While looking through the wonderful Die
Souveränen Fürstenhäuser Europas, which was published in 1898-1899, I noticed that the
Württemberg section did not include a portrait of Duchess Pauline of
Württemberg, the daughter of Prince Eugen and his wife, Princess Mathilde of
Schaumburg-
Lippe. Pauline, who was born in 1854, was still alive when the book was published. But she was no longer considered a member of the
Württemberg royal family because of her marriage to a doctor -- and then there was the matter of her devotion to socialist causes.
Pauline first met her future husband, Dr. Melchior
Willim, when he was called in to treat her mother. The young doctor, a year the Princess's junior, apparently "made a deep impression on the heart of Pauline," who informed her family that she could "never lead a happy conjugal existence with any other man."
King Karl of
Württemberg agreed to the marriage with certain conditions. The marriage would be
morganatic, and the Princess would be required to renounce her royal titles and privileges. This she did willingly. On the day of her marriage, May 1, 1880, Pauline was created Frau
von Kirbach. The marriage took place in
Carlsruhe in Silesia, where the pastor remarked: "on the deep and unselfish nature of an affection which could induce a royal princess to sacrifice the advantages of the highest rank, and of luxury, at the altar."
Apparently, the pastor's comments offended the bride, who turned to the congregation and said: "I wish to affirm once and for all time, that in marrying the man of my choice, I am not conscious of having surrendered anything to which I attach the slightest importance."
Pauline never returned to
Württemberg. She and her husband, a successful physician, settled in
Breslau (now Wroclaw, Poland), where they raised their family, two daughters, Marcella and Micaela and a son, Melchior, an eye doctor.
The former duchess never regretted her decision to give up her royal life. By 1886, she was a member of the Social Democratic Party and was also active in the
fledgling women's' rights movement. She was one of "the most energetic spellbinders of the socialist party," and would give speeches from platforms, outdoor meetings and on street corners. She also converted her husband to the socialist cause.
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Ted Rosvall collection
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She had little contact with her royal relatives, and this was due to her socialist leanings, and not because of her marriage. When the Duchess of Saxe-
Meiningen (the former Princess Charlotte of Prussia) came to live in
Breslau, where her husband, Bernhard was in command of the troops, she "was compelled to hold
aloof" from Pauline.
One journalist noted that in her later years, Pauline had "lost all traces if any beauty" she may have had, and she had become eccentric, "showing a decided preference for red blouses, which naturally were construed as a manifestation for her alleged socialist leanings."
At a meeting of the Socialist Congress in
Breslau in October 1895, "the most striking figure in the congress was a tall woman of 40 years." Pauline
von Kirbach wore a black silk skirt, a fiery red silk blouse, and a huntress' hat, and had attended each day's proceedings and had watched the debates "with the eagerness of a zealous partisan."
Although Pauline had renounced her titles, she did not lose her private fortune. She used her inheritance to help the poor.
In June 1899, a Washington Post columnist noted that Pauline "sports shirtwaists of the fiercest hue of red, and is renowned for her eccentricity, which occasionally leads her to wander about the streets followed by goats, cats, poultry and other domestic pets."
Melchior
Willim died at
Breslau in October 1910. He was 56 years old. Pauline survived him for only four years. She died on April 23, 1914, in
Breslau. No royals attended her funeral. She was mourned by socialists who left floral tributes on her coffin.
Very little is known about her descendants. There is little information on her two daughters, Marcella and Micaela, the latter of whom became a nun.
Pauline's son Melchior became an eye doctor and emigrated to Paraguay. Today,
Pauline's descendants live in Paraguay and in the United States.
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