Sophia of Prussia
Sophia of Prussia | |||||
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Queen consort of the Hellenes | |||||
Tenure | 18 March 1913 – 11 June 1917 19 December 1920 – 27 September 1922 | ||||
Born | (1870-06-14)14 June 1870 New Palace, Potsdam, Kingdom of Prussia | ||||
Died | 13 January 1932(1932-01-13) (aged 61) Frankfurt, Hesse-Nassau, Free State of Prussia, Weimar Republic | ||||
Burial | 16 January 1932 Greek Orthodox Church, Florence, Italy, and later Royal Cemetery, Tatoi Palace, Greece | ||||
Spouse | Constantine I of Greece (m. 1889; died 1922) | ||||
Issue |
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House | Hohenzollern | ||||
Father | Frederick III, German Emperor | ||||
Mother | Victoria, Princess Royal | ||||
Religion | Greek Orthodoxy prev. Calvinism |
Sophia of Prussia (Sophia Dorothea Ulrike Alice; 14 June 1870 – 13 January 1932) was Queen consort of Greece during 1913–1917 and 1920–1922.
A member of the House of Hohenzollern and daughter of Emperor Frederick III of Germany, Sophia received a liberal and anglophile education, under the supervision of her mother, Victoria, Princess Royal. In 1889, less than a year after the death of her father, she married her third cousin the Diadochos Constantine, Duke of Sparta and heir of the Greek throne. After a difficult period of adaptation in her new country, Sophia gave birth to six children and became involved in the assistance to the poor, following in the footsteps of her mother-in-law, Queen Olga. However, it was during the wars which Greece faced during the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century that Sophia showed the most social activity: she founded field hospitals, oversaw the training of Greek nurses and even she herself healed wounded soldiers.
However, Sophia was hardly rewarded for her actions, even after her grandmother, Queen Victoria, decorated her with the Royal Red Cross after the Thirty Days' War: the Greeks criticized her links with Germany. Her brother, Emperor William II was indeed an ally of the Ottoman Empire and openly opposed the construction of the Megali Idea, which could establish a Greek state that would encompass all ethnic Greek-inhabited areas. During World War I, the blood ties between Sophia and the German Emperor also aroused the suspicion of the Triple Entente, which criticized Constantine I for his neutrality in the conflict.
After imposing a blockade of Greece and supporting the rebel government of Eleftherios Venizelos, causing the National Schism, France and its allies deposed Constantine I in June 1917. Sophia and her family then went into exile in Switzerland, while the second son of the royal couple replaced his father on the throne under the name of Alexander I. At the same time, Greece entered the war alongside the Triple Entente, which allowed it to grow considerably.
After the outbreak of the Greco-Turkish War in 1919 and the untimely death of Alexander I the following year, the Venizelists abandoned power, allowing the royal family's return to Athens. The defeat of the Greek army against the Turkish troops of Mustafa Kemal, however, forced Constantine I to abdicate in favor of his eldest son George II in 1922. Sophia and her family then were forced to a new exile, and settled in Italy, where Constantine died one year later (1923). With the proclamation of the Republic in Athens (1924) Sophia spent her last years alongside her family and died of cancer in Germany in 1932.
Contents
1 Life
1.1 Princess of Prussia and Germany
1.1.1 Birth in a difficult context
1.1.2 Anglophile education
1.1.3 Meeting and engagement with Diadochos Constantine
1.1.4 Death of Emperor Frederick III
1.2 Crown Princess of Greece
1.2.1 Auspicious marriage to the Greeks
1.2.2 Installation in Athens
1.2.3 Conversion to Orthodoxy
1.2.4 Social work
1.2.5 Consequences of the War of Thirty Days
1.2.6 Family deaths
1.2.7 Goudi coup and its consequences
1.2.8 Nurse during the First Balkan War
1.2.9 Marital problems and private life
1.3 Queen of the Hellenes: 1st tenure
1.3.1 Assassination of King George I and Second Balkan War
1.3.2 Private life
1.3.3 Outbreak of World War I
1.3.4 Rupture with Venizelos
1.3.5 Assassination attempts
1.3.6 National Schism and pressures of the Triple Entente
1.4 First exile
1.4.1 Dethronement and family separation
1.4.2 Life in Switzerland
1.4.3 Death of Alexander I
1.4.4 Fall of Venizelos and Olga's regency
1.5 Queen of the Hellenes: 2nd tenure
1.5.1 Return to Greece
1.5.2 Great Disaster
1.5.3 Abdication of Constantine I
1.6 Dowager Queen
1.6.1 Second exile and concerns for Greece
1.6.2 Death of Constantine I and deposition of George II
1.6.3 Last years
1.6.4 Illness, death and burial
2 In popular culture
2.1 Literature
2.2 Film and television
2.3 Phaleristics
2.4 Name of Avenue
3 Issue
4 Ancestry
5 Notes
6 References
7 Sources
Life
Princess of Prussia and Germany
Birth in a difficult context
Princess Sophie was born in the Neues Palais in Potsdam, Prussia on 14 June 1870.[1] Her father, Crown Prince Frederick of Prussia, and her mother, Victoria, Princess Royal of the United Kingdom (herself the eldest daughter of Queen Victoria and Albert, Prince Consort) were already the parents of a large family and as the penultimate child, Sophie was eleven years younger than her eldest brother, the future Emperor William II of Germany. Frederick and Victoria were a close couple, both on sentimental and political levels. Being staunch liberals, they lived away from the Berlin court and suffered the intrigues of a very conservative Chancellor Otto von Bismarck and members of the House of Hohenzollern.[2]
A week after Sophie's birth, a case relating to succession to the throne of Spain[a] damaged the Franco-Prussian relations. The tone between Paris and Berlin worsened even further after Bismarck published the humiliating Ems Telegram on 13 July 1870. Six days later, the government of Napoleon III declared war on Prussia and the states of the German Confederation offered support to Prussia, which then appeared as the victim of French imperialism. It was in this difficult context that Sophie was christened the following month, though all the men present were in uniform, as France had declared war on Prussia. Sophie's mother described the event to Queen Victoria: "The Christening went off well, but was sad and serious; anxious faces and tearful eyes, and a gloom and foreshadowing of all the misery in store spread a cloud over the ceremony, which should have been one of gladness and thanksgiving".[3]
However, the conflict lasted only a few months and even led to a brilliant German victory, leading to the proclamation of Sophie's grandfather King William I of Prussia as the first German Emperor on 18 January 1871.[4]
Anglophile education
Sophie was known as "Sossy" during her childhood (the name was thought to have been picked because it rhymed with "Mossy", the nickname of her younger sister Margaret).
The children of the Crown Princely couple became grouped into two by age: William, Charlotte, and Henry who were favoured by their paternal grandparents, while Viktoria, Sophie and Margaret were largely ignored by them.[5] Sophie's two other brothers, Sigismund and Waldemar, died at a young age (Sigismund died before she was born, and Waldemar when he was 11 and she was 8); this drew the Crown Princess and her three younger daughters closer together, calling them "my three sweet girls" and "my trio".[6]
The Crown Princess, believing in the superiority of all things English, had her children's nurseries modelled on her childhood. Sophie was raised with a great love for England and all things associated with it as a result, and had frequent trips to visit her grandmother Queen Victoria, whom she loved.[b] Sophie often stayed in England for long periods, especially on the Isle of Wight, where she liked to collect shells with her older siblings.[7]
Because she was generally avoided by her paternal grandparents, Sophia's formative years were mainly shaped by her parents and her maternal grandmother Queen Victoria. As a little girl she was so deeply attached to the old British sovereign that the Crown Princess didn't hesitate to leave her daughter for long periods under the care of her grandmother.[2]
In Germany, Sophie largely stayed with her parents at two main residences: the Kronprinzenpalais in Berlin, and the Neues Palais in Potsdam.[8] Like her sisters Viktoria and Margaret, she was particularly close to her parents and their relationship became even closer after the death, in 1879, of Waldemar, the favorite son of the Crown Princely couple.[6]
Meeting and engagement with Diadochos Constantine
In 1884, Prince Constantine of Greece ("Tino") was sixteen and his majority was declared by the government. He then received the title of Duke of Sparta and Diadochos (διάδοχος / diádokhos, which means, "heir to the throne").[9][10] Soon after, the young man completed his military training in Germany, where he spent two full years in the company of a tutor, the Dr. Lüders. He served in the Prussian Guard, took lessons of riding in Hanover and studied Political science at the Universities of Heidelberg and Leipzig.[11]
After a long stay in England celebrating her grandmother's Golden Jubilee, Sophie became better acquainted with Constantine in the summer of 1887. The Queen watched their growing relationship, writing "Is there a chance of Sophie's marrying Tino? It would be very nice for her, for he is very good".[12] The crown princess also hoped that Sophie would make a good marriage, considering her the most attractive among her daughters.
