- Princess Irmingard of Bavaria
Princess Irmingard of Bavaria (born
May 23 1923 ) is the daughter ofRupprecht, Crown Prince of Bavaria and his second wife, Princess Antonia of Luxembourg. She was a half-sister ofAlbrecht, Duke of Bavaria .Early life
Irmingard was born at her father's residence, Schloss
Berchtesgaden . She spent her childhood between Berchtesgaden and her father's other residences, the Leuchtenberg Palais inMunich , Schloss Leutstetten, andSchloss Hohenschwangau . In 1936 she was sent to England to be educated at the Convent of the Sacred Heart School inRoehampton (where several of her cousins, princesses of Luxembourg, were also enrolled).In early 1940 Irmingard and her siblings were allowed to go to Italy and join their father who had left Germany in order to avoid conflict with the Nazi authorities. She spent the rest of the war mostly in
Rome ,Florence , andPadua .In September 1944 Irmingard was arrested by the Nazis who had been unsuccessful in trying to find and arrest her father. She fell ill from typhus and was sent to a prison hospital in
Innsbruck . When she recovered, she was sent to the concentration camp at Oranienburg-Sachsenhausen, where she was reunited with other members of her family who had also been arrested. Later they were transferred to the concentration camps at Flossenbürg and Dachau, before being freed by the Third American Army,April 30 ,1945 .Irmingard and her sisters sought refuge in
Luxembourg , where their mother's sister Charlotte was grand-duchess. After a brief return to Germany, she went to the United States for a year, where her uncle Prince Adolf of Schwarzenberg had a ranch inMontana .Marriage and children
On
July 20 ,1950 , Irmingard married her first cousin Prince Ludwig of Bavaria at Schloss Nymphenburg in Munich. The couple had three children:* Prince Luitpold of Bavaria, born 1951; married 1979 Beatrix Wiegand.
* Princess Maria of Bavaria, born and died 1953.
* Princess Philippa of Bavaria, born and died 1954.After her father's death in 1955, Irmingard and her husband moved into Schloss Leutstetten where they continue to live today.
External links
* [http://www.jacobite.ca/essays/ww2.htm The Royal Family, the Nazis, and the Second World War]
Editors Note
Prince Luitpold of Bavaria (born 1951) should not to be confused with his great-great-grandfather
Luitpold, Prince Regent of Bavaria (born 1821).
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