Adelheid of Hohenlohe-Langenburg | |||||
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Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein | |||||
Duchess consort of Schleswig-Holstein | |||||
Tenure | 11 March 1869 – 14 January 1880 | ||||
Born | Langenburg, Kingdom of Württemberg | 20 July 1835||||
Died | 25 January 1900 Dresden, Kingdom of Saxony, German Empire | (aged 64)||||
Spouse | Frederick VIII, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein | ||||
Issue more... | Augusta Victoria, German Empress Karoline Mathilde, Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg Ernst Günther II, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein Princess Louise Princess Feodora | ||||
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House | Hohenlohe-Langenburg | ||||
Father | Ernst I, Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg | ||||
Mother | Princess Feodora of Leiningen |
Princess Adelheid of Hohenlohe-Langenburg (20 July 1835 – 25 January 1900) was the Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg by marriage to Frederick VIII, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein.
Adelheid was born the second daughter of Ernst I, Prince of Hohenlohe-Langenburg by his wife Princess Feodora of Leiningen, who was the older, maternal half-sister of the British Queen Victoria. Consequently, Adelheid was Queen Victoria's half-niece. She was nicknamed "Ada" by her family.
In 1852, not long after Napoléon III became Emperor of the French, he made a proposal of marriage to Adelheid's parents after he had been rebuffed by Princess Carola of Sweden. Although he had never met her, the political advantages of the marriage for the Emperor were obvious. It would provide dynastic respectability for the Bonaparte line, and could promote a closer alliance between France and Britain, because Adelheid was Queen Victoria's niece. At the same time, she was not officially a member of the British royal family, so the risk of refusal was small. Adelheid could be expected to be grateful enough for her good fortune to convert to Roman Catholicism.
As it turned out, the proposal horrified Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, who preferred not to confer such hasty legitimacy upon France's latest "revolutionary" regime — the durability of which was deemed dubious — nor to yield up a young kinswoman for the purpose. The British court maintained a strict silence toward the Hohenlohes during the marriage negotiations, lest the Queen seem either eager for or repulsed by the prospect of Napoléon as a nephew-in-law.
The parents, accurately interpreting the British silence as disapproval, declined the French offer—to their sixteen-year-old daughter's dismay. This may have been only a maneuver by the Hohenlohe family to obtain concessions from the French to secure their daughter's future interests. But before his ministers could press his case with further inducements, Napoléon gave up pursuit of a royal consort. Instead he offered marriage to Eugénie de Montijo, Countess of Teba, whom he had been simultaneously soliciting to become his mistress, and who had refused his advances.[1]
On September 11, 1856, Adelheid married Frederick VIII, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein.[2] They were parents to seven children:
Via her daughters Karoline Mathilde and Augusta Victoria, Adelheid is the most recent common matrilineal ancestor of Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden and Felipe VI of Spain, respectively.
With her husband, the Duchess first resided at Dolzig, in Lower Lusatia, but in 1863 moved to Kiel when Duke Frederick became legitimate heir to the duchies of Schleswig-Holstein. They returned to Dolzig only three years later, when after the Austrian-Prussian War the duchies were annexed by Prussia. In the following years the couple alternated between Dolzig, Gotha, and the family domains at Primkenau. Duke Frederick died in 1880, shortly before the couple's eldest daughter was engaged to the Prussian heir. After the marriage in February 1881, Duchess Adelheid settled in Dresden, where she lived a retired life, interesting herself chiefly in painting and music.[3]
The Duchess died at Dresden on 25 January 1900.[3]
A small island in Franz Josef Land, Adelaide Island (Остров Аделаиды), was named after Princess Adelheid by the Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition. A fictionalised version of Princess Adelheid appears in the ITV series Victoria, where she is nicknamed "Heidi" and played by actress Ellen Evans.
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