- Count Ingolf of Rosenborg
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Count Ingolf of Rosenborg Spouse Inge Terney (1968–1996)
Sussie Hjorhøy (1998–present)Full name Ingolf Christian Frederik Knud Harald Gorm Gustav Viggo Valdemar Aage House House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg Father Knud, Hereditary Prince of Denmark Mother Princess Caroline-Mathilde of Denmark Born 17 February 1940
Sorgenfri Palace, Lyngby-Taarbæk, Copenhagen, DenmarkCount Ingolf of Rosenborg, RE (formerly Prince Ingolf of Denmark; Danish: Prins Ingolf Christian Frederik Knud Harald Gorm Gustav Viggo Valdemar Aage til Danmark) (born 17 February 1940), is a grandson of King Christian X of Denmark and first cousin of the present Queen Margrethe II. At his birth, his accession to the throne of Denmark appeared likely until the new right of females of the royal family to inherit the crown displaced him in favor of his cousin Princess Margrethe in 1953.
He was born at Sorgenfri Palace, Sorgenfri, as His Highness Prince Ingolf of Denmark. He was the elder son of Knud, Hereditary Prince of Denmark, by his wife (and first cousin) Princess Caroline-Mathilde of Denmark.
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Loss of place in succession
From the death of his grandfather in 1947, Ingolf stood only behind his father in the order of hereditary succession to the throne and was expected to become king in his turn. His father Prince Knud was then the heir presumptive, due to succeed Ingolf's uncle King Frederick IX, who had three daughters but no sons.
In 1953, the Constitution of Denmark was amended to allow cognatic primogeniture. The new law made thirteen-year-old Princess Margrethe the new heiress presumptive, placing her and her two sisters before Prince Knud and his family in the succession. Ingolf was thus relegated to fifth in the line of succession to the Danish throne, but more importantly, he now ranked behind Margrethe and others who were likely to have dynastic children of their own (as has, in fact, happened). The princess became Queen Margrethe II in 1972 and is still reigning as of 2011. Ingolf's place in the line of succession, were he still eligible, would be no higher than ninth today.
Loss of dynastic rights
In 1968, now with little hope of ascending the throne, Ingolf chose to forfeit his right of succession to the throne by marrying without having received the royal assent of the monarch in the Council of State. The king's permission to marry was not sought because it was expected to be denied, since Ingolf's fiancée was an untitled commoner.[1] Though Frederick IX had liberalized traditional practice by allowing royal spouses who were not themselves royal, but who claimed noble blood and were known by courtesy titles (Anne Bowes-Lyon was the granddaughter of an earl and through her first marriage to the son of an earl bore the title of viscountess; Henri de Laborde de Monpezat used the title of count, though his family's claim to nobility was later acknowledged to be flawed), it would not be until 1995 that Margrethe II would allow her children to marry commoners with neither title nor claim to noble blood. Ingolf was given the title Count of Rosenborg and the style of Your Excellency, as was customary in the twentieth century for Danish princes who forfeited their dynastic rights.
Prior to his son's wedding, Prince Knud sought to convince his brother that Ingolf should be allowed to retain his royal title after marriage.[2] But the king refused, on the grounds that other males of the dynasty who had been demoted to Counts of Rosenborg upon marriage might try to reclaim their royal rank if Ingolf were allowed to do so, despite marrying a commoner as they had done.[2] So, in 1968, Ingolf forfeited his rights to the throne and took the title Count of Rosenborg. His younger brother Christian did the same three years later.
Ingolf married firstly Inge Terney (Copenhagen, 21 January 1938 – 21 July 1996), daughter of Georg Terney (1906–1977) and wife Jenny Hansen (1908–1990), on 13 January 1968, at Lyngby, Denmark. After being widowed, he married secondly Sussie Hjorhøy (born Copenhagen, 20 February 1950), who thus became "Her Excellency Countess Sussie of Rosenborg" on 7 March 1998, at Engtved, Denmark. He has no children. Ingolf is godfather to his great-nephew, Leopold Rosanes af Rosenborg, who is the grandson of his brother Christian.[3]
Public role
Count Ingolf sometimes takes part in major public events associated with the royal family; in 2004, he and Countess Sussie attended the wedding on 14 May 2004 of Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark at Copenhagen Cathedral,[4] and the subsequent reception at Fredensborg Palace.[5] They also attended the Memorial Service in honour of Empress Maria Feodorovna held on 22 September 2006.[6] On some occasions, they are listed as members of the Royal Family such as when they attended the wedding of Prince Joachim in 2008[7] and the luncheon to celebrate the 75th birthday of Henrik, Prince Consort of Denmark at Fredensborg Palace on 11 June 2009[8] On other occasions, such as the celebrations for the 70th birthday of Margrethe II of Denmark,[9] they are listed along with non-royal guests but even in this case, usually at the ceremonies themselves they are given precedence immediately after his sister Princess Elisabeth of Denmark.
