Showing posts with label king. Show all posts
Showing posts with label king. Show all posts
30 August 2015
King Harald of Norway
Harald V, born 21 February 1937) is the King of Norway. He succeeded to the throne upon the death of his father Olav V on 17 January 1991.
The son of the then-Crown Prince Olav and of Princess Märtha of Sweden, Harald was born at the Crown Prince Residence at Skaugum, Akershus, Norway. A member of the House of Glücksburg, a house originally from Northern Germany, Harald became the first Norwegian-born prince since Olav IV, who was born in 1370.
Harald V is the formal head of the Church of Norway and the Norwegian Armed Forces. He has two children, Crown Prince Haakon and Princess Märtha Louise.
He is closely related to other European monarchs. He is the first cousin once removed of King Philippe of Belgium and Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg, the second cousin of Queen Margrethe II of Denmark and Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom, and the second cousin once removed of King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden.
In 2015, he became the world's first reigning monarch to visit Antarctica, specifically the Norwegian dependency Queen Maud Land.
Info on King Harald V courtesy of Wikipedia.com
30 October 2014
King Olav V of Norway
Olav V (Alexander Edward Christian Frederik; 2 July 1903 – 17 January 1991) was the King of Norway from 1957 until his death. A member of the House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg, Olav was the son of Haakon VII and Maud of Wales.
He became heir apparent when his father was elected king in 1905. He was the first heir to the Norwegian throne to be brought up in Norway since Olav IV, and his parents made sure he was given as Norwegian an upbringing as possible. In preparation for his royal duties, he attended both civilian and military schools. In 1929, he married his first cousin Princess Märtha of Sweden. During World War II his leadership was much appreciated and he was appointed Norwegian Chief of Defence in 1944. At his death, he was the last surviving grandchild of Edward VII of the United Kingdom and Alexandra of Denmark.
Due to his considerate, down-to-earth style, King Olav was immensely popular, resulting in the nickname Folkekongen ("The People's King"). In a 2005 poll by the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation, Olav was voted "Norwegian of the century". Born as prince of Denmark in Appleton House, Flitcham, United Kingdom,Olav was named Alexander Edward Christian Frederik. His parents were Prince Carl, second son of King Frederick VIII of Denmark, and Princess Maud, youngest daughter of King Edward VII of the United Kingdom. When his father was elected king of Norway, he took the Norwegian name Haakon VII, and on the day he was inaugurated, he gave his son the Norwegian name Olav.
Olav was the first heir to the throne since mediaeval times to grow up in Norway. Unlike his father, who was a naval officer, Olav chose to do his main military education in the army. He graduated from the three-year Norwegian Military Academy in 1924, with the fourth best score in his class. Olav then went on to study jurisprudence and economics for two years at Balliol College, Oxford.
During the 1930s, Crown Prince Olav was a naval cadet serving on the minelayer/cadet training ship Olav Tryggvason. Olav moved upwards in the ranks of the Norwegian armed forces, rising in the army from an initial rank of first lieutenant, to captain in 1931 and colonel in 1936.
He was an accomplished athlete. Olav jumped from the Holmenkollen ski jump in Oslo, and also competed in sailing regattas. He won a gold medal in sailing at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam and remained an active sailor into old age.
On 21 March 1929 in Oslo, he married his first cousin Princess Märtha of Sweden with whom he had one son, Harald, and two daughters, Ragnhild and Astrid. As exiles during World War II, Crown Princess Märtha and the Royal children lived in Washington, D.C., where she struck up a close friendship with Franklin D. Roosevelt. She died in 1954, before her husband ascended the throne.
The British Film Institute houses an early film, made in 1913, in which a miniature car commissioned by Queen Alexandra for the Crown Prince Olav tows a procession of Londoners through the streets of the capital, before being delivered to a pair of 'royal testers' of roughly Olav's age.
As Crown Prince, Olav had received extensive military training and had participated in most major Norwegian military exercises. Because of this he was perhaps one of the most knowledgeable Norwegian military leaders and was respected by other Allied leaders for his knowledge and leadership skills. During a visit to the United States before the war, he and his wife had established a close relationship with President Roosevelt. These factors would prove to be important for the Norwegian fight against the attacking German forces.
In 1939, Crown Prince Olav was appointed an admiral of the Royal Norwegian Navy and a general of the Norwegian Army.
