The Scotsman

Marina Sturdza

Former Romanian princess dedicated to humanitari­an work

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Marina Sturdza, a former Romanian princess who returned to Romania from exile after communism ended to become one of the country’s leading humanitari­ans, has died at 73. Hope and Homes for Children, of which Sturdza was patron, said she died on Sunday at her New York home. In March she visited a home for vulnerable children near Bucharest with Prince Charles.

Mark Waddington, the charity’s chief executive officer, said Sturdza had improved the lives of “thousands of children,” praising “the deep well of kindness [of ] her huge heart ... matched only by the strength of her backbone and grit in her determinat­ion to leave the world in a better place than she found it”.

Descended from two aristocrat­ic families, she left Romania at age three in the early years after the Second World War when communists began ruling the country, finding exile in Canada. She returned in 1997 to set up the Internatio­nal Herald Tribune business summit, the first of its kind.

The conference was held in the Athenee Palace, a hotel that during the war had welcomed Nazis, Western diplomats, reporters, spies and the dispossess­ed royalty of Eastern Europe as its guests.

Princess Marina was associated with charities working to move children from state orphanages to family homes. She also dedicated her efforts to palliative care.

“Marina always had an encouragin­g word, or a gem of wisdom to help you see challenges as opportunit­ies. She would never deny a request for help,” Waddington said.

Sturdza was known for her elegance and love of fashion. Earlier in her life she was a journalist who covered fashion and the arts.

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