During his stay at the Hohenzollern court in Berlin representing the Kingdom of Greece at the funeral of Emperor William I in March 1888,[13] Constantine saw Sophie again. Quickly, the two fell in love and got officially engaged on 3 September 1888.[14] However, their relationship was viewed with suspicion by Sophie's older brother William, by now the new Kaiser, and his wife Augusta Victoria. This betrothal wasn't completely supported in the Hellenic royal family, either: Queen Olga showed some reluctance to the projected union because Sophie was Lutheran and she would have preferred that the heir to the throne marry an Orthodox.[15] But despite the difficulties, Tino and Sophie's wedding was scheduled for October 1889, in Athens.[16]
Death of Emperor Frederick III
This period fell on an unhappy time for Sophie's family however, as her father Emperor Frederick III was dying an agonizing death of throat cancer. His wife and children kept vigil with him at the Neues Palais, even celebrating Sophie's birthday and offering her a bouquet of flowers as a gift. The Emperor died the next day.[17] Sophie's eldest brother William, now German Emperor, quickly ransacked his father's things in the hopes of finding "incriminating evidence" of "liberal plots".[18] Knowing that her three youngest daughters were more dependent on her than ever for emotional support, the now-Dowager Empress Frederick remained close to them: "I have my three sweet girls - he loved so much - that are my consolation".[17]
Already shocked by the attitude of her eldest son, the Dowager Empress was deeply saddened by Sophie's upcoming marriage and move to Athens.[c] Nevertheless, she welcomed the happiness of her daughter and consoled herself in a voluminous correspondence with Sophie. Between 1889 and 1901, the two women exchanged no less than 2,000 letters.[19] On several occasions, they were also found in each other's homes, in Athens and Kronberg. The preparations of Sophie's wedding were "hardly a surprising development considering the funeral atmosphere that prevailed at the home of her widowed mother".[20]
Crown Princess of Greece
Auspicious marriage to the Greeks
On 27 October 1889, Sophie married Constantine in Athens, Greece in two religious ceremonies, one public and Orthodox and another private and Protestant.[d] They were third cousins in descent from Paul I of Russia, and second cousins once removed through Frederick William III of Prussia. Sophie's witnesses were her brother Henry and her cousins Princes Albert Victor and George of Wales; for Constantine's side, the witnesses were his brothers Princes George and Nicholas and his cousin the Tsarevich of Russia.[21]
The marriage (the first major international event held in Athens) was very popular among the Greeks. The names of the couple were reminiscent to the public of an old legend which suggested that when a King Constantine and a Queen Sophia ascended the Greek throne, Constantinople the Hagia Sophia would fall to Greek hands.[19] Immediately after the marriage of the Diadochos, hopes arose for the Greek populace of the Megali Idea, i.e. the union of all Greeks in the same state.[19][21] Abroad, the marriage of Constantine and Sophie raised much less enthusiasm. In France, it was feared that the arrival of a Prussian princess in Athens would switch the Kingdom of Greece to the side of the Triple Alliance.[e] In Berlin, the union was also unpopular: German interests were indeed important in the Ottoman Empire and the Emperor didn't intend to help Greece simply because the Diadochos was his new brother-in-law.[23]
Nevertheless, in Athens, the marriage ceremony was celebrated with pomp and gave rise to an especially significant pyrotechnic spectacle on the Acropolis and the Champ de Mars. Platforms were also built on the Syntagma Square so the public could better admire the procession between the Royal Palace and the Cathedral.[24] The newlyweds were related to most of the European dynasties, so representatives of all the royal houses of the continent were part of the festivities: King Christian IX of Denmark (grandfather of the groom), Emperor William II of Germany (brother of the bride), the Prince of Wales (uncle of both groom and bride) and the Tsarevich of Russia (groom's cousin) were among the guests of honor.[24] Naturally, Sophie's mother and sisters were also present at the ceremony.[16]
In fact, the hosts and their retinues were so many in the small Hellenic Capital that King George I couldn't receive all of them in his palace. He had to ask some members of the Greek high society to receive part of the guests in their mansions. Similarly, the sovereign was obliged to borrow the horses and carriages of his subjects in order to transport all visitors during the festivities. In addition, the king was forced to hastily buy dozens of additional liveries for the lackeys at the service of the guests.[25]
Installation in Athens
In the Hellenic Capital Constantine and Sophia settled in a small villa of French style located on Kifisias Avenue, while waiting for the Greek state to build a new home for them, the Diadochos Palace,[f] located near the Royal Palace. The couple also ordened the building of another house on the royal estate of Tatoi because King George I refused to allow work to be undertaken in the main palace.[19][21] In Athens, Constantine and his wife lived a relatively simple life[g] far removed from the protocol of other European courts. But life in Greece was often monotonous and Sophia lamented for any company, save only for the wives of the tobacco sellers.[28]
Sophia had difficulties adjusting to her new life. However, she took up learning Modern Greek (and managed to become almost perfectly fluent in a few years[29]) and used her many trips abroad to furnish and decorate her new home.[30] Less than nine months after her marriage, on 19 July 1890, the Crown Princess gave birth to her first child, a slightly premature son who was named George after his paternal grandfather. But the birth went wrong and the umbilical cord was wrapped around the baby's neck, almost choking him. Fortunately for the mother and child, the German midwife sent by the Dowager Empress Victoria to help her daughter in childbirth managed to resolve the situation and no tragic consequences occurred.[31]
Conversion to Orthodoxy
After the birth of her eldest son, Sophia decided to embrace the faith of her subjects and to converted to the Orthodox faith.[h] Having requested and received the blessing of her mother and grandmother,[32] the Crown Princess informed her in-laws of her intention and asked Queen Olga for instruction in orthodoxy. The Greek royal family was delighted by the news, because the announcement of the conversion would be popular among the Greeks. But King George I insisted that Germanus II, Metropolitan of Athens and Head of the Autocephalous Greek Church would instruct Sophie in the Orthodoxy, rather than his wife.[33] Of Russian origin, Queen Olga was indeed considered by some Greek nationalists as an "agent of the Pan-Slavism" and King George I therefore preferred that Germanus II would guarantee the task that could otherwise create difficulties for the Crown.[33][34]
Though the news of her conversion was greeted calmly by most members of her family, Sophia feared the reaction of Emperor William II, who took his status as Head of the Evangelical State Church of Prussia's older Provinces very seriously and hated disobedience more than anything.[32]
Sophia took a trip to Germany with her husband for the occasion of the wedding of her sister Viktoria to Prince Adolf of Schaumburg-Lippe, in November 1890, and personally announced to her brother her intentions to change her religion. As expected, the news strongly displeased the Emperor and his wife, the very pious Empress Augusta Victoria. The latter even tried to dissuade her sister-in-law to convert, triggering a heated argument between the two women. The Empress later claimed that this caused her to go into premature labor, and deliver her sixth child, Prince Joachim, too early. William II, meanwhile, was so angry that he threatened Sophia with excluding her from the Prussian royal family. Pressed by her mother to appear conciliatory, Sophia ended up writing a letter to her brother explaining the reasons for her conversion. But the Emperor would not listen, and for three years he forbade his sister to enter Germany.[35][36] Upon receiving his reply Sophie sent a telegram to her mother: "Received answer. Keeps to what he said in Berlin. Fixes it to three years. Mad. Never mind."[37]
Sophia officially converted on 2 May 1891;[38] however, the imperial sentence was ultimately never implemented. Nevertheless, relations between William II and his sister were permanently marked by Sophia's decision.[i] Indeed, the Emperor was an extremely resentful man and he never stopped making his younger sister pay for her disobedience.[35][41]
Social work
Throughout her life in Greece, Sophia was actively involved in social work and helping the underprivileged. Following in the footsteps of Queen Olga, she led various initiatives in the field of education, soup kitchens and development of hospitals and orphanages.[42] In 1896, the Crown Princess also founded the Union of Greek Women, a particularly active organization in the field of assistance to refugees from the Ottoman Empire.[43][j] Fascinated by arboriculture and concerned by the fires that regularly ravaged the country, Sophia was also interested in the reforestation.[44][45] In addition, she was one of the founders of the Greek Animal Protection Society.[46]
