Princess Margaret of Denmark
Princess Margaret of Denmark (Danish: Prinsesse Margaretha; 17 September 1895 – 18 September 1992) was a member of the House of Glücksburg, the only daughter and youngest child of Prince Valdemar of Denmark and his wife, Princess Marie of Orléans.[1] Born at Bernstorff Palace in Copenhagen, she was a granddaughter of King Christian IX of Denmark, known as the "father-in-law of Europe" for his children's marriages into other royal houses.[2] As the last surviving grandchild of Christian IX, she lived through significant historical events, including two world wars, and outlived most of her extended royal family.[2] In 1921, Margaret married Prince René of Bourbon-Parma (1894–1962), a member of the exiled Parma branch of the House of Bourbon, in a civil ceremony in Copenhagen followed by a religious one in Rome; upon marriage, she converted from Lutheranism to Roman Catholicism.[2] The couple had four children: Prince Jacques (1922–1964), Princess Anne (1923–2016) who became the wife of King Michael I of Romania, Prince Michel (1926–2018), and Prince André (1928–2011).[2] After her marriage, Margaret primarily resided in France at La Carrère in Villefranche-sur-Mer on the French Riviera, where she raised her family.[3] Margaret's life bridged Danish and European royalty, with her daughter's marriage linking the family to the Romanian throne and her own connections extending to the British and French royal houses through her parents' lineages.[1] She died in Copenhagen at the age of 97, shortly after celebrating her birthday, and was buried in Denmark, reflecting her enduring ties to her birth country despite decades abroad.[2]Early Life
Birth and Family Background
Princess Margrethe of Denmark, full name Margrethe Françoise Louise Marie Helene, was born on 17 September 1895 at Bernstorff Palace in Gentofte, Denmark.[4] She was the fifth and youngest child of Prince Valdemar of Denmark (1858–1939) and his wife, Princess Marie of Orléans (1865–1909).[5] Prince Valdemar was the youngest son of King Christian IX of Denmark (1818–1906), who earned the nickname "Father-in-Law of Europe" for arranging marriages that connected his children to the royal houses of the United Kingdom, Russia, Greece, and beyond.[6] Through her father, Margrethe was thus a great-granddaughter of King Frederik VI and part of the House of Glücksburg, which had ascended to the Danish throne in 1863. Princess Marie, a granddaughter of King Louis-Philippe I of France, brought French noble heritage to the union, which was celebrated for bridging Danish and Orléans lineages.[4] The couple's marriage in 1885 had been notable as a Protestant-Catholic match, with an agreement that any sons would be raised in the Lutheran faith of the Danish state church, while daughters would follow their mother's Roman Catholicism.[7] As the only daughter, Margrethe was baptized Catholic two days after her birth in the palace chapel, marking her as the first Danish princess raised in that faith since the Reformation in the 16th century—a departure from the predominantly Lutheran royal tradition.[8] Margrethe's four older brothers—Prince Aage (1887–1940), who later renounced his royal title to become Count of Rosenborg; Prince Axel (1888–1964); Prince Erik (1890–1950), also Count of Rosenborg; and Prince Viggo (1892–1994), Count of Rosenborg—shaped a lively sibling dynamic within the family.[4] The Valdemar branch of the family enjoyed a relatively informal and artistic atmosphere at Bernstorff Palace, influenced by Prince Valdemar's interests in naval affairs and the arts, contrasting with the more formal court life at Amalienborg. During her early years, the family navigated the Danish court under the reign of her uncle, King Frederik VIII (1843–1912), who succeeded Christian IX in 1906, fostering close ties among the extended Glücksburg relatives amid Europe's pre-war royal interconnections.[6]Childhood and Upbringing
Princess Margaret was born on 17 September 1895 at Bernstorff Palace in Gentofte, north of Copenhagen, the family's primary summer residence.[4] As the youngest child and only daughter of Prince Valdemar of Denmark and Princess Marie of Orléans, she grew up in a privileged environment that included time spent at the family's apartments in Amalienborg Palace in central Copenhagen.[1] Her upbringing was shaped by close ties to the extended Danish royal family, including frequent interactions with her uncle King Frederik VIII and her aunt, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna of Russia, who often stayed at Bernstorff Palace during visits to Denmark.[9] Raised in the Catholic faith due to her parents' marriage agreement—unlike her Protestant brothers—Margaret received a private education typical of royal princesses of the era, focusing on languages, arts, and etiquette.[10] Her mother's French heritage contributed to a bilingual upbringing in Danish and French, fostering an appreciation for European culture. As a minor princess, she had a limited public role during her youth, allowing her to develop personal interests in a relatively sheltered setting. The outbreak of World War I in 1914 significantly influenced her early adulthood, prompting her to train as a nurse and serve in hospitals in Harrogate, England, where she assisted Russian royal relatives displaced by the war.[11] Despite Denmark's neutrality, the conflict disrupted family travels across Europe and highlighted the vulnerabilities of her privileged yet interconnected royal life.Marriage and Immediate Family
