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Saturday, January 8, 2011

The Countess of St Andrews

From The Telegram:

The Queen's first great-grandchild isn't the only Canadian with a connection to the throne

Not many people born in this province can say the late Princess Diana was their son's godmother.

Or that their in-laws live in a palace.

Or that their youngest child is in the line of succession for the British throne.

Or that there is speculation as to whether she'll present the trophies at the Wimbledon tennis championship.

But Placentia-born Sylvana (Tomaselli) Windsor can make such claims.

"(She) is one of the least known members of the Royal Family. She and her husband maintain a very low profile," explained Rafal Heydel-Mankoo, an editor with Burke's Peerage and Gentry, a guide to the genealogical history of royal and noteworthy families.

Canadian connections to the monarchy recently made holiday headlines.

Autumn Phillips, the Montreal-born wife of the Queen's grandson, Peter, had a baby girl Dec. 29.

The newborn is Elizabeth II's first great-grandchild, and she'll hold dual British and Canadian citizenship, making the child the first Canuck to be in line for the throne. (She's 12th on the list.)

The baby girl and her mom weren't the first Canadian citizens to be part of the modern-day Royal Family, though.

Sylvana married George Windsor 23 years ago Sunday at a registry office in Scotland.

George's father is Prince Edward, the Queen's first cousin. He's also the Duke of Kent, a title that involves carrying out official duties on behalf of the Queen and sees him living in a Kensington Palace apartment.

With his "I do," Sylvana's hubby gave up his place in the succession to the throne. Because she was Catholic, the Act of Settlement barred George — but not his children — from the crown. (Not that there was ever a realistic chance he'd become king.)

Sylvana and George have three children, a boy and two girls. The two oldest converted to Catholicism and are also blocked from the line of succession.

The youngest child has not converted and is 29th in line for the throne.

George Windsor's title is Earl of St. Andrews, making Sylvana the Countess of St. Andrews. Both are considered courtesy stylings.

Heydel-Mankoo noted that George will become the Duke of Kent with the passing of his father. Sylvana would then be the Duchess of Kent.

But they will not be Royal Highnesses, as the current Duke and Duchess are.

It was decided in 1917 that Royal Dukedoms — as the five dukes are known — would no longer be "Royal" after the third generation.

George and Sylvana will instead be known as His Grace and Her Grace, Heydel-Mankoo explained.

Given the increasing distance between the Duke of Kent and the throne, the peerage expert said it's doubtful the couple would fulfil as many duties on behalf of the crown as George's parents do.

"It will be interesting to see whether the Earl of St. Andrews will succeed his father as president of the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club at Wimbledon," Heydel-Mankoo said.

"And, if so, whether the Countess of St. Andrews will present the Wimbledon trophies, as her mother-in-law famously did until recently."

Sylvana did not respond to The Telegram's request for an interview.

There are next to no public details about her life in Canada, and Newfoundland especially.

She was born at Placentia in May 1957, to Maximillian Tomaselli and Josiane Preschez.

Town resident Rhonda Power checked church records for The Telegram Friday and confirmed Sylvana was baptized at the Holy Rosary Parish on July 20th of the year she was born.

The sponsors at the christening were not local, suggesting a possible connection to the U.S. naval base at nearby Argentia.

Other than that, it's known that Sylvana was married to a John Paul Jones in Vancouver in 1977, and they divorced in 1981.

The Telegram spoke to numerous people knowledgeable about Placentia and the Argentia base, but the name Tomaselli didn't ring a bell with any of them. That's not surprising, since it's hardly a common surname in Placentia, Fox Harbour and Jerseyside.

The Countess of St Andrews

For further reading, click on the link...

http://www.thetelegram.com/News/Local/2011-01-08/article-2100512/From-Placentia-to-the-Palace/1

Book Review: The Russian Court at Sea

This is a book review published in the UK. Eurohistory is carrying this book. If interested simply get in contact with us!

–//–

All books about the fall of the Romanovs leave one with an uneasy doubt that we have ever heard the full story.

It was complicated for decades by doubts about the murder of the Tsar and his family, the supposedly missing remains, the unanswered questions about whether George V did or did not attempt or even want to rescue them.


This addendum to the story concentrates entirely on the rescue mission that was sent on the King’s initiative to evacuate the Tsar’s mother, the dowager Empress Marie and her entourage, from the Crimea.


