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  1. H

    Charles and Diana

    We are forgetting that treason was committed and quite a number of times. I have no reason not to believe the POW when he said what he did, or did not, do and when. Neither do I doubt that his wife thought otherwise. They were both telling the truth as they saw it. They were both victims. Let's...
  2. H

    British Royal History: General Questions, Random Facts & Strange Quirks

    A better version. She may be French - she resembles Louise Marie Adelaide a little.
  3. H

    British Royal History: General Questions, Random Facts & Strange Quirks

    She most resembles Lady Jersey, but she would probably have been too young to have been this person. The lady is believed to have royal connections, but not necessarily a direct member. She may even have been French or German.
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    British Royal History: General Questions, Random Facts & Strange Quirks

    Can anyone identify this lady? I am hoping someone will be able to identify this royal (or at least aristocratic) lady. Portrait painted about 1802.
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    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    Was there another Princess Mary around this time (1798) of the right age? Just a thought.
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    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    It's not Princess Mary I'm told, so back to the drawing board...
  7. H

    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    The heart on her head dress and breast probably refers to those found on the Hanoverian coat of arms. The parallel with a religious painting is apparently a disguise of a painting of a mother about to give up her natural son.
  8. H

    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    Like a Madonna and Child but no haloes and colours all wrong. A mother and child, but not a family portrait. No finger rings. No father or paternal heraldry. Child points at his mother who points with her left hand past her baby while looking heavenwards. Part II to follow
  9. H

    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    William would be right, I think. I shall look for it. Princess Mary isn't hard to identify. Thank you very much indeed. The date doesn't look right (too early), but she does and the hand symbolism is telling. I think we may have a match. .
  10. H

    Duke Carl of Württemberg and Princess Diane of France - 1960

    Does anyone know how I can get in touch with Duke Carl of Wurttemberg? I am writing a book and need to communicate with His Royal Highness or someone close to him. Thanks.
  11. H

    Richard III and the Battle of Bosworth: A "What If?"

    Well said my lady. Very true!
  12. H

    Royal Brides Who Were Commoners

    I do understand your point. In earlier times princes entered into marital alliances with another royal house and produced heirs. Job done. Sometimes they would later find themselves widowered and would then marry for love - this tended to work and the marriages lasted. Love matches, which...
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    Royal Brides Who Were Commoners

    Elizabeth Woodville, married to Edward IV. A great beauty, but their marriage upset courtiers like the Earl of Warwick who expected a royal match as part of European political diplomacy. Most of Henry VIII's wives were commoners. Although of aristocratic descent from the Howards, Anne Boleyn was...
  14. H

    Richard III and the Battle of Bosworth: A "What If?"

    Edward IV was legitimate - there is no evidence otherwise. He was almost certainly premature and his baptism was rushed. His brother Richard III remained entirely loyal to him while he was alive.
  15. H

    Death and Funeral of HI&RH Archduke Rudolph (1919-2010)

    No need to mourn one on the way to Paradise and as noted led a long full life. The Habsburgs have a deep and abiding faith. Go bless Her late Imperial and Royal Majesty Regina and His late Royal Highness Prince Rudolph.
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    Charles I (1600-1649) and Henrietta Maria of France (1609-1669)

    King Charles I was in an awkward position. His father had managed to maintain a balance in England of contending parties that were religious as much as political, but by the time he died moves to support European protestants militarily meant the possibility of expensive wars abroad that the king...
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    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    Letters and documents from National Archives mostly.
  18. H

    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    The child in question, who may have been Mary's, was adopted by a friend of the father's who placed the child as a border in a school near London and looked after his welfare from a very early age. The child was recognised by the father's family, but his mother would reveal nothing whatsoever...
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    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    Usually a mention would be made in the Times of the celebration of the princess's birthday and that other members of the royal family and peerage paid their respects. This did not happen for an interval of a few years. I may be reading too much into this, but I think an inspection of baptismal...
  20. H

    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    The Times stops posting her birthday between 1997 and 1802 and she is "indisposed" quite a lot in the period. The rumour I've heard is of the son of a Scottish laird who died shortly afterwards. There may have even been a clandestine marriage. I'm searching...
  21. H

    Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1776-1857)

    Does anyone know if Princess Mary (daughter of George III) had a natural son in about 1798, prior to her marriage to her cousin the Duke of Gloucester? Her sister Princess Sophie had one illegitimate child, but there is a rumour that Princess Mary may also have had a child who she had to give up...
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