Courtship and Wedding
Princess Margaretha of Denmark began her courtship with Prince René of Bourbon-Parma around 1919, following introductions within European royal circles.[12] Prince René, born in 1894 as the seventh surviving son of Robert I, the last reigning Duke of Parma, belonged to the exiled branch of the House of Bourbon-Parma, which had lost its Italian territories in 1859; he had pursued a military career, serving as a cavalry captain in the Austrian Army during World War I. Their romance culminated in an engagement announced on 11 March 1921, which surprised many observers, including those close to the Danish royal family.[8] Preparations for the wedding included private family dinners and a grand ball at Bernstorff Palace on 8 June 1921, attended by international royalty.[9] The ceremony took place on 9 June 1921 at the Sacred Heart of Jesus Church in Copenhagen, a Catholic venue reflecting the faith of both bride and groom.[8] The event drew prominent European royals, including King Christian X and Queen Alexandrine of Denmark, Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna of Russia, and members of the Bourbon-Parma family such as Infanta Maria Antonia of Portugal.[13] This union held significant dynastic implications, forging a link between Denmark's House of Glücksburg and the exiled House of Bourbon-Parma, thereby bridging Protestant and Catholic European royal traditions.[8] Although the Danish royal family adhered to Lutheranism, Margaretha had been raised Catholic due to her parents' agreement that daughters follow their mother's French Catholic faith and sons their father's Lutheran creed—the first Danish princess to be so raised since the Reformation—mitigating potential religious tensions with René's devout Catholicism.[12] Following the wedding, the couple honeymooned briefly before settling in their initial marital residence in Paris, where Margaretha adopted the title Princess of Bourbon-Parma.[14]Children and Immediate Descendants
Princess Margaret of Denmark and her husband, Prince René of Bourbon-Parma, had four children, born in France where the family primarily resided during the interwar period. Their eldest son, Prince Jacques of Bourbon-Parma (born 9 June 1922, died 5 November 1964), served as a pilot during World War II and later pursued a career in motorsport. He tragically died at age 42 in a car accident near Roskilde, Denmark, when his vehicle collided with a truck. The second child, Princess Anne of Bourbon-Parma (born 18 September 1923, died 1 August 2016), married the exiled King Michael I of Romania on 10 June 1948 in a civil ceremony in Athens, Greece, becoming Queen consort despite the political instability following Romania's communist takeover. Their third son, Prince Michel of Bourbon-Parma (born 4 March 1926, died 7 July 2018), fought as an Allied paratrooper during the war and later became a prominent figure in European royal circles. The youngest, Prince André of Bourbon-Parma (born 6 March 1928, died 22 October 2011), led a more private life focused on family and business interests. Margaret played an active role in raising her children in Paris, overseeing their education and upbringing in a Catholic household that emphasized discipline and faith, reflecting her own Catholic upbringing as a child—the first Danish princess to be so raised since the Reformation. The family's life in the French capital provided a stable environment amid the Bourbon-Parma branch's exile status. Margaret supported her daughter Anne's marriage to King Michael, helping navigate the challenges posed by Romania's communist regime and the couple's subsequent exile, even as religious differences (Anne Catholic, Michael Orthodox) prevented the Catholic parents from attending the civil ceremony. This union produced five daughters—Margareta (born 1949), Helen (born 1950), Irina (born 1953), Sophie (born 1957), and Maria (born 1964)—who became Margaret's grandchildren and key figures in the Romanian royal family, carrying forward the lineage through their own descendants, including several great-grandchildren. Margaret took great pride in the resilience of her family, particularly through Anne's line, which endured political upheavals and maintained royal ties across Europe. The family faced significant tragedies, most notably Jacques' untimely death, which deeply affected Margaret and underscored the vulnerabilities of their peripatetic life. Influenced by Catholic values, she instilled in her children a strong sense of duty and perseverance, fostering a close-knit unit that weathered exiles, wars, and personal losses.Adulthood and World War II