However, it was during the wars that Greece suffered during late 19th early 20th century that Sophie showed the most social activity. In 1897 and at the outbreak of the Thirty Days' War against the Ottomans about the possession of Crete which ended with a humiliating Greek defeat, Sophia and other female members of the royal family actively worked with the Greek Red Cross in order to help wounded soldiers. In the thessalian front, the Crown Princess founded field hospitals, visited the wounded and even directly administered care for victims of the fighting. Sophia also facilitated the arrival of English nurses in Greece and even participated in the training of young women volunteers to provide assistance to wounded soldiers.[47]
The involvement of Sophia and her mother-in-law in the aid to the victims of fighting (either of Greek or Turkish origin) was so active that it elicited admiration from other European courts. As a reward for their work, both women were decorated with the Royal Red Cross by Queen Victoria, in December 1897. Unfortunately for the Crown Princess, her help for the wounded soldiers was less appreciated in Greece, where the population accused the royal family, and especially Diadochos Constantine, for the loss against the Ottomans.[47]
Consequences of the War of Thirty Days
After the Thirty Days' War, a powerful anti-monarchical movement developed in Greece and Sophia herself wasn't immune to criticism. Always eager to punish his sister for her disobedience, Emperor William II of Germany openly supported the Ottoman Empire during the conflict and agreed to offer his mediation after being begged by his sister, his mother and his grandmother. He demanded that Greece agree to humiliating conditions in exchange for his intervention[k] and the population believed that he did so with the consent of his sister.[49][50][51]
But Sophia wasn't the only victim of popular condemnation. In fact, it was openly discussed in Athens that the Diadochos should be sent before a military court to punish him for the national defeat and depose King George I as was previously done with his predecessor Otto I.[43][52] Several weeks after the signing of the Peace Treaty between Greece and the Ottoman Empire, the situation became so tense that the sovereign was a subject of an assassination attempt when he travelled in an open carriage with his daughter, Princess Maria. But George I defended himself so bravely that he recovered at least some estimation from his subjects.[52][53]
In these difficult conditions, Constantine and Sophia choose to live some time abroad. In 1898, they were established in Kronberg, and then in Berlin. There the Diadochos resumed his military training with General Colmar von der Goltz and for a year, he received the command of a Prussian division. To mark their reconciliation, Emperor William II also appointed Sophia as Honorary Commander of the 3rd regiment of the Imperial Guard.[54]
The couple returned to Greece in 1899 and the government of Georgios Theotokis appointed Constantine as the head of the Hellenic Staff. This promotion, however, caused some controversy among the army, which still considered the Diadochos as the main person responsible for the defeat in 1897.[55]
Family deaths
Back in Greece with her husband, the Crown Princess resumed her charity work. However, the health of both her mother and English grandmother deeply concerned her. The Empress Dowager of Germany was indeed suffering from breast cancer, which caused her extreme suffering.[56][57] As for the Queen of the United Kingdom, she was approaching the age of eighty and her family knew that the end was close. But the last years of Queen Victoria's reign were marked by the Second Boer War, during which the United Kingdom suffered terrible losses facing the Afrikaner resistance. Sophia was concerned that the difficulties suffered by the British in South Africa would undermine the already fragile health of her grandmother.[58]
Queen Victoria finally died of a cerebral hemorrhage on 22 January 1901 in Osborne House. Very affected by the death of the sovereign, Sophia traveled to the United Kingdom for her funeral and attended a religious ceremony in her honor in Athens with the rest of the Greek royal family.[59]
A few months later, in the summer of 1901, Sophie went to Friedrichshof to look after her mother, whose health continued to decline. Five months pregnant, the Crown Princess knew that the Dowager Empress was dying and, with her sisters Viktoria and Margaret, she accompanied her until her last breath on 5 August.[56][60] In the space of seven months Sophia lost two of her closest relatives. However, her new maternity helped keep her from feeling sorry for herself.
Goudi coup and its consequences
In Greece, political life remained volatile throughout the first years of the 20th century and the Megali Idea (Greek: Μεγάλη Ιδέα Megáli Idéa, "Great Idea") continued to be a central concern of the population. But in 1908, the Cretan authorities unilaterally proclaimed the attachment of their island to the Kingdom of Greece.[61] But for fear of Turkish reprisals, the Greek government refuses to recognize the annexation, although the island was, de facto, detached from the Ottoman Empire. In Athens, the pusillanimity of the King and government was shocking, particularly to the militia.[62] On 15 August 1909, a group of officers gathered in the "Military League" (Greek: Στρατιωτικός Σύνδεσμος, Stratioticos Syndesmos) and organized the so-called Goudi coup. While declaring to be monarchists, members of the League, led by Nikolaos Zorbas, asked, among other things, for the sovereign to expel his son from the army.[62] Officially, this was to protect the Crown Prince from the jealousies that could arise from his friendship with some soldiers. But the reality was quite different: officers continued to hold the Diadochos responsible for the 1897 defeat.[62]
The situation became so tense that King George I's sons had to resign from their military posts to save their father the shame of having to expelled them.[63][64] In September, the Diadochos, his wife and their children also chose to leave Greece and seek refuge in Germany at Friedrichshof, now owned by the Princess Margaret of Prussia.[65][66] Meanwhile, in Athens, discussions began about dethroning the House of Glücksburg to establishing a republic or replacing the sovereign with either a bastard son of Otto I, a foreign prince or with Prince George, with Sophia as regent.[67]
In December 1909, Colonel Zorbas, head of the Military League, pressured George I to appointed him Head the government in place of Prime Minister Kyriakoulis Mavromichalis.[68] The sovereign refused but the government undertook reforms which favored the military. The staff was reorganized and supporters of the Diadochos, including Ioannis Metaxas, were expelled.[69] At the same time, French soldiers were called to reorganize the Greek army, which threatened both Sophia and her husband, as they helped develop republican ideas within the militia.[66]
Despite these reforms, some members of the Military League continued to oppose the government in order to take power. They then traveled to Crete to meet the Head of government of the island, Eleftherios Venizelos, and offered him the post of Prime Minister of Greece.[l] But the Cretan leader didn't want to appear in Greece to be supported by the army and convinced them to arrange for new elections.[70] In March 1910, the king eventually called for elections and Venizelos and his supporters came to power. For the royal family, this was a difficult time.[70]
However, Venizelos didn't want to weaken the Crown. To show that he didn't obey the army, he restored the members of the royal family to their military duties and the Diadochos thus again became Chief of the Staff.[71] Back in Greece on 21 October 1910, after over a year of exile, Sophia nevertheless remained very suspicious of the new government and the militia. She refused any contact with Venizelos, blaming him as partly responsible for the humiliation suffered by the royal family. The Princess also had problems with her father-in-law, whom she accused of having been weak during the crisis.[72][73]
Nurse during the First Balkan War
After the arrival of Venizelos in power and under the supervision of Diadochos Constantine, the Greek army was modernized and equipped with the support of French and British officers. New warships are also controlled by the Navy.[74] The aim of the modernization was to make the country ready for a new war against the Ottoman Empire. But to defeat the enemy and achieve the Megali Idea, Greece needed allies. That was why, under the Prime Minister, Greece signed alliances with its neighbors and participated in the creation of the Balkan League in June 1912.[75] Thus, when Montenegro declared war on the Ottoman Empire on 8 October 1912, they were joined less than ten days later by Serbia, Bulgaria and Greece. This was the beginning of the First Balkan War.[76]
While the Diadochos and his brothers took command of Greek troops,[77] Queen Olga, Sophia, and her sisters-in-law (Marie Bonaparte, Elena Vladimirovna of Russia and Alice of Battenberg) took in charge the aid to wounded soldiers and refugees. In one month, the princesses collected 80,000 garments for the military and gathered around them doctors, nurses and medical equipment.[78] The Queen and Crown Princess also opened a public subscription in order to create new hospitals in Athens and on the front.[79][80] Very active, the princesses did not just stay in the back but also went to the center of the military operations. Queen Olga and Sophia visited Larissa and Elassona,[80] while Alice made long stays in Epirus and Macedonia. Meanwhile, Elena directed an ambulance-train and Marie Bonaparte set up a hospital ship that connected Thessaloniki to the capital.[79]