It was carried out in the nick of time before the Bolsheviks reached Yalta, where the surviving Romanovs were confined to their summer estates. It was entirely successful. In April, 1919, HMS Marlborough carried off the Empress and 17 members of her family at the head of a small fleet of vessels rescuing White Russian refugees who had swarmed to the port.
An intimate diary of the voyage to Malta has been constructed by Frances Welch from the diaries and memoirs both of the passengers and the crew, especially the Marlborough’s first lieutenant, Francis Pridham, who found himself in the anxious position of purser to the crews. His was the worry of finding suitable cabins for a quarrelsome set of relatives acutely conscious of status and protocol - by no means a united family.


Besides soothing their temperaments, sorting out their luggage and overseeing their menus, he found time to keep a diary of events, the prime source for this close-up of this weird, quirky family party, thrown together by events they still did not comprehend. Dark but tantalising photographs give us glimpses of them.


By the end of the short voyage one does feel a certain sympathy for them, tempered by an impatience that such an inadequate family happened to exercise supreme power over an empire.


The leading characters on the voyage were first and foremost the dowager Empress Marie Feodorovna, mother of the Tsar. She was an awkward customer for two reasons: she refused to believe that her son and his family were dead, and strongly objected to leaving Russia under the impression that the revolution could soon be over and she would be going back to St Petersburg.


At that time, 1918, it was still possible for her to believe this. The execution of the Tsar, but not of his family, had been tersely announced. But rumours abounded of their secret removal to a hiding place - possibly a Siberian monastery. Meanwhile the uncertain grip of the Bolsheviks on the country was hotly disputed by White Russian armies in civil war.
George V, as we now know, changed his mind about the original invitation to the abdicated Tsar to come to Britain.


He feared it would cause unrest - the Russian revolution had many sympathisers. Unfairly he later laid the blame on the Prime Minister, Lloyd George. But this time he had no choice.




Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/books/article-1344746/All-sea-Russian-royal-family-THE-RUSSIAN-COURT-AT-SEA-THE-VOYAGE-OF-HMS-MARLBOROUGH-APRIL-1919-BY-FRANCES-WELCH.html#ixzz1ASHWattF

Archduchess Marie Christine of Austria is Expecting

Archduchess Marie Christine of Austria, married to Count Rudolf Limburg Stirum, is expecting the couple's first child.

She is the eldest child of Archduke Carl Christian and Archduchess Marie Astrid (née Luxembourg). Marie Christine's wedding was covered by the European Royal History Journal in late 2009.

Archduchess Marie Christine of Austria in red.

Danish Baby Arrival – Seems Like This Time's the Time

Princess Mary has given birth to a boy and a girl at a Copenhagen hospital.
The births, which came on Saturday morning, local time (about 9.30pm AEDT) at Rigshospitalet, had been much anticipated with two false alarms this week.

Crown Prince Frederik told the gathered press at the hospital that following about four hours of labour, the boy cane first, followed half an hour later by the girl.

A relieved Crown Prince Frederik said the births went well and there was no nail-biting.
He said there were two small hearts to watch now and it was almost like the first time when he became a dad.

Both mother and children are doing well and he and Mary are very happy.
The girl is measuring 46cm and weighs 2554 grams while the boy weighs 2674 grams and measures 47cm.

Crown Prince Frederik and Tasmanian-born Princess Mary already have two children, Prince Christian, five, and Princess Isabella, three.


http://www.theage.com.au/lifestyle/people/twin-smiles-prove-marys-crowning-glory-20110108-19jc7.html

Thursday, January 6, 2011

When Times are Tough – Recycle, Royal Style

From the Huffington Post...
  
Today in things that amuse us: Spain's Princess Letizia started 2011 the same way she began 2010 -- in a lavender blazer and matching maxi skirt. She stepped out to the Pascua Military ceremony on Thursday in the ensemble and we knew it looked familiar.

Turns out, she wore the same thing last January to the annual Foreign Ambassadors Reception. We're digging the wardrobe repeat! Also, check out how Princess Letizia and Queen Sofia rock their scarves Spanish style.


 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/06/princess-letizia-starts-o_n_805329.html#s220046&title=2011

The Wedding of the Princes of Asturias (4)

And more scenes from a wonderful day...

The Wedding of the Princes of Asturias (3)

The arrival of guests continues...

The Wedding of the Princes of Asturias (2)

The entrance of guests continues!

The Wedding of the Princes of Asturias (1)

I cannot believe it has been nearly seven years since we went to Madrid to cover this wedding, after already having covered the previous two weeks the wedding of Archduke Martin of Austria and Princess Katharina of Isenburg, and that of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark and Ms Mary Donaldson.