Pre-War Life in Europe
Following her marriage to Prince René of Bourbon-Parma in 1921, Princess Margaret established her primary residence in France, where the couple acquired La Carrière, a manor house built into the stone walls of a 16th-century fortress in Villefranche-sur-Mer on the Côte d'Azur during the 1920s. This elegant property, overlooking the Mediterranean, became the center of their family life amid the relative stability of interwar Europe.[15] Princess Margaret socialized within exclusive circles of European nobility and royal exiles, drawing on her Danish heritage as the daughter of Prince Valdemar and her connections to displaced dynasties like the Bourbon-Parma, who had lost their Italian throne in 1860. Her network included ties to the royal houses of Britain, Russia, Greece, Hanover, and Orléans, reflecting the interconnected web of pre-war aristocracy. The couple's lifestyle blended formal engagements with private leisure, though specific royal events such as coronations and family weddings marked occasional travels.[15] Supported by family resources from Danish royal allowances and Prince René's other income sources, the princess and her husband maintained a comfortable yet nomadic existence, frequently traveling between France, Denmark to visit relatives, and Italy linked to the Bourbon-Parma roots. In the 1930s, as geopolitical tensions mounted across Europe, their family life at La Carrière involved raising their four young children—Jacques, Anne, Michel, and André—amid growing uncertainty, before a shift toward Paris.[16]Exile and Wartime Experiences
As the German forces advanced into France in the spring of 1940, Princess Margaret and her immediate family fled Paris, first crossing into Spain and then Portugal before reaching the United States in 1940; their relocation was necessitated by the ongoing war and the long-standing exile of the House of Bourbon-Parma from their ancestral duchy since 1859.[17] Settling in New York City from 1940 to 1945, the family endured significant financial strain, leading Princess Margaret to take employment at a hat shop on Madison Avenue, where she acquired and applied millinery skills to help sustain the household.[15] This work built upon her pre-war affinity for fashion and artisanal pursuits. Prince René secured a position with a local gas company, while their daughter, Princess Anne, served as a shop assistant at Macy's department store. Meanwhile, their sons Jacques and Michel remained in Europe, enlisting with the Free French forces, which resulted in prolonged family separations marked by sporadic letters and telegrams amid wartime disruptions.[16][18] Throughout the conflict, the family in New York maintained tenuous connections with their sons through censored correspondence and followed news of the Allied campaigns via radio and newspapers, ultimately witnessing the European victory from across the Atlantic in May 1945. Post-liberation reunions began that summer, as surviving family members gradually reconvened in France after the war's conclusion.[18]Later Life and Legacy
Post-War Return and Activities
Following the end of World War II, Princess Margaret returned to Paris in 1945 with her family, re-establishing their life at residences in the city amid Prince René's declining health, which persisted until his death in Copenhagen on July 30, 1962, at age 67.[17] In 1954, Princess Margaret joined Prince René for the "Cruise of the Kings," a Mediterranean yacht voyage organized by King Paul and Queen Frederica of Greece, attended by over 100 royals from across Europe to promote Greek tourism and foster international ties among monarchies.[19] Amid her daughter Anne's exile from Romania following the 1947 communist coup that forced King Michael's abdication, Princess Margaret provided ongoing familial support, including through shared residences in Paris and regular family gatherings that sustained close bonds during Anne's displacement.[16][20] Princess Margaret frequently visited Denmark to maintain connections with her birth family and royal kin, participating in private gatherings that reflected her enduring ties to the Danish court.[16] In her later years, she pursued hobbies such as gardening at family properties near Paris and engaged in philanthropy supporting Catholic causes, aligned with her husband's Bourbon-Parma heritage and the family's European networks.[17]Death and Historical Significance