But if the war was an opportunity for the princesses to prove themselves useful to their adopted country, it also exacerbated rivalries within the royal family. Conflict began due to Sophia's jealousy of her cousin[m] and sister-in-law Alice. In fact, a heated argument between the two young women erupted after Alice sent, without requesting permission from Sophia, nurses dependent on the Crown Princess to Thessaloniki. One seemingly innocuous event provoked a real discomfort within the family and Queen Olga was shocked when Sophia's attitude was supported by her husband.[80][81]
Marital problems and private life
Sophia and Constantine's marriage was harmonious during the first years. However, faithfulness was not the greatest quality of the Diadochos and his wife soon had to deal with his numerous extramarital affairs. Initially shocked by what she saw as a betrayal, Sophia soon followed the example of her mother-in-law and condoned the behavior of her husband.[82] From 1912, however, the couple became noticeably separated. At that time, Constantine began an affair with Countess Paola von Ostheim (née Wanda Paola Lottero), an Italian stage actress who had recently divorced from Prince Hermann of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach; this relationship lasted until Constantine's death.[83]
When Sophia gave birth to her sixth and last child, a daughter named Katherine on 4 May 1913, a persistent gossip stated that the child was the result of her own affairs. The rumours, true or false, didn't affect Constantine, who easily recognized his paternity.[84]
In private, the Crown Princely couple communicated in English and it was mainly in this language that they raised their children, who grew up in a loving and warm atmosphere in the middle of a cohort of tutors and British nannies. Like her mother, Sophia inculcated in her offspring the love for the United Kingdom and for several weeks every year, the family spent time in Great Britain, where she visited the beaches of Seaford and Eastbourne. However, the summer vacations of the family were spent not only in Friedrichshof with the Empress Dowager, but also in Corfu and Venice, where the Greek royal family went aboard the yacht Amphitrite.[85]
Queen of the Hellenes: 1st tenure
Assassination of King George I and Second Balkan War
The First Balkan War ended in 1913 with the defeat of the Ottoman Empire by the Greek, Bulgarian, Serbian and Montenegrin coalition. The Kingdom of Greece was greatly expanded after the conflict but disagreements soon arose between the Allied powers: Greece and Bulgaria competed for possession of Thessaloniki and its surrounding region.[86]
To affirm the sovereignty of the Greeks over the main city of Macedonia, King George I moved to the city soon after its conquest by the Diadochos, on 8 December 1912. During his long stay in the city, the King went out every day to walk unescorted in the streets, as he had become accustomed to doing in Athens. On 18 March 1913 a Greek anarchist named Alexandros Schinas shot him in the back from a distance of two paces while he was walking in Thessaloniki near the White Tower.[87]
Sophia was in Athens when she learned of the murder of her father-in-law, the king. Now, as Queen Consort of the Hellenes, the responsibility fell upon her to break the news of the murder to her mother-in-law.[n] Together with her eldest daughter, Princess Helen, both comforted the now Dowager Queen, who received the news stoically. The next day, members of the royal family who were present in the capital went to Thessaloniki. Arriving in the Macedonian city, they visited the scene of the murder and collected the remains of the King to escort them back to Athens, where he was buried at Tatoi.[89]
In this difficult context, the death of George I sealed the possession of Thessaloniki to Greece.[90] Still, the Second Balkan War broke out in June 1913 over the division of Macedonia between the former allies of the first conflict.[91] Victorious again, Greece came out of this war considerably enlarged, with the prestige of King Constantine I and Queen Sophia also increased.[92]
Private life
After their accession to the throne, Constantine I and Sophia continued to lead the simple lifestyle that they had enjoyed during their time as heirs. They spent their free time practicing botany, which was their common passion, and transformed the gardens of the New Royal Palace[o] on the English model.[44][45]
The couple was very close to other members of the royal family, especially Prince Nicholas. Every Tuesday, the King and Queen dined with him and his wife Elena, and on Thursdays, they returned the visit with the royal couple at the Royal Palace.[93]
Outbreak of World War I
At the outbreak of World War I on 4 August 1914 Sophia was in Eastbourne with several of her children while her husband and their daughter Helen were the only representatives of the dynasty still present in Athens. But given the gravity of the events, the Queen quickly returned to Greece, where she was soon joined by the rest of the royal family.[94]
While the greater European states entered into the conflict one by one, Greece officially proclaimed his neutrality.[95] Being grandchildren of the so-called "Father-in-law and Grandmother of Europe" (as King Christian IX of Denmark and Queen Victoria respectively were known), Constantine and Sophia were closely related to the monarchs of the Triple Alliance and the Triple Entente.[p] Above all, the King and Queen were aware that Greece was already weakened by the Balkan Wars and was not ready to participate in a new conflict.[96] However, the population did not share the opinion of the sovereigns. Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos hoped that thanks to the start of the war, they would carry the Megali Idea and continue defeating the Ottoman Empire.[97]
Things got complicated when the Triple Entente engaged in the Gallipoli Campaign in February 1915. Desiring to release the Greek populations of Asia Minor from Ottoman rule, Constantine I, at first, was ready to offer his support to the Allies and bring his country into the war. However, the King faced with the opposition of his Staff and, in particular, Ioannis Metaxas, who threatened to resign if Greece entered the war because the country didn't have the means. Constantine I therefore desisted, causing the wrath of Venizelos. Convinced that the royal couple was in connivance with the Emperor, the Prime Minister tried to bring his country into war despite the opposition of the Crown. But, facing the united front of the King, the army and the majority of the government, the politician ended up giving his resignation on 6 March.[98][99]
Weakened by all these events, Constantine I became seriously ill after this crisis. Suffering from pleurisy aggravated by a pneumonia, he remained in bed for several weeks and nearly died. In Greece, public opinion was outraged by a rumour, spread by Venizelists, who said that the King wasn't sick but was in fact wounded with a knife by Sophia during an argument where she wanted to force him to go to war alongside her brother.[100][101] Certainly the Queen kept a frequent communication with her brother. In the words of G. Leon, "She remained a German, and Germany's interests were placed above those of her adopted country which meant little to her. Actually she never had any sympathy for the Greek people".[102] Other sources point to the opposite, based on her many charitable works and efforts to improve the lives of the Greek people in and around the capital.[101]
The King's health declined so a ship was sent to the Island of Tinos in order to seek a miraculous icon of The Virgin and Child who supposedly heal the sick. While Constantine I had already received the last sacraments, he partly recovered his health after kissing the icon. However, his situation remained worrying and he needed surgery before he could resume his duties. Relieved by the recovery of her husband, Sophia offered then, by way of ex-voto, a sapphire to enrich the icon.[100][103]
During the King's illness period, the Triple Entente continued to put pressure on Greece to go to war alongside them. Dimitrios Gounaris, successor of Venizelos as Prime Minister, proposed the intervention of his country in the conflict in exchange for the protection of the Allies against an eventual attack of Bulgaria. However, the Triple Entente, although eager to form an alliance with them, refused the agreement.[100]
Rupture with Venizelos
In June 1915, legislative elections gave victory to the Venizelists. A month later, Constantine I, still convalescent, reasumed his official duties and eventually called on Venizelos to head the Cabinet on 16 August. In September, Bulgaria entered the war alongside the Central Powers and attacked Serbia, ally of Greece since 1913. Venizelos asked the King to proclaim a general mobilization, which he refused. However, to avoid a new political crisis, Constantine I finally proclaimed mobilization while making it clear that this was a purely defensive measure. On 3 October, in order to force the King to react, the Prime Minister called on the Allied Powers to occupy the port of Thessaloniki but Constantine I left the city when the French, Italian and British forces landed in the city. The break was now final between Venizelos and the royal family.[104][105]
As for the Allied governments, the attitude of Constantine and Sophies appeared as a betrayal and they appeared as such in the newspapers of the Triple Entente.[q][107] The French press accused the Queen of regularly visiting the beaches of Phalerum in order to supply of German submarines with fuel.[108]
It must be said that by refusing to go to war, Greece prevented the Franco-British troops of helping Serbia, whose armies soon found themselves overwhelmed by the Austro-Bulgarian coalition, and it made even more uncertain an Allied victory in the Dardanelles. In retaliation, the Triple Entente ordered Greece to demobilize its army while martial law was proclaimed in Thessaloniki and a blockade was imposed on the Greeks.
