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Princess Ingeborg of Denmark

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Mother
  
Louise of Sweden

House
  
House of Glucksburg

Name
  
Princess of

Princess Ingeborg of Denmark 1911 Ingeborg Denmark with Carl of Sweden Grand Ladies
Born
  
2 August 1878Charlottenlund Palace, Copenhagen, Denmark (
1878-08-02
)

Issue
  
Margaretha, Princess Axel of DenmarkMartha, Crown Princess of NorwayAstrid, Queen of the BelgiansPrince Carl Bernadotte

Died
  
March 11, 1958, Stockholm, Sweden

Spouse
  
Prince Carl, Duke of Vastergotland (m. 1897)

Children
  
Astrid of Sweden, Princess Martha of Sweden, Prince Carl Bernadotte, Princess Margaretha of Sweden

Parents
  
Frederick VIII of Denmark, Louise of Sweden

Similar People
  
Prince Carl - Duke of Vaster, Astrid of Sweden, Princess Martha of Sweden, Prince Carl Bernadotte, Louise of Sweden

Princess Ingeborg of Denmark, Princess of Sweden, Duchess of Västergötland


Princess Ingeborg of Denmark (Ingeborg Charlotta Carolina Frederikke Louise; 2 August 1878 – 12 March 1958) was a daughter of Frederick VIII of Denmark. She is the maternal grandmother of Harald V of Norway, Baudouin and Albert II of Belgium, and the female line great grandmother of Henri of Luxembourg.

Contents

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Early life

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Princess Ingeborg was born on 2 August 1878 at Charlottenlund Palace north of Copenhagen as the second daughter and fifth child of Crown Prince Frederick of Denmark, the eldest son of King Christian IX. Her mother was Princess Louise of Sweden, the only surviving child of King Charles XV of Sweden and IV of Norway.

Marriage

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In May 1897, Princess Ingeborg was engaged to Prince Carl of Sweden, Duke of Vastergotland. Prince Carl was the third son of King Oscar II of Sweden and Sophia of Nassau. They were, therefore, first cousins.

Princess Ingeborg of Denmark Princesses Ingeborg and Thyra of Denmark Grand Ladies gogm

They married on 27 August 1897 in the chapel at Christiansborg Palace in Copenhagen and spent their honeymoon in Germany.

The couple had four children:

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  1. Princess Margaretha of Sweden, later Princess of Denmark (1899–1977).
  2. Princess Martha of Sweden, later Crown Princess of Norway (1901–1954).
  3. Princess Astrid of Sweden, later Queen of the Belgians (1905–1935).
  4. Prince Carl Bernadotte, known as Carl Jr., later Prince Bernadotte, a Belgian title (1911–2003).

In 1947, on the occasion of their wedding anniversary, her spouse admitted that their marriage had been completely arranged by their respective fathers, and Ingeborg herself added: "I married a complete stranger!"

Princess Ingeborg of Denmark Princess Ingeborg Of Sweden Nee Princess Of Denmark The

The marriage was popular because she was the granddaughter of the popular king Charles XV of Sweden and IV of Norway, and she was a personal success in Sweden. It was said of her, that of all foreign princesses married into the Swedish royal house, she was perhaps the one best suited to be Queen consort of Sweden, and for the first ten years in Sweden, she almost was: from 1897 until 1907, Queen Sophia seldom attended public events and Crown Princess Victoria spent most of her time abroad for health reasons, Princess Ingeborg was thereby given more public duties, unofficially performing much of the role associated with the queen consort at the Swedish court. She is perceived as having performed her representational duties with a combination of dignity and easygoing friendliness, and as attracting a social circle with her wit.

Ingeborg was interested in sports, especially ice skating, and at the automobile exhibition of Stockholm in 1903, she and the Crown Prince, Gustav, made a spontaneous demonstration trip in a car from Scania. In 1908, she accompanied Prince William to his wedding with Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna in Russia.

Family life

She lived a harmonious family life, and the family was known as "The happy family". The children were given a simple upbringing, and expected to learn household tasks: they were, for example, given a real stove in their play cottage, on which they cooked real food. She and Carl lived an informal and intimate family life with their children.

Ingeborg was admired for her handling of the economic difficulties experienced when a bank they invested in crashed in 1922 and they had to sell their home. She was portrayed as a symbol of a wife and mother in many magazines and was for many years the most popular member of the royal house.

In 1905, the Norwegian government discussed making them king and queen of Norway, but Carl declined the offer. Instead, her brother was elected monarch of Norway. Ingeborg's kinship to the Scandinavian dynasties helped bring the three royal houses together again after tension created due to Norway's 1905 secession. Politically, Ingeborg had democratic and liberal sympathies and disliked the conservatives, views she expressed during the governmental crisis in 1918. She detested the conservative Hammarskoljd cabinet and the 1914 policy, criticized the conservative press and viewed the resignation of the Liberal-Social Democratic cabinet of 1918 as a disaster, reportedly commented it with the words: "It must not happen! No no no!"

During the World War II in 1940–45, she demonstrated publicly against Nazi Germany by blocking the window of her house which faced the German embassy in Stockholm.

Princess Ingeborg has the distinction of being the grandmother of three European monarchs, King Harald V of Norway, King Baudouin of the Belgians, King Albert II of the Belgians. And she is great-grandmother of two: Henri, Grand Duke of Luxembourg and Philippe, King of the Belgians

References

Princess Ingeborg of Denmark Wikipedia