy at the same time, Mom. |
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Mom, are you almost finished writing? I am hungry. |
Thank you so much for enjoying Royal Musings and RBN Royal Book News.
Perhaps it is time for a glass of champagne
Wednesday, August 3, 2022
Prince Ludwig of Bavaria engaged
Prince Ludwig in Bucharest in October 2011 @Marlene Eilers Koenig |
Prince Ludwig Heinrich of Bavaria is engaged to Sophie-Alexandra Evekink. He is the future head of the Royal House of Bavaria.
The couple became engaged in Berchtesgaden.
He was born on June 14, 1982 in Landsberg am Lech, third child and eldest son of Prince Luitpold of Bavaria and Beatrix Wiegand. Prince Luitpold is the only child of the late Prince Ludwig of Bavaria and Princess Irmingard of Bavaria, who were first cousins.
Ludwig III - Rupprecht - Irmingard - Luitpold - Ludwig
Ludwig III - Franz - Ludwig - Luitpold - Ludwig.
Prince Ludwig is also a descendant of Grand Duke Adolphe of Luxembourg:
Adolphe - Wilhelm - Antonia - Irmingard - Luitpold - Ludwig
Miss Evekink was born in Singapore in 1989 and has dual Dutch-Canadian nationality. She studied political and criminal science in England and worked for WHO in Geneva. Sophie is a Ph.D. candidate at Oxford University. She is the daughter of Dorus Evekink, Program Manager of Strategic Leadership a the Maastricht School of Management.
Prince Ludwig has taken on "representative and honorary duties for the family" at the request of Duke Franz, the current head of the house. He studied law at Göttingen University, focusing on human rights. He is committing to helping those in need in Africa, Romania, and Ukraine.
In May 2022, Prince Ludwig received the Bavarian State Medal for Social Merit.
Prince Ludwig's father, Prince Luitpold spoke to Bild about his son's engagement.
"Ludwig made a good choice. My future daughter-in-law is a very intelligent and well-educated woman."
He also looks forward to more grandchildren. "I hope they start a family soon. It is very gratifying that Ludwig is now more in Bavaria again. He worked as a development worker in Africa for almost ten years."
Miss Evekink is currently writing her doctoral thesis on international law at Oxford.
The date for the wedding has not been announced.
"We don't know that yet. What is clear, however, is that it will be a celebration of joy," Prince Luitpold told Bild.
Prince Luitpold is the owner of the Kaltenberg brewery.
https://royalbavarianbeer.com/
https://www.pointdevue.fr/royal/couronnes-du-monde/le-prince-ludwig-de-baviere-est-fiance
https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/people/sophie-evekink
Myra, Lady Butter (1925-2022)
Tatler Magazine (June 2012) described Lady Butter as "the smartest woman in Scotland," even "without the Queen in tow." She was always "immaculately dressed" and lead "Highland society with brio."
Myra Alice Wernher was born March 18, 1925, at Coates Crescent, Edinburgh, the third and youngest child of Sir Harold Wernher, BT, and Countess Anastasia "Zia" Torby who was the eldest of three children of Grand Duke Michael Mikhailovich of Russia (1861-1929) and his morganatic wife, Countess Sophie von Merenberg, elder daughter of the elder daughter of Prince Nikolaus Wilhelm of Nassau and his morganatic wife, Natalia Alexandrovna Pushkina, the daughter of Russian poet Alexander Pushkin.
Countess Zia de Torby was granted the style and precedence of the daughter of an Earl by a Royal Warrant of King George V, on September 1, 1917, and was styled as The Lady Zia Wernher.
Myra's birth was announced in the Court Circular on March 10, 1925. "Lady Zia Wernher gave birth to a daughter on Sunday." Her baptism took place on June 4, 1925, at Holy Trinity Church, in Marylebone. Her godparents were the Crown Princess of Sweden, Lady Amy Coats, Mme de Ellis, Lt. Col. J.G Lowther, and Mr. Marshall Field.
The Crown Princess of Sweden was represented by her sister-in-law, the Marchioness of Milford Haven, who was Lady Zia's younger sister. The former Lady Louise Mountbatten was the second wife of the future King Gustav VI of Sweden. When he succeeded to the throne in 1950, Louise became Queen Louise of Sweden.