Nevertheless, the King and Queen were far from losing their support in the country. On the contrary, the withdrawal of British troops from the Dardanelles, in December 1915, reinforced the confidence of many Greeks in their sovereign, and Constantine I used this advantage to call new elections. Aware of the electoral defeat that surely awaited them, Venizelos and his supporters refused, in turn, to participate in the poll and declared that the new elected Greek parliament was illegal.[109]
Assassination attempts
From that point on, the Greek government held a policy more favorable to the Triple Alliance. The population officially protested against the transfer of the Serbian army to Corfu and then to Thessaloniki. Orders were also given to the officers present at the borders to not oppose a possible Bulgarian advance into the country, which took place on 27 May 1916. Finally, in April 1916, Constantine I symbolically proclaimed the annexation of Northern Epirus to Greece in response against the Italian intervention into Albania.[109]
Now considered enemies of the Triple Entente,[r] the royal couple faced an increasingly violent opposition to them. The French developed various plots to kidnap or assassinate of the sovereigns. On 14 July 1916, a mysterious fire (probably a deliberate act of arson set by agents of Paris) broke out in the forest surrounding Tatoi. In the confusion of the event, Sophia saved her youngest daughter, Princess Katherine, and ran over 2 km. into the woods with the child in her arms. Several members of the royal family, including Constantine I himself, were wounded and the residence of the rulers was largely destroyed by the fire, which lasted for forty-eight hours. Above all, sixteen (or eighteen, depending on sources) soldiers and other members of the palace staff were killed.[111][112]
After these events, the attitude of the royal family to Germany changed considerably. Between December 1916 and February 1917, the Queen, who had long been less germanophile than her husband, sent several telegrams to her brother asking when the troops of the Centrals would be able to intervene in Macedonia. However, Sophia still had some resentment against the Emperor because of his attitude at the time of her marriage and her conversion to Orthodoxy; but the violation of Greece's neutrality by the Triple Entente and the threats against the life of her husband and children gradually changed her views against the Allies.[113][114]
National Schism and pressures of the Triple Entente
In October 1916, Eleftherios Venizelos set up in Thessaloniki, where he organized a provisional government against the one led by Spyridon Lambros in Athens: this was the beginning of the called National Schism (Greek: Εθνικός Διχασμός, Ethnikos Dikhasmos).[115] In the meanwhile, a Franco-British fleet commanded by Vice-admiral Louis Dartige du Fournet, occupied the bay of Salamis to put pressure on Athens, while various ultimatums were sent, mainly concerning the disarmament of his army.[116] With the blockade, the supply of the capital was increasingly difficult and famine began. Sophia therefore redoubled her efforts to help the poor. With the Patriotic League of Greek Women, she managed to distribute 10,000 meals a day, as well as clothing, blankets, medicines and milk for children. Still, the situation became even more difficult.[117]
On 1 December 1916 Constantine I finally agreed to the French demands and soldiers of the Triple Entente landed in Athens to seize guns promised by the sovereign two months earlier. But secretly a group of Greek reservists mobilized and fortified Athens.[116][118] The French were met by a heavy fire and were killed; the event was called by the local press of the time as the "Greek Vespers". After this, the king congratulated both the Minister of War and General Dousmanis.[119]
The Triple Entente quickly reacted to this attack. The French fleet bombarded the royal palace in Athens, forcing Sophia and her children to take refuge in the castle cellars for several hours.[120] Above all, the government of Aristide Briand offered to depose Constantine I and replaced him by his younger brother, Prince George.[121]
However, Russia and Italy refused to intervene because of fears of Greek claims on Asia Minor and the blood ties between Constantine I and Tsar Nicholas II.[116]
First exile
Dethronement and family separation
With the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the deposition of Nicholas II, Constantine I and Sophia had lost the last of their supporters in the Triple Entente. Thus, on 10 June 1917 Charles Jonnart, the Allied High Commissioner, asked the Greek Government for the abdication of the King and his replacement by another prince because the Diadochos George was considered a pro-German too. Under the threat of an invasion of 10,000 troops in Piraeus, Constantine I thus relinquished power in favor of his second son, Prince Alexander. Nevertheless, the sovereign refused to abdicate and he explained to his second son that he should not be regarded otherwise than as a kind of regent, in charge of the throne until the return of the legitimate monarch.[122]
On 11 June, the royal family secretly left the Royal Palace, surrounded by a group of loyalists and arrived to Tatoi. The next day, Constantine I, Sophia and five of their children left Greece from the port of Oropos, taking the road to exile.[123] This was the last time that Sophia saw her second son, now proclaimed King as Alexander I. In fact, after their return to power, Venizelists prohibited any contact between the new sovereign and the rest of the royal family.[124]
Life in Switzerland
After crossing the Ionian Sea and Italy, Sophia and her family settled in Switzerland, mainly between the cities of St. Moritz, Zürich and Lucerne.[125][126] In exile, the rulers were soon followed by almost all the members of the royal family, who left Greece on the return of Venizelos at the head of the government and Greece entered the war at the side of the Triple Entente. In addition, the financial position of the royal family was precarious and Constantine I, haunted by a deep sense of failure, soon fell ill. In 1918, he contracted Spanish flu and was again close to death.[127]
Already concerned about the health of her husband,[126] Sophia was devastated by the prohibition to get in touch with her second son. In fact, in Athens, Alexander I was entirely cut off from his family and the government formally prevented him from communicating with his parents. Even during the short stay of the King in Paris in May 1920, guards closely monitored the sovereign. So when Sophia telephoned him at his hotel, a man cut her appeal and coldly replied that "His Majesty is sorry but he can't answer the phone".[128]
