Louise, Princess Royal and Duchess of Fife |
Louise, Princess Royal and Duchess of Fife (20 February
1867-4 January 1931), was the third child and the eldest daughter of King Edward VII of the United Kingdom and Queen Alexandra. She was the younger sister of King George V and the fifth daughter of a British monarch to be styled Princess Royal.
Her Royal Highness The Princess Louise Victoria Alexandra Dagmar, VA, CI, GCStJ was born at Marlborough House, the London residence of her parents,
the Prince and Princess of Wales (later King Edward VII and Queen
Alexandra). Princess Louise of Wales spent much of her childhood at Sandringham House, her parents' country estate in Norfolk.
Like her sisters, Princess Maud and Princess
Victoria, she received a limited formal education.
On 27 June 1889, Princess Louise married
Alexander Duff, 6th Earl of Fife
(11 October 1840-29 December 1912), at the Private Chapel in
Buckingham Palace. Two days after the wedding, Queen Victoria created the Earl 1st Duke of Fife and Marquess of Duff in the peerage of the United Kingdom. The Letters Patent creating this dukedom contained the standard remainder to "male
heirs of the body lawfully begotten." However, it eventually became apparent that the Duke and Duchess of Fife would not have a
son. Therefore, on 24 April 1900, Queen
Victoria signed Letters Patent creating a second dukedom of Fife and earldom of MacDuff in the peerage of the United Kingdom with
a special remainder: in default of a male heir, these peerages (or rather, the 1900 creation of them), would pass to the
daughters of the 1st Duke and then to their male descendants.
The Duke of Fife and Princess Louise, Duchess of Fife had three children:
On 9 November 1905, King Edward VII
declared Princess Louise the Princess Royal, the highest honor bestowed
on a female member of the royal family. Therefafter, she was styled "HRH The Princess Royal, Duchess of Fife." At the same time,
the King declared that the two daughters of the Princess Royal would have the titular dignity of Princess of Great Britain and
Ireland and the style of Highness, with precedence immediately after all members of the British Royal Family styled Royal Highness. From that point ownward, the Princess Royal's
daughters, Princess Alexandra of Fife and Princess Maud of Fife, no longer took their rank from their father, but rather from the
will of the Sovereign.
In December 1911, while sailing to Egypt, the
Princess Royal and her family were shipwrecked off the coast of Morocco. Although
they escaped unharmed, the Duke of Fife fell ill with pleurisy, probably contracted
as a result of the shipwreck. He died at Assuan, Egypt in January 1912, and Princess Alexandra succeeded to his dukedom, becoming
Duchess of Fife in her own right.
Princess Louise of Wales received the Order of Victoria and Albert in 1885 and the Imperial Order of the Crown of India in
1887. She became a Lady of the Venerable Order of St. John of Jerusalem (LJStJ) in 1888. In 1929, the Princess Royal became a
Lady Grand Gross of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem (GCStJ). She became colonel-in-chief of the 7th Dragoon Guards (the
Princess Royal's Own) in 1914. She later served as colonel-in-chief of the 4th and 7th Dragoon Guards when it was formed in
1921.
The Princess Royal died in January 1931, at her home in Portman Square, London and was buried in St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle. Her remains were later removed to the Private Chapel, Mar Lodge
Mausoleum, Braemar, Aberdeenshire.
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