Royal Deaths
14 January 1972: Frederik IX of Denmark was the son of King Christian X and Queen Alexandrine. In 1922 he was engaged to Olga of Greece and Denmark, however he married Ingrid of Sweden on 24 May 1935. They had three daughters but no son. This situation forced an Act of Succession to be passed in 1953, allowing his elder daughter, Margrethe, to sit on the throne. During Frederick's reign, many changes occurred in Danish Society, transforming the country into a welfare state which meant news demands for the monarchy. He was made Knight of the Order of the Garter in 1951. Just after his New Year's Address to the Nation of 1972, he became ill. He died in Copenhagen on 14 January 1972 and was buried outside Roskilde Cathedral.
28 May 1972: Duke of Windsor or as he was called before, Edward VIII, was King of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions. He reigned for less than a year, abdicating on 11 December 1936 and leaving the throne to his younger brother, George VI. His decision was pushed by the crisis he had caused when proposing marriage to an American divorced woman, Wallis Simpson. During World War II, while the couple was stationed in France, they were brought back to Britain by Lord Mountbatten. However, they soon returned to the continent, and faced private accusations of supporting Nazi ideology. After the war, he lived in retirement, away from the public attention. He died in May 1972, aged 77, in Paris. He was buried at Frogmore.
7 July 1972: Talal I of Jordan became King after his father, Abdullah I was killed in Jerusalem. Even with his short reign, he managed to smooth relations between his country and the nearest states such as Egypt and Saudi Arabia. On 11 August 1952, he abdicated due to health reasons, suspicions of schizophrenia surrounding this decision. He eventually died in July 1972 in Istanbul and was buried in the Royal Mausoleum at the Raghdan Palace in Amman.
7 August 1972: Princess Aspasia of Greece was a Greek commoner who married Alexander I, King of the Hellenes. This union was controverted due to their secret wedding at Tatoi on 4 November 1919, hence her particular title Princess Aspasia of Greece and Denmark rather than Queen of Greece. Her and King Alexander had a daughter who was born 5 months after her father's tragic death from sepsis. The marriage was retroactively recognized and the child legitimated. She died in Venice and was buried there until her remains were transfered to the Royal Cemetery Plot in the park of Tatoi.
28 November 1972: Princess Sybilla was the mother of the current King of Sweden, Carl XVI Gustaf. In 1932, she married Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden but was widowed in 1947 when her husband died in an airplane crash. She had tortuous relationships with her children, especially Carl Gustaf who was raised by nannies. Her time in Sweden was very difficult: she never accustomed to the country, didn't learn the language and endured a lot of pressure to produce an heir. Her German background made it even more complicated to be accepted, particularly due to her father's support of the Nazis. She died of cancer in 1972.
15 September 1973: Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden was the eldest son of Gustaf V and Victoria of Baden. He became King on 29 October 1950, when his father died. His motto was "Duty before all". His first wife was Margaret of Connaught with whom he had 5 children before she died suddenly on 1 May 1920, eight months pregnant of her sixth child. In 1923, he married Lady Louise Mountbatten, sister of Louis Mountbatten, uncle of Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, but their only child produced was stillborn. He died in September 1973 and was buried next to his two wives in Haga.
9 February 1977: Queen Alia of Jordan was the third wife of Hussein of Jordan. They had two children and adopted a daughter. She fought for many causes, visited hospitals and national institutions. In 1974, she obtained the right for women to elect and be elected for parliament but the suspension of parliamentary life between 1974 and 1989 prevented its application. She tragically died in February 1977 after a helicopter crash in Amman. The airport was later renamed after her.
15 November 1977: Princess Charlotte of Monaco, Duchess of Valentinois was the daughter of Marie Juliette Louvet, a cabaret singer, and Prince Louis II. After the death of her father, she was still illegitimate to the eyes of the sovereign family until 1911 when a law passed. She married Pierre de Polignac who took the surname of Grimaldi and became Prince of Monaco. They had 2 children: Antoinette and Rainier. On May 1944, she renounced to her rights to the throne to her son, Rainier. She died in 1977 in Paris.
27 August 1979: Lord Louis Mountbatten was the last Viceroy of the British Indian Empire. He married Edwina Ashley in 1922 and had two daughters, Patricia and Pamela. He had a strong influence on his great-nephew and current Prince of Wales. His mission in India was to give satisfaction to both camps, Gandhi's and Jinnah's. Eventually, he succeeded by splitting the old Empire in two. Mountbatten died suddenly at the age of 79 when his boat exploded at Mullaghmore in the Republic of Ireland. This assassination was orchestrated by the IRA. He was buried in Romsey Abbey after a televised funeral in Westminster Abbey.