The Jewish Chronicle

Clues that tell us Philip had Jewish blood

- BY DOREEN BERGER

AS THE country mourns HRH Prince Philip, it may come as a surprise that it is generally accepted he had a Jewish great grandmothe­r.

Prince Philip’s parents were Prince Andrew of Greece and Princess Alice, daughter of Princess Victoria of Hesse.

His maternal grandparen­ts were Louis Alexander Mountbatte­n, First Marquess of Milford Haven, and Princess Victoria of Hesse, granddaugh­ter of Queen Victoria. It is an unconfirme­d story that Battenberg cake was first baked for the marriage of Prince Louis and Princess Victoria.

In 1917 the family gave up their German titles and took the name of Mountbatte­n. Louis Mountbatte­n, Prince Philip’s grandfathe­r, was said to be of Jewish ancestry through his mother, Julia Therese Salomea Hauke. Julia’s father was John Maurice Hauke, a distinguis­hed German soldier, who was appointed Deputy Minister of War of Congress Poland.

When his family were elevated to

Louis Mountbatte­n was said to be of Jewish ancestry’

the rank of counts, Julia automatica­lly became a Countess. Hauke was killed during the Polish-Russian War in 1830, and the children were made wards of the Tsar. Julia’s mother, Sophie Lafontaine, was the daughter of Markus Antoni de Comela. Julia was

serving as Lady-in-Waiting to the wife of the future Tsar Alexander II when a romance developed between her and the Tsarina’s brother, Prince Alexander of Hesse. They both left the court and by the time they were able to marry, Julia was six months pregnant.

The marriage took place on 28 October, 1851, but Julie was considered to be of insufficie­nt rank to qualify for the succession to the Hessian throne and so the marriage was considered to be morganatic (a legal marriage between someone of noble birth and a partner of lower rank with an agreement that any assets of the noble partner will not be shared by the commoner or their offspring.)

She was created Countess of Battenberg in 1851, then elevated to the title of Princess of Battenberg, and the Battenberg­s became a morganatic branch of the Ducal family of Hesse.

Her line of descent includes the Jewish ancestry of not only Prince Philip’s grandfathe­r, Louis Mountbatte­n, but Alexander, Prince of Bulgaria, and the current generation­s of the Spanish royal family.

There are similariti­es between the ancestral history of HRH Prince Philip and the consort of Queen Victoria, Prince Albert. Both are considered to have been moderniser­s, both had a difficult time within the

English court and both had difficult childhoods. Additional­ly, both were rumoured to be of Jewish descent.

In the case of Prince Albert, it was strongly suspected by many that he was not the son of Ernest 1, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.

Ernest’s 18-year-old wife, Princess Luise, had been desperatel­y unhappy, married to an adulterous husband, and it was said that she had an affair with an under servant to the Dowager Duchess Augusta of Coburg at Schloss Ehrenburg.

As a result, she was banished from her home and her family. Luise’s son, Albert, now a motherless child, was brought up as the son of the Duke, but was never allowed to see his mother again. The under servant was named as Friedrich Blum.

Blum, whose Jewish family originated in Tukums, now in Latvia, then married an attractive widow as a Christian. His descendant­s settled in London. There was, apparently, a close resemblanc­e to the Prince Consort of England and this story was handed down in their family.

Of course, it cannot be corroborat­ed, but the rumour has persisted in their family and features strongly in a book, The Coburg Conspiracy, by Richard Sotnick, published in 2008. What we can be certain of is that Prince Albert did not inherit the inheridita­ry syphilis Duke of SaxeCoburg-Gotha passed to his other son, also called Ernest.

There were other men rumoured to be Prince Albert’s father so it is merely conjecture to say it was Blum. But if it were correct, then most of the royal families of Europe – and all the descendant­s of Queen Victoria – would have a strain of Jewish DNA.

If it’s true, all Victoria’s descendant­s would have a strain of Jewish DNA

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 ?? Illustrate­d London News, ?? (Above:) Portraits of Philip’s grandparen­ts, Princess Victoria and Prince Louis with intertwine­d coat of arms, from the 26 April 26, 1884. (Right:) The Coburg Conspiracy by Richard Sotnick
Illustrate­d London News, (Above:) Portraits of Philip’s grandparen­ts, Princess Victoria and Prince Louis with intertwine­d coat of arms, from the 26 April 26, 1884. (Right:) The Coburg Conspiracy by Richard Sotnick
 ??  ?? Queen Victoria, the Prince Consort and Victoria, Princess Royal in 1858
Queen Victoria, the Prince Consort and Victoria, Princess Royal in 1858

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