Princess Margaret spent her final years residing in Copenhagen, Denmark, where she died on 18 September 1992 at the age of 97, just one day after her birthday, from natural causes associated with advanced age.[10] She was buried at Roskilde Cathedral, the traditional resting place for Danish royalty, alongside her parents and other relatives, attended by family members and Danish royal representatives.[4][21] As the last surviving grandchild of King Christian IX of Denmark—known as the "Father-in-Law of Europe"—Princess Margaret embodied a vital link between the interconnected royal dynasties of the 19th century and the upheavals of 20th-century Europe, including the exiles triggered by World War II.[10] Her life spanned profound historical shifts, from the opulent courts of pre-war Europe to the challenges of displacement and postwar resettlement. Through her daughter, Princess Anne of Bourbon-Parma, who married the exiled King Michael I of Romania in 1948, Margaret indirectly contributed to the preservation and continuity of the Romanian royal lineage. Anne and Michael's eldest daughter, Margareta, has since assumed the role of Custodian of the Romanian Crown, maintaining the family's symbolic presence and charitable efforts amid Romania's republican status.[22] Margaret's enduring legacy also reflects her personal resilience in navigating family losses, such as the death of her husband Prince René in 1962, and her influence on royal fashion through elegant, understated style that blended Danish simplicity with European sophistication, as chronicled in accounts of her life.[23]Titles and Honours
Formal Titles and Styles
Upon her birth on 17 September 1895 at Bernstorff Palace in Gentofte, Denmark, she was formally titled Her Royal Highness Princess Margrethe of Denmark (Danish: Hendes Kongelige Højhed Prinsesse Margrethe af Danmark), reflecting her status as the youngest daughter of Prince Valdemar of Denmark and Princess Marie of Orléans. Following her marriage to Prince René of Bourbon-Parma on 9 June 1921 at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Copenhagen, her official style in Danish contexts became Her Royal Highness Princess Margrethe of Denmark, Princess René of Bourbon-Parma, adhering to Danish royal protocol for princesses who wed members of non-sovereign foreign houses, thereby retaining her Danish princely designation while incorporating her husband's title.[10][24] In French and Parman aristocratic circles, where the Bourbon-Parma family maintained influence despite the house's deposition in 1859, she was alternatively addressed as Son Altesse Royale la Princesse René de Bourbon-Parme, emphasizing her integration into the Catholic branch of the dynasty.[25] As she was raised in the Catholic faith, she was ineligible for the Danish line of succession under the Act of Succession of 1853, which required profession of the Evangelical-Lutheran faith; her marriage to a member of a foreign house further conformed to protocols limiting rights for such unions without altering the male-preference primogeniture framework.[24][26] Throughout her life, these titles appeared variably in official documents, diplomatic invitations, and court correspondence; for instance, Danish state records continued to reference her primarily as Princess Margrethe of Denmark, while international events and Bourbon-Parma family announcements favored the combined or Parman style to honor her marital status.Awards and Recognitions
Princess Margaret of Denmark was invested as a Dame of Justice of the Order of the Dannebrog, Denmark's premier order of chivalry, which recognizes distinguished service to the realm and is traditionally bestowed upon members of the royal family.[27] This honour, granted during her lifetime, underscored her role in upholding royal traditions and her contributions to Danish cultural and familial ties.[27] Internationally, she received the Dame Grand Cross of the Order of Saints Olga and Sophia from the Kingdom of Greece, reflecting her status and diplomatic connections within European royalty.[28]Ancestry
Princess Margaret's ancestry combines the House of Glücksburg through her Danish paternal line and the House of Orléans through her French maternal line.| Relation | Name | Birth–Death | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Father | Prince Valdemar of Denmark | 1858–1939 | Third son of King Christian IX; naval officer and art collector.[1] |
| Mother | Princess Marie of Orléans | 1865–1909 | Daughter of Prince Robert, Duke of Chartres; converted family to Catholicism upon marriage.[29] |
Paternal Grandparents
| Name | Birth–Death | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| King Christian IX of Denmark | 1818–1906 | Known as "Father-in-Law of Europe"; reigned 1863–1906.[30] |
| Queen Louise of Hesse-Kassel | 1817–1898 | Consort to Christian IX; from the House of Hesse.[31] |
Maternal Grandparents
| Name | Birth–Death | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Prince Robert, Duke of Chartres | 1840–1910 | Son of Ferdinand Philippe, Duke of Orléans; French army officer. |
| Princess Françoise of Orléans | 1844–1925 | Daughter of François, Prince of Joinville; from the Orléans branch.[32] |