During World War II, Olav stood by his father's side in resisting the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany. During the campaign he was a valuable advisor both to civilian and military leaders. When the Norwegian government decided to go into exile, he offered to stay behind with the Norwegian people, but this was declined. So, against all his deep patriotic instincts, he reluctantly fled with/followed his father to the United Kingdom, where he and his staff and servants and aides continued to be a key advisor to the government-in-exile and his father. It is a popular legend among his countrymen that he did not allow himself any dessert or sweets for the duration of the Norwegian occupation.
Olav made several visits to Norwegian and Allied troops in the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States. In 1944, he was appointed to the post of Norwegian Chief of Defence and after the war he led the Norwegian disarmament of the German occupying forces. His war decorations from other nations, including the War Crosses of Norway, France, Greece and the Netherlands, the US Legion of Merit and the French Médaille Militaire, are testament to the international recognition of his contribution to the war against Hitler.
Succeeding to the Norwegian Throne in 1957 upon his father's death, Olav reigned as a "People's King," and became extremely popular. He liked to drive his own cars, and would drive in the public lanes, even though as a monarch he was allowed to drive in private transport lanes. During the 1973 energy crisis driving was banned on certain weekends. King Olav never wanted to miss an opportunity to go skiing, and while he could have driven legally, he wanted to lead by example. So he dressed up in his skiing outfit, and boarded the Holmenkollbanen suburban railway carrying his skis on his shoulder. He was later asked how he dared to go out in public without bodyguards. He replied that “he had 4 million bodyguards" —the population of Norway was at the time was 4 million.
For his athletic ability and role as King, Olav V earned the Holmenkollen medal in 1968. He had a strong interest in military matters and took his role as titular Commander-in-Chief very seriously. As well as his ceremonial roles in the Norwegian Army, he also served as Colonel-in-Chief of the Green Howards (Alexandra, Princess of Wales's Yorkshire Regiment), the British regiment named for his grandmother Queen Alexandra.
The King represented Norway extensively abroad during his reign, conducting state visits to both neighbouring countries and more distant destinations such as Ethiopia.
King Olav V opened the 14th World Scout Jamboree in July 1975 in the presence of 17,259 Scouts from 94 countries.
He was an accomplished athlete. Olav jumped from the Holmenkollen ski jump in Oslo, and also competed in sailing regattas. He won a gold medal in sailing at the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam and remained an active sailor into old age.
On 21 March 1929 in Oslo, he married his first cousin Princess Märtha of Sweden with whom he had one son, Harald, and two daughters, Ragnhild and Astrid. As exiles during World War II, Crown Princess Märtha and the Royal children lived in Washington, D.C., where she struck up a close friendship with Franklin D. Roosevelt. She died in 1954, before her husband ascended the throne.
The British Film Institute houses an early film, made in 1913, in which a miniature car commissioned by Queen Alexandra for the Crown Prince Olav tows a procession of Londoners through the streets of the capital, before being delivered to a pair of 'royal testers' of roughly Olav's age.
*Thanks to Wikipedia for the Olav V biography.
28 October 2014
The Royal Family of the Netherlands
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Queen Maxima and King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands. |
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The new King and Queen of the Netherlands. |
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The smiling happy royal family of the Netherlands. |
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The King with his eldest daughter and heir, Princess Amalia, the Princess of Orange. |
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The Queen and King of the Netherlands with their three lovely daughters. |
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The Queen with her three daughters. |
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Princess Alexia, Queen Maxima, Princess Ariane, King Willem Alexander, and Princess Amalia. |
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The couple with one of their newborn daughters. |
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On a skiing holiday with their three daughters and Princess Beatrix, at right. |
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Willem-Alexander and Maxima with their two eldest daughters, Amalia and Alexia. |
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The young King and Queen with there three daughters. |
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Queen Maxima of the Netherlands poses with the cast of the musical Hij Gelooft in Mij (He Believes in Me), after a benefit performance in Amsterdam. |
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A young King Willem-Alexander. |
02 June 2014
King Juan Carlos Abdicates...and hunts Elephants
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King Juan Carlos with a beautiful, majestic African elephant he murdered. |
As quoted from BBC News:
"Support for the king fell further when it was discovered he had been on a lavish elephant hunting trip to Botswana in April 2012, in the middle of Spain's financial crisis.
"Until a few years ago his popularity was high, but the hunting trip and corruption allegations involving his youngest daughter, Cristina, and her husband Inaki Urdangarin, led to calls for him to step aside."
It is not okay to hunt endangered animals. Obviously, the fact that the king is rich and famous makes him think that he can do whatever he likes, regardless of the consequences.