With the end of World War I and the signing of the Treaties of Neuilly and Sèvres, the Kingdom of Greece achieved significant territorial gains in Thrace and Anatolia.[129] However, this didn't give back the country its lost stability and tensions between Venizelos and the exiled royals continued. The decision of Alexander I to marry Aspasia Manos, a young aristocrat[s] from Phanariot, rather than a European princess, displeased both the Head of the government and the King's parents. Very attached to social conventions, Sophia condemned what she saw as a mésalliance while the Prime Minister saw in this marriage a lost opportunity to get closer to Great Britain.[131]
Death of Alexander I
On 2 October 1920, King Alexander I was bitten by a pet monkey as he walked on the royal estate of Tatoi. His wounds quickly became infected and he suffered from a strong fever and sepsis. On 19 October, he became delirious and called out for his mother at his bedside. However, the Greek government refused to allow Sophia to return to Greece: they feared that the loyalists would benefit from the presence of the Queen in Athens to organize action against them.[132][133]
Very worried about her son, Sophia begged the government to change their mind but, aware that only her mother-in-law still found favor with Venizelists, she eventually asked Olga to go to Athens to take care of Alexander I. After several days of negotiations, the Dowager Queen obtained permission to return to Greece, but delayed by rough seas, she only arrived twelve hours after the death of her grandson, on 25 October.[133][134]
Two days later, the remains of the young King were buried in the royal crypt of Tatoi. Again, the government banned the exiled royals from entering the country and the Dowager Queen was the only member of the family to attend the funeral.[135] The loss of her son and the impossibility to go to his funeral deeply affected Sophia; many observers now emphasized the sadness that showed on the Queen's face.[136]
Fall of Venizelos and Olga's regency
In Athens, the death of Alexander I created a serious institutional crisis. Always opposed the return of Constantine I and Diadochos George to Greece, the government of Eleftherios Venizelos offered the throne to Prince Paul, the third son of the deposed sovereign. However, he refused to ascend the throne before his father and his elder brother unless a referendum appointed him as the new Head of State.[137][138]
However, the situation of the Venizelists was already precarious after the difficulties faced by the country during the Greco-Turkish War of 1919-1922. Supporters of King Constantine I therefore experienced a resurgence of popularity and Venizelos was defeated in the parliamentary elections of November 1920. The return of monarchists in power led to the resignation of Venizelist administrative staff and on 17 November Admiral Pavlos Kountouriotis, who was appointed regent after the death of Alexander I, chose to resign. The new Prime Minister Dimitrios Rallis, therefore asked Dowager Queen Olga to assume the regency until the return of her son, on 19 December 1920. For about a month, she was the head of the Greek kingdom but her role was roughly limited to prepare the restoration of Constantine I.[139][140]
In the meanwhile, in Switzerland, the royal family was preparing the wedding of two of their children with children of King Ferdinand I of Romania. A few weeks before the death of Alexander I, the Diadochos George was engaged to Princess Elisabeth of Romania,[t] which gave the opportunity for Princess Helen of Greece to meet Crown Prince Carol of Romania and in turn, become engaged to him. But if Sophia was satisfied with her son's upcoming wedding, she disapproved of her daughter's romance with the Romanian Crown Prince. Still saddened by the loss of Alexander I, the Queen did not want to lose another of her children. Above all, Sophia had no confidence in the future Carol II, whose marriage and divorce with Zizi Lambrino had already shocked her.[142]
Queen of the Hellenes: 2nd tenure
Return to Greece
The return of Constantine I and Sophia to Athens on 19 December 1920, was accompanied by large demonstrations of joy. Everywhere in the streets, portraits of Venizelos were pulled and replaced by those of the royal family. Above all, a huge crowd surrounded the royal couple in the streets of the capital and, after returning to the Royal Palace, they had to appear repeatedly on the balcony to greet the people who cheered them.[143][144]
However, the presence of the sovereigns in Greece didn't bring the expected peace by the people. Even more, it prevented the country to receive the support of the major powers in the war that Greece faced against the Turkey of Mustafa Kemal since 1919. In fact, the former allies didn't forgive the King and Queen's attitude during World War I and they weren't ready to provide their support.[145] The hatred of the great powers to Constantine I and Sophia appeared also clearly on the occasion of the marriage, in Athens, of Princess Helen and Crown Prince Carol of Romania. Present at the wedding, the ambassador of Great Britain and his wife pointedly refused to salute the Greek King and Queen when they publicly showed their respects to Queen Marie of Romania. For Sophia, the snub was more difficult to bear because she had always been on good terms with the United Kingdom representatives before the deposition of Constantine I and she continued to nurture loving feelings for the country of her mother.[146]
In fact, the main source of joy for Sophia after her return to Greece was the birth of her granddaughter Alexandra, on 25 March 1921. Although initially opposed to Alexander's marriage with Aspasia Manos, the Queen welcomed their daughter with delight and pressed both her husband and eldest son to give her granddaughter the status and titles reserved to members of the royal family.[147][148]
Great Disaster
After initial success, the situation of the Greek army was increasingly precarious in Anatolia. Constantine I decided to travel there in May 1921 to support the morale; however he wasn't the dynamic Commander-in-chief that led his country to victory in the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913. Seriously diminished by illness, he had to return to Greece in September, which was perceived as a real military desertion by some.[149] As for Sophia, she couldn't do more than support her husband and reassume her nursing work with wounded soldiers.[150]
The Greco-Turkish War continued until the Greek defeat of Sakarya in August–September 1921, and the siege and burning of Smyrna (now İzmir) by the Turks in September 1922. After these events, the country plunged into a deep political and moral crisis.[151] While Mustafa Kemal and his armies gradually reconquered Anatolia and east Thrace, thousands of Greeks were murdered and others fled from Asia Minor to find refuge in Greece.[152][153] This was called the "Great Disaster", which was definitive a few months later with the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne (24 July 1923).
