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Zizi Lambrino

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Name
  
Zizi Lambrino


Children
  
Carol Lambrino

Zizi Lambrino wwwsteliantanaserowpcontentuploads201304Z

Born
  
3 October 1898 (
1898-10-03
)

Role
  
Died
  
March 11, 1953, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France

Spouse
  
Carol II of Romania (m. 1918–1919)

Parents
  
Constantin Lambrino, Euphrosine Alcaz

Grandchildren
  
Paul-Philippe Hohenzollern

Similar People
  
Carol II of Romania, Carol Lambrino, Paul‑Philippe Hohenzollern, Magda Lupescu, Helen of Greece and Den

Parintele galeriu casatoria dintre printul carol si zizi lambrino singura recunoscuta de dumnezeu


Joanna Marie Valentina "Zizi" Lambrino (3 October 1898 in Roman, Romania – 11 March 1953 in Paris), was the first (morganatic) wife of the later King Carol II of Romania. They had one son, Carol, born in 1920, in Bucharest.

Contents

Zizi Lambrino Zizi Lambrino Wikipedia

Life

Zizi Lambrino 1953 joanna marie valentina zizi lambrino 1953 1st wife of king

Born in the former Byzantine imperial Rangabe-Lambrino family, the daughter of Romanian Colonel later General Constantin Lambrino and Euphrosine Alcaz, Joanna Lambrino met the Hohenzollern Prince Carol, son of King Ferdinand of Romania and Queen Marie of Romania, in Iaşi, Romania, in 1918, during the First World War. The Romanian royal court had adjourned from Bucharest to Iaşi to keep its distance from a German invasion. Journalist A.L. Easterman would later write that "Carol fell violently in love and was at no pains to dissemble it", despite the obvious disapproval of the royal court for his bestowing his affections on a commoner.[1] Even so, there are several photographs of Zizi Lambrino and Prince Carol at the Royal family residences and together with other members of the Romanian Royal family. Lulu, Zizi's brother, was one of Carol's best friends and they corresponded with each other throughout their lives.

Zizi Lambrino img9amroimagesslideshowsslide26409221918jpg

Some say their union was opposed by his parents, but Carol "smuggled" her across the Ukrainian (former Russian) frontier and they were married in the Orthodox Cathedral of Odessa, Ukraine, on 31 August 1918, in the presence of witnesses. Carol's parents were furious. The king ordered him to be kept in close confinement in Bistrița Monastery for seventy-five days. Prime Minister Ion I. C. Brătianu practically accused Carol of treason. Carol threatened to renounce his right of royal succession and, indeed, when in August 1919 the Romanian Supreme Court ruled the marriage unconstitutional and unlawful and annulled it, Carol signed documents of renunciation.[2] However, as Easterman describes it, "intriguers... cunningly... [threw] other young and attractive women in his view and society" and eventually "corroded his relations with his wife..."[3]

Carol and Zizi Lambrino had one son, Mircea Gregor Carol Lambrino (8 August 1920 – 27 January 2006). Carol and the Romanian government continued to pay Lambrino's maintenance and that of her son in their French exile.[4]

Zizi Lambrino died in Paris, France, on 11 March 1953.

Descendants

Her son, Mircea Gregor Carol Lambrino, was named in memory of Prince Mircea of Romania (1913-1916), Carol's youngest brother, who had died four years previous to the former's birth, but he would later be known as "Carol" rather than "Mircea." Mircea/Carol married three times, firstly (1944-1950) to Opera singer Helene Nagavitzine (aka. Léna Pastor); they had one son, Paul-Philippe Hohenzollern. He next married Jeanne Williams (1960-1977); they had one son, Ion Nicolas George Alexander Hohenzollern (born 1961 in Dorset, England). He married his third wife, Antonia Colville, in 1984 and they remained married until he died in 2006.

In response to a suit by her grandson Paul, a Romanian Court determined in 1996 that her marriage was legal. This places a shadow over the status of Carol II's son, the de facto King of Romania Michael, because if Carol's marriage to Zizi Lambrino was never properly ended, that could invalidate his later royal marriage to Helen of Greece and Denmark, Michael's mother.

ChivalricOrders.org sees this shadow as very slight: "The legality of the annulment of the marriage was not only unchallenged at the time, but significantly, after eventually becoming King, Carol II did not attempt to undo this act nor declare his son Mircea legitimate. Neither did he ever name Mircea as his heir..."; further, "the annulment" although contested by Carol at the time was "... eventually acknowledged by Carol II himself who remarried twice." [5] [6]

References

Zizi Lambrino Wikipedia