Here are some cold hard facts from elephant conservation group, Big Life Foundation:
"Since 2008, the poaching of animals, most
of all elephants, has dramatically escalated across much of Africa.
There has been a massively increased demand from China and the Far East
again, ivory prices have soared from $200 a pound in 2004 to more than
$2000 a pound today. Some experts estimate that as much as 35,000
elephants a year are being slaughtered, 10% of Africa's elephant
population each year alone.
"Some of the methods being used are
frighteningly simple - from concealed poisoned spikes that pierce the
elephants’ feet, to poisoned melons and pineapples, all of which kill
the elephants in unimaginable pain.
"The plains animals are getting slaughtered as well: Giraffes here in the region are being killed at a faster rate for bush meat. There are even contracts out on zebras, as their skins are the latest fad in Asia."
I will spare you all the pictures of elephants I would like to post on here, of them laying dead, with their tusks cute out of their faces (you can view these kinds of pics on Big Life's website). Elephants do not shed their tusks, they are killed just for their tusks. And you know what the one driving force behind elephants being killed is? It's for the Chinese, who consider ivory as a status symbol, and this makes ivory incredibly valuable and sought after in China. There are also the sad and ironic ivory elephant figurines; why one would kill an elephant for its tusks, only to carve a mini elephant out of them is beyond me.
15 October 2013
The First King and Queen of Norway
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Queen Maud and King Haakon of Norway at their coronation in 1905. They were the first monarchs of a newly independent Norway. |
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Prince Carl of Denmark (later King Haakon VII of Norway) and Princess Maud on their wedding day, 1896. |
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Prince Carl with Princess Maud and her parents, Queen Alexandra and King Edward VII of Great Britain. |
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The wedding announcement for Haakon and Maud's wedding, 1896. |
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Wedding souvenirs from Maud and Haakon's wedding, 1896. |
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Another wedding pic of the lovely Maud and Haakon. |
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King Haakon VII of Norway. |
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King Haakon VII of Norway (then Prince Carl) with his mother, Queen Louise of Denmark. |
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King Haakon VII in his old age. |
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Queen Maud of Norway in 1914. |
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Maud in 1921. |
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Queen Maud posing with a pet dog, 1928. |
03 July 2013
King Albert II of Belgium set to Abdicate!
You know what this means? Queen Mathilde! And King Philippe, I guess, but he's not nearly as attractive as Mathilde. Here's the full story from the BBC News site:
Belgian state TV reported that the 79-year-old monarch would make an announcement on all of the major networks at 17:00 BST.
His son, Crown Prince Philippe, 53, is next in line to the throne.
During Belgium's political deadlock in 2010-11, the king - who is due to mark 20 years on the throne next month - took on the role of mediator.
Media reports say he will announce his abdication to take effect on Belgium's national day on 21 July.
King Albert met the Belgian government's cabinet earlier on Wednesday to inform them of his decision, Belgian state TV reported.
The palace said in a statement: "The core council of ministers has convened in the presence of the king. The king will speak to the people at 1800 (1600 GMT) via a radio and television address."
Following the king's announcement, Belgian Prime Minister Elio Di Rupo will address the nation.
King Albert was sworn in as the sixth king of the Belgians on 9 August 1993, following the death of his brother, King Baudouin aged 62.
Like other European monarchies, the Belgian monarch has no executive powers and plays a largely ceremonial role. King Albert's abdication would come only three months after Queen Beatrix of the neighbouring Netherlands vacated the Dutch throne in favour of her son Willem-Alexander.
Belgian state TV reported that the 79-year-old monarch would make an announcement on all of the major networks at 17:00 BST.
His son, Crown Prince Philippe, 53, is next in line to the throne.
During Belgium's political deadlock in 2010-11, the king - who is due to mark 20 years on the throne next month - took on the role of mediator.
Media reports say he will announce his abdication to take effect on Belgium's national day on 21 July.
King Albert met the Belgian government's cabinet earlier on Wednesday to inform them of his decision, Belgian state TV reported.
The palace said in a statement: "The core council of ministers has convened in the presence of the king. The king will speak to the people at 1800 (1600 GMT) via a radio and television address."
Following the king's announcement, Belgian Prime Minister Elio Di Rupo will address the nation.
King Albert was sworn in as the sixth king of the Belgians on 9 August 1993, following the death of his brother, King Baudouin aged 62.
Like other European monarchies, the Belgian monarch has no executive powers and plays a largely ceremonial role. King Albert's abdication would come only three months after Queen Beatrix of the neighbouring Netherlands vacated the Dutch throne in favour of her son Willem-Alexander.
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