Ingolf receives an annual allowance of 1.4 million kroner according to the Danish Royal House web-site.[10] Presumably this is to compensate him for having lost the right of succession to the throne, as neither his sister Princess Elisabeth of Denmark, nor his brother Count Christian of Rosenborg, formerly Prince Christian of Denmark, receive such an allowance, even though in 1971 Count Christian also lost his rights to the throne, and Princess Elisabeth remains in the line of succession.
Ancestry
References
- ^ Billed-Bladet, (Interview with Count Christian of Rosenborg), 1985, Danish
- ^ a b Familie-Journalen, (Interview with Count Ingolf of Rosenborg), 14 May 1990, Danish
- ^ Leopold
- ^ Kongehuset – Artikel
- ^ Kongehuset – Artikel
- ^ Kongehuset – Aktuelt – Nyheder
- ^ http://kongehuset.dk/publish.php?id=17229
- ^ http://kongehuset.dk/publish.php?id=21596
- ^ http://kongehuset.dk/publish.php?id=24453
- ^ Kongehuset – Organisation – Økonomi
External links
Count Ingolf of RosenborgCadet branch of the House of OldenburgBorn: 17 February 1940Titles in pretence Preceded by
Prince Julian of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-GlücksburgLine of succession to the Headship of the House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg
6th positionSucceeded by
Count Christian of RosenborgBritish royalty Preceded by
Princess Marie of Schaumburg-LippeLine of succession to the British throne Succeeded by
Count Christian of RosenborgDanish princes The generations are numbered from the ascension of Christian I as King of Denmark in 1448. 1st generation 2nd generation Prince John · Prince Ernest · Christian II · Prince Francis · Christian III · Prince John, Duke of Holstein-Haderslev · Prince Adolf, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp · Prince Friedrich, Bishop of Hildesheim and Schleswig3rd generation Prince John · Prince Philip Ferdinand · Prince Maximilian · Frederick II · Magnus of Livonia · Prince John, Duke of Holstein-Sonderburg4th generation 5th generation 6th generation 7th generation Frederick IV · Prince Christian William · Prince Christian · Prince Charles · Prince William · Prince William, Duke of Gloucester · Prince George · Prince Charles8th generation Prince Christian · Christian VI · Prince Frederik Charles · Prince George · Prince Frederik Christian · Prince Charles9th generation 10th generation Prince Christian · Christian VII · Frederick, Hereditary Prince11th generation 12th generation Prince Christian · Prince Christian · Frederick VII13th generation 14th generation Christian X · Haakon VII of Norway · Prince Harald · Constantine I of Greece* · Prince George* · Prince Nicholas* · Prince Andrew* · Prince Christopher* · Prince Gustav · Prince Aage** · Prince Axel · Prince Erik** · Prince Viggo**15th generation Frederick IX · Prince Knud · Prince Gorm · Prince Oluf** · George II of Greece* · Alexander of Greece* · Paul of Greece* · Philip, Duke of Edinburgh* · Prince Michael* · Prince Peter* · Prince George Valdemar · Prince Flemming Valdemar**16th generation 17th generation Crown Prince Frederik · Prince Joachim · Pavlos, Crown Prince of Greece* · Prince Nikolaos* · Prince Philippos*18th generation Prince Nikolai · Prince Felix · Prince Christian · Prince Henrik · Prince Vincent · Prince Constantine-Alexios* · Prince Achileas-Andreas* · Prince Odysseas-Kimon* · Prince Aristide-Stavros* ·*also a prince of Greece
**lost his title due to an unequal marriage
***not a Danish prince by birth, but a royal prince consortCategories:- 1940 births
- Danish princes
- Living people
- House of Glücksburg (Denmark)
- Counts of Rosenborg
- People from Copenhagen
- Disinherited European royalty
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