Abdication of Constantine I
In response to the military defeat by the Turks, a part of the Greek army, commanded by General Nikolaos Plastiras, revolted on 11 September 1922. They demanded the abdication of Constantine I and the dissolution of the Hellenic Parliament. Having consulted his friend, General Ioannis Metaxas, the King abdicated on 27 September on his eldest son, who succeeded him on the throne under the name of George II.[154][155]
Dowager Queen
Second exile and concerns for Greece
To ensure their security and stabilize the throne of their son, Constantine I and Sophia once again chose to take the path of exile. On 30 October 1922 the deposed royal couple, Princesses Irene and Katherine and Prince Nicholas with his family, went again to the port of Oropos to leave their country. But, contrary to what happened in 1917, few followers awaited them this time before their departure into exile.[156][157]
On board the Greek steamboat SS Patris, the royal family arrived in Sicily and moved to the Villa Hygeia in Palermo.[158] The Greek political situation remained a source of concern for the exiles. In fact, in Athens, the called Trial of the Six led to the execution for high treason of former Prime Ministers Petros Protopapadakis, Nikolaos Stratos and Dimitrios Gounaris and Generals Georgios Baltatzis, Nikolaos Theotokis and Georgios Hatzianestis, all accused of responsibility for the defeat against Turkey. Above all, the life of Prince Andrew, brother of Constantine I, was also threatened in November–December 1922 and only the intervention from foreign governments commuted his sentence from death to exile.[159]
Death of Constantine I and deposition of George II
Increasingly depressed by the events that had shaken Greece and sick with arteriosclerosis, Constantine I developed a deep depression. He then remained sometimes hours without speaking, staring into space.[160] Faced with this situation, Sophia's anxiety (already bigger by the fate of George II and other members of the royal family who remained in Greece), only increased. The Queen and her husband therefore made the decision to leave Sicily and settled in Florence. However, Constantine I died of a brain hemorrhage shortly before their departure, on 11 January 1923, and Sophia found herself even more isolated than she was previously.[161]
After the death of her husband, Sophia wanted to repatriate his remains to be buried in Tatoi but the Greek government refused, with George II being unable to do anything.[u] In fact, the situation of the new King was increasingly precarious and at the end, he himself went into exile in Romania a few months after the death of his father, on 19 December 1923. The republic was then proclaimed in Greece on 25 March 1924 and Sophia and the other members of the royal family were stripped of their Hellenic nationality. However, the Greek royals maintained their Danish titles since George I ascended to the Greek throne in 1863 and King Christian IX of Denmark almost immediately gave them Danish passports.[163][164]
Last years
Sophia, now Dowager Queen, left Southern Italy with her daughters Irene and Katherine and moved to Tuscany, in the Villa Bobolina[v] of Fiesole.[166][167] From 1924 to 1927, the three women were joined by Princesses Aspasia and Alexandra, much to Sophia's delight, because she was very attached to her granddaughter.[168][169] In 1930, Princess Helen also came live with her mother after her disastrous marriage with King Carol II of Romania ended in divorce. During summer vacations, the Dowager Queen had the opportunity to see her grandson Prince Michael of Romania, when he came to visit his mother.[170]
Surrounded by her family, Sophia found some stability but, convinced that Greece wouldn't remain a republic forever, refused to acquire the villa where she settled.[171] Released from any official position, she had now more freedom to travel. She made frequent trips to Germany, where she reunited with her sister Margaret, but also to Great Britain, after having obtained the permission of King George V.[172] The Dowager Queen also witnessed several strong moments in the life of the European elite. In 1929, she went to Doorn in the Netherlands for 70th birthday of her brother, the former Emperor William II, whom she had not seen since 1914.[173]
In her older years, Sophie became increasingly religious. She remained orthodox, but also attended Anglican offices when she had the chance. The Queen Dowager was also interested in the Protestant literature, especially in the works of the Episcopalian pastor Samuel Shoemaker (particularly Religion That Works and Twice Born Ministers) and the Episcopalian Rev. James Reid (In Touch With Christ). Finally, she has a close correspondence with the Anglican pastor R. W. Cole, whom she met in Birchington, and spent long hours praying.[174]
Illness, death and burial
Sick for many years, Sophia saw her condition worsen from 1930, which forced her to go to a hospital in Frankfurt to follow a treatment. Apparently recovered by December, she took full advantage of her strength and during 1931 she traveled to Great Britain, Bavaria and Venice. But in September, her condition deteriorated again and she had to return to Frankfurt, where she underwent surgery. It was during this time that the doctors diagnosed advanced cancer and they gave the Dowager Queen a few weeks to life. After the New Year celebrations of 1931, Sophia gradually stopped eating and her health declined rapidly. She finally died surrounded by her children in the hospital, on 13 January 1932.[175][176]
Sophia's body was transferred to the castle of Friedrichshof, where she rested a few days before being sent to the Russian Church in Florence, where she was buried alongside her husband and mother-in-law. They stayed there for four years until the restoration of George II on the Greek throne in 1935.[175][176]
After his restoration on the Greek throne, George II organized the repatriation of the remains of members of his family who died in exile. An important religious ceremony that brought together, for six days in November 1936, all members of the royal family still alive. Sophia's body was buried at the royal burial ground at Tatoi Palace, where she still rests today.[175][177]
In popular culture
Literature
- In The Athenians, the British journalist and writer Beverley Nichols tells the story of a young Englishwoman charged by the Secret Intelligence Service to assassinate King Constantine I during World War I. However, this spy novel, inspired by the survey conducted by the author in Greece after the restoration of the sovereign, was never released because Nichols publishing house deemed too compromising. The work, in which appears Queen Sophia and was also dedicated to her, only exists today in the form of manuscript.[178]
Film and television
- The role of Sophia is played by actress Olga Karlatos in the Greek film Eleftherios Venizelos of Pantelis Voulgaris (1980).[179]
- Sophia was also portrayed by Greek actress Antigoni Amanitou in the American mini-series of two episodes The First Olympics: Athens 1896, directed by Alvin Rakoff (1984).[180]
- Sophia was portrayed by English actress Sophie Trott in the British film Victoria & Abdul (2017).
Phaleristics
- In 1936, the Order of Saints Olga and Sophia (Greek: Βασιλικό Οικογενειακό Τάγμα των Αγίων Όλγας και Σοφίας / Basilikon oikogeneiakon tagma ton agion Olgas kai Sophias) was established by King George II of Greece in the memory of his grandmother and mother.[181][182]
Name of Avenue
- In Athens, the Vasilissis Sofias Avenue (Greek: Λεωφόρος Βασιλίσσης Σοφίας) was named after Queen Sophia. This major artery, which begins at the intersection of Vasilissis Amalias Avenue and Panepistimiou Street and ends in the Alexandras, Kifisias and Mesogeion Avenues, had some of the major monuments of the Greek capital: the Old Royal Palace, the National Garden of Athens, the Byzantine and Christian Museum and the War Museum.
Issue
Image | Name | Birth | Death | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
George II of Greece | 20 July 1890 | 1 April 1947 | married Princess Elisabeth of Romania, no issue. | |
Alexander I of Greece | 1 August 1893 | 25 October 1920 | married Aspasia Manos, had issue, Queen Alexandra of Yugoslavia. | |
Princess Helen of Greece and Denmark | 2 May 1896 | 28 November 1982 | married the future Carol II of Romania, had issue, Michael I of Romania. | |
Paul I of Greece | 14 December 1901 | 6 March 1964 | married Princess Frederika of Hanover, had issue, include Constantine II of Greece and Queen Sofía of Spain. | |
Princess Irene of Greece and Denmark | 13 February 1904 | 15 April 1974 | married Prince Aimone, Duke of Aosta, nominally King Tomislav II of Croatia from 1941 to 1943; had issue. | |
Princess Katherine of Greece and Denmark | 4 May 1913 | 2 October 2007 | married Major Richard Brandram MC; had issue. |
Ancestry
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Notes
^ On 21 June 1870 Madrid offered the Spanish throne to Leopold, Prince of Hohenzollern, a distant cousin of King William I of Prussia. The Second French Empire immediately declared its opposition to the project and Prince Leopold eventually declined the offer. Bismarck, however, took this opportunity to force France to declare war on Prussia. Aware of the Prussian military superiority, the Chancellor was indeed convinced that they could defeat the French and in this way finished the Unification of Germany.
^ "She [the Queen] is so nice to kiss you cannot think," Sophia said at age 11.[7]
^ In a letter to her mother Queen Victoria, the Dowager Empress wrote: "... my trio is now broken and I feel embittered." Empress Frederick and Frederick Ponsonby, Letters of the Empress Frederick, Kessinger ed, 2007, pp. 393-394.
^ The Lutheran service took place in the private Chapel of King George I while the Orthodox ceremony was celebrated in the new Metropolitan Cathedral of Athens.
^ This was also the assertion at the time of the French, Italian and Austrian newspapers.[22]
^ The construction of the palace, led by architect Ernst Ziller, which it financed and completed around 1900. For more details, see:[26]
^ The couple's income was fairly modest but Sophia's marriage contract, however, guaranteed a comfortable existence. The princess did receive from the Kingdom of Prussia a dowry of 50,000 marks and 150,000 marks of paraphernalia. Sophia had also inherited two million marks from her father Emperor Frederick III in 1888. Finally, Constantine received an annual income and King George I guaranteed a comfortable dower.[27]
^ Sophia's conversion was probably motivated because she was obliged to do so under her new family's House law
^ The Emperor and his wife considered that Sophia's conversion was responsible for the premature birth of their son Joachim;[39] shortly after William II wrote to his mother that had the baby died, Sophia would have "murdered it."[40]
^ At that time, the Cretans suffered a violent repression by the Ottoman power, prompting thousands of Greeks to leave their island to seek shelter in Athens. For details, see: History of Crete.