She had an older brother, George Michael Alexander, known as Alex (1919-1942), and an older sister, Georgina (1910-2011) who was married twice, first to Harold Phillips (1909-1980) and then to Sir George Arnold Ford Kennard, 3rd Bt, (1915-1999).
Myra and her older siblings were childhood friends of Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Margaret. This friendship continued throughout their lives. Their maternal aunt, Nada, was married to George, 2nd Marquess of Milford Haven (ne Prince George of Battenberg,) who was Prince Philip's guardian.
Myra and her siblings spent their childhood at Lubenham, where Princess Elizabeth, then only two and a half years old, came to tea -- 'two little things running about." A few years later, Myra and Elizabeth had swimming lessons together along with other young girls at the Bath Club in London.
"They got hold of some girls to be part of the thing to make it more fun," Lady Butter told the Sunday Telegraph in 2021.
@Bassano National Portrait Gallery |
Every summer for six weeks, the family traveled to Downie Park in Scotland. The children "worshipped Scotland," where their home was packed with friends. They would spend all day out, "fishing or up in the hills."
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Bassano National Portrait Gallery |
The girls were brought up "very strictly." Gina was "inclined to be rebellious, but "Myra, small and bright, much younger, a great mimic, seemed set to be a brilliant musician."
Myra would later describe her parents as "a terrific example of self-discipline and service. They made us aware of our good fortune in life. Pa was completely unmaterialistic but admired good things and would have been happy anywhere. Ma was very demanding but would have made herself comfortable in different circumstances. They were people of great strength."
Lady Zia and Queen Elizabeth II shared a love of horse racing.
When Georgina married Harold Phillips at St. Margaret's Westminster in 1944, Myra and Princess Alexandra were her two bridesmaids. Two years later, Myra became engaged to David Henry Butter, a "member of an ancient Scottish family" that had owned land in the Pitlochry area since the 12th century. His mother Agnes Marguerite Clark was American.
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from a member of Lady Butter's family |
Their society wedding took place on November 5, 1946, at St Margaret's, Westminster. Queen Mary, who was accompanied by Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret, attended the wedding along with the Duchess of Kent, Princess Andrew of Greece, Admiral the Hon Sir Alexander and Lady Patricia Ramsay, and Admiral Viscount Mountbatten of Burma and Viscountess Mountbatten.
Myra was given away by her father. She wore a "gown and train of shell-pink tulle heavily embossed with silver in a floral design, and a long tulle embroidered with silver and she carried an ivory-bound Prayer book," according to the Times.
Four-year-old Prince Michael of Kent carried the bride's train. He was dressed in the Royal Stuart tartan "with a white silk blouse and red shoes. Princess Alexandra of Kent, 9, and the Hon. Diana Herbert were the bridesmaids. Their dresses were "shell-pink picture frocks, with head-dresses of mixed flowers matching their bouquets."
The reception was held at the Dorchester Hotel.
Myra and her husband divided their time between a London home and their estate in Cluniemore.
Lady Butter and her sister, Georgina, along with their parents, Sir Harold and Lady Zia Wernher, were guests at Prince Philip's wedding to Princess Elizabeth. She told the Daily Mail in 1997: "The war had been so grey that the Royal Wedding seemed to signify the world coming to life again. Everyone was determined to have a new dress for the day and I wore a blue ribbed silk dress by Dior. It was one of the first three-quarter-length dresses, and I wore it with a feathered hat. I had new shoes and a bag, too -- any excuse.
"All the people from the Commonwealth made the ceremony very colourful and the choir superb.
"The Princess looked truly glittering. Her dress was beautiful and she was obviously in love. Philip looked very dashing in his naval uniform -- and it really did seem like a fairytale wedding."
After the wedding, Myra and her family "rushed home and changed, then sped off down the Mall to Buckingham Palace, where we stood there shouting to get them out on the balcony. Everyone I know claims the credit for getting them out on the balcony."
