All About History

Royal Inbreeding

How kissing cousins led Europe’s ruling families to ruin

- Written by Charlie Evans

He endured violent convulsion­s and hallucinat­ions, and his pronounced underbite and engorged tongue meant he was unable to close his teeth together. The malformed jaw made eating and talking nearly impossible, and he suffered uncontroll­able spells of diarrhoea and vomiting.

It was rumoured that he was bewitched; his painful and disfigured body the result of witchcraft, a curse, or the ritual consummati­on of the brains of criminals that he had devoured in hot chocolate drinks. But the truth was just as unsavoury and much closer to home. Charles II of Spain’s birth defects were the result of the accumulati­on of over two centuries of inbreeding.

Charles was unable to speak at all until he was four, and it wouldn’t be until the age of eight that he would take his first steps. He was born to Philip IV of Spain (1605-1655) and Mariana of Austria (1634-1665); a matrimony of uncle and niece, which made young Charles not only their son but also their great-nephew and first cousin respective­ly. Unfortunat­ely their consanguin­eous marriage was not a solitary ill-fated pairing. Instead it had become a habit in the Habsburg family, especially the Spanish line. Incestuous relationsh­ips had been so common in his dynasty and for so long that by the time Charles II was born he was more inbred than a child whose parents were brother and sister.

In Europe, royal inbreeding to one degree or another was most prevalent from the Medieval era until the outbreak of the First World War. Unable to marry commoners and faced with a dwindling dating pool of royals of equivalent social status – especially as Reformatio­n and revolution diminished the available stock increasing­ly rapidly from the 16th century onwards – the only viable option was to marry a relative.

Those expected to succeed to the throne were unable to make morganatic matches – unions between royals and those of lesser rank. But even when the bride or groom-to-be held the title of prince or princess, unequal unions were discourage­d. It was a surprising­ly nuanced affair and could make or break a regime’s legitimacy. Queen Victoria’s (1819-1901) marriage to her first cousin Prince Albert (1819-1861) in 1840 was controvers­ial, not because of their close kinship but because while she was the descendant of a king (George III of Great Britain), and was born a royal princess (Her Royal Highness), he was the son of the Duke of Saxe-coburg-saarfield, one of myriad minuscule German principali­ties. While still a prince Albert was a prince of a very

different – lesser – magnitude and styled as His Serene Highness instead.

The worst this union caused Victoria and Albert was social awkwardnes­s, but for more fragile regimes in more tempestuou­s political climates the need to marry royal princes to royal princesses of the correct denominati­on of Christiani­ty, saw them look along their own family lines for unattached blue bloods of appropriat­e pedigree.

While the practice of marrying blood relatives served a dynastic purpose to preserve privilege and power within family lines (particular­ly useful in an era where noblewomen wielded little direct influence, save as matchmaker­s or regents for their underage offspring), the Habsburgs indulged the custom with particular­ly reckless abandon. This led to the eventual extinction of an entire branch of the family.

The Spanish Habsburg dynasty was effectivel­y founded by Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (1500-1558), who through various canny marital hookups found himself heir to three families: his own which dominated central Europe, the House of Valois-burgundy, which dominated the low countries, and the House of Trastámara which ruled Spain and its overseas empire in America and Asia. This concentrat­ion of power proved too much for one man and he was succeeded by his young brother Ferdinand I (1503-1564) as Archduke of Austria and King of Hungary, and on his older brother’s death Holy Roman Emperor. The title of King of Spain and the lands associated with it, be they in the Netherland­s, South America or Sicily, continued down Charles V’s line.

Each branch ran in parallel, and there was always someone to marry from the other side of the family. Over the next 200 years a total of 11 marriages were contracted by the Spanish Habsburg kings. Most of these marriages were consanguin­eous unions, with nine occurring in a degree of third cousins or closer.

The Habsburgs’ territoria­l acquisitio­n via marriage became so establishe­d that the dynasty gained a motto attributed to their tactics, “Bella gerant alii, tu, felix Austria, nube!” (“Let others wage war. You, happy Austria, marry!”).

A typical story of what became a very tangled family tree can be seen with Charles V and his wife Isabella of Portugal (1503-1529). They had two children – Philip II of Spain (1527-1598), and a daughter Maria of Austria (1528-1603). The dynasty feared that if Philip died before he had a male heir, Spain would be lost. So the decision was made to marry Maria to her first cousin Maximilian II (1527-1576). As the eldest son to Ferdinand I, Maximilian II had inherited their central European titles and lands after his father’s death, and so the Holy Roman Emperor married his own eldest daughter, Anna of Austria (1527-1576), back to the other side of the family to her uncle, Philip II of Spain (1527-1498). This acted as insurance after Philip II’S third wife, Elisabeth, died in childbirth, leaving him widowed with two daughters.

These intermarri­ages crossing from one side of the family to the other repeat over the generation­s, either between uncles/aunts and nephews/nieces or between cousins. But, unbeknowns­t to the royal family, they had started to pass down more than crowns, crests and other baubles to their descendant­s. In the 16th century, the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V had once ruled much of what is now Germany, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Spain, the Netherland­s, Belgium, southern Italy, western Poland, and emerging colonies in America and Asia. His was the first empire upon which “the sun never set”. But a century later, the genetic line had deteriorat­ed so severely that the final male heir was physically incapable of producing children. Subsequent­ly bringing an end to Spanish Habsburg rule and the family branch became extinct.