^ In addition to withdrawing their troops from Crete, Greece had to officially recognize the independence of the island, a condition that none of the other Great Powers suggested.[48]
^ When Prince George of Greece, Sophia's brother-in-law, was High Commissioner of the Cretan State, between 1905 and 1909, Venizelos fiercely opposed his policy and the Cretan leader acquired a strong anti-monarchical will. The officers of the League thus saw him as a natural and effective partner against King George I.[70]
^ Alice and Sophia were first cousins once removed in descent from Queen Victoria; Alice's mother Princess Louis of Battenberg was, like Sophia, a granddaughter of Queen Victoria (through her second daughter, also named Alice).
^ Hugo Vickers, in his biography of Princess Alice of Battenberg, however, says that it was Princess Alice and Princes Andrew and George of Greece who gave Queen Olga the news of her husband's murder.[88]
^ In 1909, a fire destroyed a large part of the Royal Palace (now used by Parliament), with the result that the Crown Prince's Palace was used temporarily as the residence of the royal family. However, it wasn't until the ascension of Constantine I to the throne that the Palace became the main royal residence.
^ King Constantine I was the first-cousin of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia and King George V of the United Kingdom. As for Sophia, she was the sister of Emperor William II of Germany and cousin of the Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna (Alix of Hesse) and King George V.
^ It's said that since their marriage, Constantine and Sophia are regarded as toys of German politics by the French government.[106]
^ During a visit of Prince Andrew of Greece to the Permanent Sub-Secretary at the Foreign Office, the latter said coldly: "What can we expect [from Greece] as your Queen is the sister of the Emperor?".[110]
^ In addition to the royal family and nobility of Venetian origin from the Ionian Islands, there is not, strictly speaking, nobility in Greece. Nevertheless, the Phanariot families (like Manos) are often considered as aristocracy. Aspasia has among her ancestors, many Romanian Voivodes like Nicolae Caradja (1737–1784) or Michael Soutzos (1784–1864). That's why she is often described as "aristocratic" by historians. For details on Aspasia's ascendance see:[130]
^ However, it seems that the matrimonial project was already decided since 1913, during the Second Balkan War.[141]
^ The King's remains were buried in the crypt of the Russian Church of Naples, before being transferred to the Russian Church in Florence until he was finally buried at Tatoi in 1936.[162]
^ When Sophia died, this villa of the 15th century was bought by her eldest daughter Helen, Queen Mother of Romania, who renamed it Villa Sparta. That is why several sources give that name to the residence.[165]
References
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 3.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, pp. 9–10.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 4.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 3–4.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 9.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, p. 11.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, p. 10.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 3 and 10.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 43.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, pp. 77–78.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 78.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 18.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, p. 260.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 47.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 79.
^ ab Van der Kiste 1994, p. 48.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, pp. 19-20.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 20.
^ abcd Gelardi 2005, p. 22.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 21.
^ abc Van der Kiste 1994, p. 50.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, pp. 262–263.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, p. 267.
^ ab Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 80.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 49.
^ Site of the current presidential palace in Athens (archive)
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, p. 264.
^ Bertin 1982, p. 150.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 27 and 193.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 72.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 24–25.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, p. 25.
^ ab Driault & Lhéritier 1926, pp. 269–270.
^ Philip Carabott: Politics, Orthodoxy and the Language Question in Greece: The Gospel Riots of November 1901, Journal of Mediterranean Studies, nª 3, 1993, p. 125.
^ ab Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 51–52.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 25–27.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 26.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, p. 270.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 51.
^ Bennett 1971, p. 301.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 27.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 82, 159 and 193.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, p. 82.
^ ab Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 81–82.
^ ab Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 87.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 193.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, pp. 82–83.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, p. 403.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 80–82.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 57.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, pp. 403–410.
^ ab Van der Kiste 1994, p. 59.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 84.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, pp. 475–476.
^ Terrades 2005, pp. 235–236.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, pp. 95–96.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 165 and 173.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 86.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 90.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 175.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 68.
^ abc Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 68–69.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 69.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 157–158.
^ Bertin 1982, p. 178.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, p. 158.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, p. 33.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 69–70.
^ Terrades 2005, p. 237.
^ abc Vacalopoulos 1975, p. 206.
^ Clogg 1979, p. 100.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 158–159.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, p. 49.
^ Clogg 1979, pp. 101–102.
^ Vacalopoulos 1975, pp. 215–216.
^ Vacalopoulos 1975, p. 216.
^ Vickers 2000, p. 93.
^ Vickers 2000, pp. 93–94.
^ ab Captain Walter Christmas: King George of Greece, New York, New York, MacBride, Naste & Company, 1914, p. 368.
^ abc Gelardi 2005, p. 180.
^ Vickers 2000, pp. 102–103 and 108.
^ Vickers 2000, p. 68.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 181.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 82 and 212–214.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 83.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 72.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 72–75.
^ Vickers 2000, p. 105.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 76–77.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, pp. 95–99.
^ Vacalopoulos 1975, p. 217.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 79–80.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 81.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 87–88.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 201–202.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 89–91.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 90.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 208.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 92–93.
^ abc Van der Kiste 1994, p. 93.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, p. 210.
^ Leon 1974, p. 77.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, pp. 87–88.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 94.
^ Collectif 1919, pp. 253–254.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, pp. 260–266.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 94–95.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 211.
^ ab Van der Kiste 1994, p. 95.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 236.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 96–98.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 88.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 105–106.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 247.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, pp. 261–262 and 267.
^ abc Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 99–104.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 248.
^ Bertin 1982, p. 214.
^ Collectif 1919, p. 258.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 246–247.
^ Bertin 1982, p. 215 and 220.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 106–107.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 108–110.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 113 and 117.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 115.
^ ab Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 90.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 115–116.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 292–293.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, pp. 382–384.
^ Pedigree Chart of Aspasia Manos in: Genealogics - Leo van de Pas [retrieved 6 July 2016].
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 118.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 122–123.
^ ab Gelardi 2005, p. 293.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 123–124.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 125.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 293–295.
^ Vickers 2000, p. 148.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 125–126.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 295.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 126.
^ Driault & Lhéritier 1926, p. 152.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 296–298.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 128–129.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 295–296.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 129–130.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 298.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 402.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 309–310.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 132–135.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 300.
^ Bertin 1982, p. 230.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 299–303.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 134–137.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 137.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 303.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 139.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 303–304.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 139–140.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 305–306.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 141–142.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 305–307.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 143 and 156.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 310.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 143–144.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 149 and 151.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 148.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 92 and 214.
^ Mateos Sainz de Medrano 2004, p. 180 and 402.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 357.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 149–150.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, p. 14.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 318–319 and 348–349.
^ Gelardi 2005, p. 356.
^ Gelardi 2005, pp. 347–349.
^ abc Gelardi 2005, pp. 357–358.
^ ab Van der Kiste 1994, p. 151.
^ Van der Kiste 1994, pp. 156–157.
^ Bryan Connon, Beverley Nichols : A Life, Timber Press, 2001, pp. 108-109.
^ Eleftherios Venizelos 1910-1927 in: imdb.com[retrieved 6 July 2016].
^ 'The First Olympics - Athens 1896 in: imdb.com[retrieved 6 July 2016].
^ GREECE ORDERS - DECORATIONS - MEDALS in: Antiques Atoz [retrieved 6 July 2016].
^ GREECE House of Oldenburg (Greek Orthodox) in: icocregister.org [retrieved 6 July 2016]
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Media related to Queen Sophia of Greece at Wikimedia Commons
Sophia of Prussia House of Hohenzollern Born: 14 June 1870 Died: 13 January 1932 | ||
Greek royalty | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Olga Konstantinovna of Russia | Queen consort of the Hellenes 18 March 1913 – 11 June 1917 | Succeeded by Aspasia Manos (untitled) |
Preceded by Aspasia Manos (Royal Consort) | Queen consort of the Hellenes 19 December 1920 – 27 September 1922 | Succeeded by Elisabeth of Romania |