Queen Elizabeth II is the godmother of Myra and David's eldest child, Sandra Elizabeth Zia. Princess Alexandra is the godmother of Myra's fourth daughter, Georgina Marguerite
Myra and her husband David offered their "Perthshire haven" in Pitlochry to the Duke of Kent when he was courting Katharine Worsley and Princess Alexandra when she began dating the Hon. Sir Angus Ogilvy. Alexandra and Angus first met at Myra's parents' home, Luton Hoo.
Major Sir David Butter, who was appointed KCVO in 1991, died on May 29, 2010, at Cluniemore, Pitlochry at the age of 90.
During ITV's coverage of Prince Philip's funeral in April 2021, Lady Butter shared her sadness at his death. She was asked what the queen had lost with her husband's death; "The world, I think. Incalculable."
In March 2022, Lady Butter, who had founded the Pushkin Prizes in Scotland more than 30 years ago, returned the Pushkin Medal, which has been presented to her on "the personal decree of President Putin." She began the Pushkin Prizes after visiting the palaces in St. Petersburg where her family had lived.
She had received the honor in recognition of her work "bringing Scottish and Russian pupils together," reported The Times.
Lady Butter wrote to Russia's consul in Edinburgh, saying she was returning the medal "with great regret."
"I regarded the medal as such an honour when it came to Scotland in better times. We have always felt our deep roots with our ancestors in Russia and the great friendships received over the past years. However, to witness the terrible suffering taking place now is unbearable. Every human being only wishes to live in a peaceful world and we can only pray that the war will end with the utmost speed."
https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2010/11/myra-werner-marries-major-butter.html
https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2017/12/of-course-elizabeth-knew-philip.html
https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2011/05/georgina-lady-kennard.html
https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2011/01/hold-your-breath-and-smile.html
https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2011/04/death-of-lady-kennard.html
https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2020/05/alex-wernher-close-friend-of-duke-of.html
If you want to learn more about the Wernher family, I recommend this book:
https://royalbooknews.blogspot.com/2011/05/grand-dukes-and-diamonds.html
Catherine II - Paul - Nicholas I - Grand Duke Michael - Grand Duke Michael - Countess Zia - Myra
Monday, August 1, 2022
The marriage of the Hereditary Prince Paul Anton Esterhazy
The Hereditary Princess Esterházy von Galántha The copyright for the photos belongs to the photographer. |
Hereditary Prince Paul-Anton Esterházy von Galántha and Franziska "Sissi" von Reutter were married on July 30 in the Maria Saal Cathedral in Klagenfurt, Austria. It was a formal wedding as the dress code was white tie and decorations.
The reception was held at Schloss Gradisch in Carinthia, which is owned by Count Karl-Georg von Goess.
The groom's father, Anton, Prince Esterházy von Galántha did not attend the wedding.
The couple became engaged last August as revealed by Royal Musings.
The new Hereditary Princess is the half-niece of the late German sculptor, Franz Koenig.
Prince Ludwig of Bavaria and Sophie-Alexandra Evekink |
Prince and Princess Joachim-Albrecht of Prussia (the Princess appears to be expecting a third child) and Prince Joachim-Albrecht's sister, the Hereditary Princess of Leiningen |
The Hereditary Prince and Princess of Leiningen |
Philipp Lovrek and his wife, Countess Alice of Koenigsegg-Aulendorf |
the Prince and Princess of Castell-Rüdenhausen |
The copyright of all these photos belongs to a friend .... no one can use these photos in blogs, on social media (Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest. etc), or published anywhere without the permission of the copyright holder. I thank this friend for allowing me to use the photos.
Two photos are not captioned.
The Daily Mail has published an article about the wedding by Jessica Green, who included photos lifted from Instagram without permission of the copyright holders. But no real facts about the wedding.
The article includes background information on the couple... hmm, where do you suppose Jessica got that information?
Here is the Daily Mail article:
and then click on my engagement article and you find numerous similarities including quotes from the Hereditary Prince's interview which I translated into English.
https://royalmusingsblogspotcom.blogspot.com/2021/09/the-hereditary-prince-esterhazy-von.html
It appears Jessica used the cut and paste keys to write her article.
This is from Royal Musings |
This is from the Mail's article, nearly word for word .. again I translated a German-language article into English |
I ran the Daily Mail article through a plagiarism checker which showed that 29% of Jessica's article was plagiarized from Royal Musings.