East Bay Times

Philip’s royal ties spanned Europe

- By Theodora Tongas Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Denmark, and Aritz Parra in Madrid contribute­d to this report.

Prince Philip’s life spanned a century of European history. His family ties were just as broad, with Britain’s longest-serving consort linked by blood and marriage to most of the continent’s royal houses.

“If Queen Victoria is considered the grandmothe­r of Europe, Prince Philip is the uncle of Europe,” said Vassilis Koutsavlis, president of the Tatoi Royal Estate Friends Associatio­n.

It’s in that densely wooded estate at the foot of a mountain north of Athens that Philip’s father, Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark, lies buried. The Tatoi estate housed the royal summer residence and the royal cemetery, dotted with the tombs of Philip’s relatives: kings and queens of Greece, princes and princesses of Denmark, grand duchesses of Russia and even a distant relative of Napoleon Bonaparte.

“At that time, it was very common to marry others in royal families. And (Denmark’s King) Christian IX was very good at it,” royalty expert Lars Hovbakke Soerensen said. “He was instrument­al in getting his children married into other royal houses in Europe.”

Christian also sent one of his sons to become the monarch of Greece. The relatively new state had won its independen­ce a few decades earlier from the Ottoman Empire, with the help of the Great Powers at the time: Britain, France and Russia.

Philip’s grandfathe­r was just 17 years old in 1863 when the Greek National Assembly elected him king, becoming George I to take the place of the equally foreign-born but unpopular King Otto, who had been deposed.

George I married Olga Constantin­ovna of Russia, a member of the Romanov dynasty, and together they had eight children, of which Andrew, Philip’s father, was the seventh.

Apart from one child who died in infancy, all of George and Olga’s offspring went on to marry European royals or nobles. For Andrew, that was Princess Alice, a great-granddaugh­ter of Britain’s Queen Victoria.

“What was then important was that the royal houses needed blue blood in their veins,” Hovbakke Soerensen said.

Like the Danish king, Victoria was a well-known matchmaker, marrying her children into European monarchies. Several of her descendant­s still reign in Europe.

As a descendent of Christian IX and Victoria, Philip’s blood ties extend far into European royal families.

Current monarchs Queen Margrethe II of Denmark

and King Harald V of Norway, as well as Spain’s King Felipe VI, are all also descendant­s of both Victoria and Christian.

Felipe’s Greek-by-birth mother, Queen Emeritus Sophia, was a second niece to Philip. The uncle of Queen Elizabeth’s late husband was King Constantin­e I of Greece — Sophia’s grandfathe­r.

Sophia is the wife of Juan Carlos I, who was Spain’s king from 1975 to 2014 and also a distant relative of Queen Victoria.

In their telegram of condolence­s to Queen Elizabeth last week, Felipe and his wife, Letizia, of Spain started with an affectiona­te: “Dear Aunt Lillibet.”

“We are deeply saddened to hear about the passing away of our dear uncle Philip,” it continued.

In addition to being Philip’s second nephew, the brother of Sophia is Constantin­e, who was deposed as Greece’s king in the 1970s. He and Philip maintained strong friendly ties

that included serving as godparents to members of each other’s families.

Other sitting royals related to Philip include Sweden’s King Carl XVI Gustaf and Philippe, king of the Belgians.

Philip’s family fled Greece when he was still a baby, forced into exile to save the life of his father, who had been sentenced to death over actions taken during his involvemen­t as an officer in the failed Greek military campaign against Turkey in Asia Minor. Philip’s uncle, the king, was forced to abdicate.

Philip was married to Britain’s Queen Elizabeth for more than 70 years.

Philip was interred Saturday in the Royal Vault in St. George’s Chapel in Windsor, far from the graves of his father and ancestors in the Greek woodland of Tatoi.

 ?? FRED ERNST — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? King Juan Carlos of Spain, foreground left; Prince Philip, center rear; and Prince Henrik of Denmark, rear right, arrive for the funeral of Prince Bernhard of the Netherland­s at Nieuwe Kerk, or New Church, in the Netherland­s in 2004.
FRED ERNST — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS King Juan Carlos of Spain, foreground left; Prince Philip, center rear; and Prince Henrik of Denmark, rear right, arrive for the funeral of Prince Bernhard of the Netherland­s at Nieuwe Kerk, or New Church, in the Netherland­s in 2004.
 ?? ARISTOTLE SARIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? King Constantin­e II of Greece, left, and Prince Philip of Britain review an honor guard of the Greek Royal Evzones Guard as the prince arrives at the Athens Airport in 1965.
ARISTOTLE SARIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS King Constantin­e II of Greece, left, and Prince Philip of Britain review an honor guard of the Greek Royal Evzones Guard as the prince arrives at the Athens Airport in 1965.

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