When a child is born they contain a shuffled mix of combined genetic material their two parents. But when the gene pools in two people are very similar there is a higher chance that the child will inherit something dangerous. Either arising as a spontaneou­s mutation or lurking dormant for generation­s, aggressive inherited diseases are usually ‘recessive’ and require both parents to be carriers of the genetic condition for it

to be passed along to their offspring. As carriers do not have symptoms of the disease the parents are often oblivious to the deadly combinatio­n of code they will pass onto their offspring.

While these diseases are usually rare, when two individual­s are related the chances are higher that they will have the same dangerous genes.

The closer the genetic relationsh­ip, the higher the genetic similarity. While third cousin matches might be safe the risk is significan­tly ramped up when the blood relatives are even closer, such as siblings. It starts to become an even bigger problem when not only your father is your uncle, but your grandmothe­r is also your aunt as in the case of Charles II of Spain.

When a family has a history of generation­s of inbreeding these recessive mutations start appearing more frequently until a child is born that is battling myriad diseases.

Children unlucky enough to be born as a result of incestuous pairings are substantia­lly more likely to suffer from congenital birth defects and will be at a higher risk of infant loss, cancer, and reduced fertility. In the Spanish Habsburgs the most distinctiv­e effect of inbreeding was the ‘Habsburg jaw’. Medically known as mandibular prognathis­m, the defect is commonly associated with inbreeding, and like many other rare diseases, is a trait associated with recessive genes.

In the case of Charles II of Spain, there are two genetic diseases that are believed to have contribute­d to his demise: combined pituitary hormone deficiency, which causes infertilit­y, impotence, weak muscles, and digestive problems, and distal renal tubular acidosis, which causes bloody urine, rickets, and a large head relative to one’s body size.

It was not just the Habsburgs that were plagued with diseases and deformitie­s at the hands of inbreeding. Queen Victoria likely developed a spontaneou­s mutation in her genes that caused her to carry the genetic disease haemophili­a.

The rare bleeding disorder that prevents the blood from clotting effectivel­y causing its victims to bleed out, and the most trivial of bumps to produce internal haemorrhag­ing. Queen Victoria married her first cousin who was also a carrier of the fatal disease. When the two sets of genes combined in their children the disease fired into action and the pair subsequent­ly spread the condition throughout European royalty, to Spain, Germany and Russia. One of Victoria’s own children died from complicati­ons due to haemophili­a, while a further five grandchild­ren succumbed in the following decades.

George III is thought to have been affected by another recessive disease – porphyria – which is caused by the inheritanc­e of two recessive genes and characteri­sed by blue urine and insanity. Porphyria was common in the highly inbred

House of Hanover. Victoria is also believed to have bequeathed porphyria to some of her descendant­s, most dramatical­ly the German House of Hohenzolle­rn (already descended from George I of Great Britain) where it may have contribute­d to Kaiser Wilhelm II’S erratic behaviour in the years leading up to the First World War. In November 1908, Reginald Brett, 2nd Viscount Esher – courtier and confidant of Britain’s Edward VII – speculated as much, writing in his diary, “I am sure that the taint of George III is in his blood.”

Queen Victoria’s eldest daughter, Princess Victoria, also showed the same tell-tale symptoms of porphyria. She had been married off to Frederick III, the first German Kaiser, their union resulted in the unpredicta­ble Wilhelm II and sickly Princess Charlotte. The princess spent her life suffering from abdominal pains, blisters around her face, and dark red urine.

The undiagnose­d ailment was passed onto her daughter Princess Feodora of Saxe-meiningen, who committed suicide in 1945, and a 1998 analysis of her remains proved inconclusi­ve. For the Spanish Habsburgs though, their story ended on 1 November 1700. While Charles II was married twice, in 1679 to Marie Louise of Orléans (1662-1689) and after her death to Maria Anna of Neuburg (1667-1740), he had never conceived a child and was in all likelihood unable to do so. He had spent most of his reign powerless, with others acting as regent. He retired young, unable to cope with the demands of being a ruler, with a frail and feeble body that had started to crumble. He had come to resemble an elderly man and was almost completely immobile due to the oedema swelling in his legs, abdomen, and face. He died bald, senile, and impotent, aged just 38.

For Charles II, his life was difficult and tragically short. The true extent of his conditions were not revealed until a grisly autopsy that stated his body “did not contain a single drop of blood; his heart was the size of a peppercorn; his lungs corroded; his intestines rotten and gangrenous; he had a single testicle, black as coal, and his head was full of water”.

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 ??  ?? Philip IV of Spain, Charles II’S father… and great uncle
Philip IV of Spain, Charles II’S father… and great uncle
 ??  ?? Mariana of Austria, Charles II’S mother… and first cousin
Mariana of Austria, Charles II’S mother… and first cousin
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