Qui a épousé Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark?

  • Prince Christoph of Hesse-Kassel a épousé Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark le . Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark avait 16 ans le jour du mariage (16 ans, 5 mois et 19 jours). Prince Christoph of Hesse-Kassel avait 29 ans le jour du mariage (29 ans, 7 mois et 1 jours). L'écart d'âge était de 13 ans, 1 mois et 12 jours.

  • Prince Georg Wilhelm of Hanover a épousé Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark le . Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark avait 31 ans le jour du mariage (31 ans, 9 mois et 28 jours). Prince Georg Wilhelm of Hanover avait 31 ans le jour du mariage (31 ans, 0 mois et 29 jours). L'écart d'âge était de 0 ans, 8 mois et 27 jours.

Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark: Chronologie de l'état du mariage

Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark

Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark

Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark (Greek: Σοφία, romanized: Sofía; 26 June 1914 – 24 November 2001) was by birth a Greek and Danish princess, as well as a princess of Hesse-Kassel and a princess of Hanover through her successive marriages to Prince Christoph of Hesse and Prince George William of Hanover. An elder sister of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (husband of Queen Elizabeth II), she was, for a time, linked to the Nazi regime.

The fourth of five children of Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark and Princess Alice of Battenberg, Sophie spent a happy childhood. Her early years, however, were affected by the First World War (1914–1918) and the Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922), leading to the family's exile in Switzerland (between 1917 and 1920), and then in France (from 1922 to 1936). During their exile, Sophie and her family depended on the generosity of their foreign relatives, in particular Marie Bonaparte (who offered them accommodation in Saint-Cloud) and Lady Louis Mountbatten (who supported them financially). At the end of the 1920s, Sophie fell in love with one of her distant cousins, Prince Christoph of Hesse. Around the same time, her mother had a mental health crisis which led to her confinement in a Swiss psychiatric hospital between 1930 and 1933. Married in December 1930, Sophie moved to Berlin with her husband. She then gave birth to five children.

Close to the Nazi circles, in which her husband and several of her in-laws were involved from 1930, Sophie joined the National Socialist Women's League in 1938. Sophie and her in-laws served as unofficial intermediaries between Nazi Germany and the European dynasties to which they were related. Christoph and Sophie moved into a large house located in Dahlem, in 1936. The outbreak of the Second World War, however, forced the couple to separate; Sophie moved with her children to her mother-in-law at Friedrichshof Castle in Kronberg im Taunus. Adolf Hitler's growing distrust of the German aristocracy (from 1942) and the betrayal of King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy (in 1943) led the Nazi regime to turn against the House of Hesse-Kassel. Princess Mafalda, daughter of the Italian monarch and sister-in-law of Sophie, was imprisoned in Buchenwald, where she was seriously wounded and died shortly after, while her husband, Philipp, Landgrave of Hesse, was confined in Flossenbürg until the victory of the Allies. At the same time, Christoph was found dead in mysterious circumstances, leaving Sophie almost alone with her four children and a fifth one on the way, as well as the children of Philipp and Mafalda. The tragic events made Sophie turn against Nazism.

The defeat of Germany and its occupation by the Allies brought new difficulties in the life of Sophie, who found herself in a precarious financial situation due to the theft of her jewelry by American soldiers in 1946 and the sequestration of the property of her first husband until 1953. After living for several months in Wolfsgarten, she began a relationship with another cousin, Prince George William of Hanover, whom she married in 1946. She had three more children by her second husband. The couple moved to Salem, where George William worked as director of Schule Schloss Salem (1948–1959), before settling in Schliersee (from 1959). Excluded from the 1947 wedding of her brother Prince Philip to Princess Elizabeth of the United Kingdom (later Queen Elizabeth II) because of her past links to the Nazi regime, Sophie was reintegrated into the royal circles in the early 1950s. She nevertheless led a discreet and withdrawn life, spending her time reading, listening to music and gardening. The last surviving sibling of the Duke of Edinburgh, she died in a retirement home in Schliersee in 2001. She was the paternal aunt of the Prince of Wales, who later became King Charles III.

Lire la suite...
 
Wedding Rings

Prince Christoph of Hesse-Kassel

Prince Christoph of Hesse-Kassel

Christophe de Hesse-Cassel (en allemand : Christoph von Hessen), prince de Hesse-Cassel, est né le à Francfort-sur-le-Main (Prusse, Allemagne) et mort le près de Forli, dans les Apennins (Italie). Membre de la Maison de Hesse, c'est un militaire allemand du Troisième Reich.

Lire la suite...
 

Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark

Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark
 
Wedding Rings

Prince Georg Wilhelm of Hanover

Prince Georg Wilhelm of Hanover

Georges Guillaume Ernest Auguste Frédéric Axel de Hanovre (en allemand : Georg Wilhelm von Hannover), prince de Hanovre et de Brunswick, est né le à Brunswick, dans le duché de Brunswick, en Allemagne, et mort le à Munich, en Bavière. Membre de la dynastie anglo-allemande des Hanovre, il est le second fils du duc souverain Ernest-Auguste de Brunswick, le frère de la reine Frederika de Grèce et le beau-frère de la reine Élisabeth II.

Longtemps directeur de la prestigieuse école de Salem, il a également représenté la Grèce, pays de sa femme et de sa sœur, au Comité international olympique.

Lire la suite...
 

Enfants de Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark et leurs épouses:

Père de Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark et ses épouses:

Mère de Princess Sophie of Greece and Denmark et ses épouses: