Marie of Edinburgh
Encyclopedia : M : MA : MAR : Marie of Edinburgh
Medal with image of Marie; the inscription, in Romanian, reads "MARIA REGINA ROMÂNIEI".
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In her youth, Princess Marie was considered a suitable match for marriage to the royalty of Europe. Her first cousin, Prince George of Wales, later King George V, fell in love with her and proposed marriage. Both Marie's father and George's father approved of the marriage. However, Marie's mother held a deeply-felt disdain for the British Royal Family, and was keen to see her daughters marry outside its court.
Road to the crown
In 1893, a few months before her father became Duke of Coburg-Gotha, Princess Marie married Crown Prince Ferdinand of Romania, nephew of King Carol I of Romania. The marriage, which produced three daughters and three sons, was not a happy one. Her correspondence with her longtime secret confidante, the American dancer Lois Fuller, revealed "the distaste, which grew to revulsion" that Marie felt for her husband. (Easterman, 1942, 58) The last two children were born after Marie met her long-time lover, Barbu Ştirbey, and historians generally agree that Prince Mircea was his son (having brown eyes, unlike Marie and Ferdinand), while Ileana's paternity is under discussion. Also, Queen Marie has herself written that the daughter Marie was sired by Grand Duke Boris Vladimirovich of Russia. The two eldest children, Elisabeth and Carol, were quite certainly biologically Ferdinand's.
- the future Carol II of Romania (1893-1953)
- Elisabeth - wife of King George II of Greece (1894-1956)
- Marie - wife of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia (1900-1961)
- Nicholas (1903-1978)
- Ileana - Archduchess of Austria (1909-1991)
- Mircea (1913-1916)
Queen and Queen Mother
In 1914, Carol I died and Ferdinand ascended the throne of Romania. Crown Princess Marie then became styled Her Majesty Queen Marie of Romania. Due to World War I, they were not crowned as monarchs until 1922.
Marie had become a Romanian patriot, and her influence in that country was large. A.L. Easterman writes that King Ferdinand was "a quiet, easy-going man, of no significant character… it was not he, but Marie who ruled in Roumania." He credits Marie's sympathies for the Allies as being "the major influence in bringing her country to their side" in the war. (Easterman, 1942, 28–29)
During the war she volunteered as a Red Cross nurse to help the sick and wounded and wrote a book, My Country to raise funds for the Red Cross, but these were by no means her most notable contributions to the war effort. In 1917, with the country half overrun by the German army, she and a group of military advisers devised the plan by which the Romanian army, rather than retreating into Russia, would choose a triangle of the country in which to stand and fight; and through a letter to Lois Fuller she set in motion the series of events that brought a timely American loan to Romania, providing the necessary funds to carry out the plan. (Fortuitously, the young woman from the U.S. embassy who delivered the letter to Fuller was the former ward (legal) of Newton D. Baker, by this time serving as U.S. Secretary of War. Fuller and the young woman traveled from Paris to Washington, DC and secured an audience with Baker who, along with U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Carter Glass, arranged the loan.)
After the war ended, Marie represented Romania at Versailles, gaining back territory lost by Romania during the war.
Ferdinand and Marie's son, the crown prince Carol (later King Carol II), was never close to his father—by the time Carol was an adult, their antagonism became an "open breach" (Easterman, 1942, 29)—but there continued to be a "deep bond of affection and sympathy" between Carol and Marie. (Easterman, 1942, 30–31) Their relationship, however, deteriorated. The initial conflict came over Carol's objections to Marie's relationship with Prince Ştirbey; the breach was exacerbated as Marie attempted to steer Carol toward a dynastic marriage rather than allow him to choose his own bride. (Easterman, 1942, 31–32) During Carol's exile in Paris Lois Fuller had befriended Carol and his mistress Magda Lupescu; they were unaware of Fuller's connection to Marie. Fuller initially advocated to Marie on their behalf, but later schemed unsuccessfully with Marie to separate Carol from Lupescu. (Easterman, 1942, 58–61) Eventually, when Carol became king and did not seek her counsel, the breach between mother and son became complete. (Easterman, 1942, 31, 86–87)
After the death of her husband in 1927, Queen Marie remained in Romania, writing books and her memoirs, The Story of My Life. She died on July 18, 1938, and was buried next to her husband in the Monastery of Curtea de Argeş.
Religious beliefs
She is held in high esteem by members of the Bahá'í Faith as she was the first royalty to declare faith in that religion. Her religious background was of the Church of England, although she is known to have incorporated herself into the Orthodox Christian beliefs of Romanian nationals. In her late years, she was approached by Martha Root, a well-recognized traveling "teacher", on the topic of the Bahá'í Faith. Bahá'ís recognize Queen Marie of Romania as the first Monarch to have declared her belief in Bahá'u'lláh.
In regard to the Bahá'í Faith, Queen Marie stated:
(Quote source: http://www.bic-un.bahai.org/pdf/47-0701.pdf)
Styles and titles
- Her Royal Highness Princess Marie of Edinburgh (1875-1893)
- Her Royal Highness The Crown Princess of Romania (1893-1914)
- Her Majesty Queen Marie of Romania (1914-1927) [Queen Dowager 1927-1938]
Literary mentions
- Marie was famously mentioned in Dorothy Parker's poem "Comment":
- : ''Oh, life is a glorious cycle of song,
- : ''A medley of extemporanea;
- : ''And love is a thing that can never go wrong,
- : ''And I am Marie of Roumania.
- She is discussed in Her Eternal Crown: Queen Marie of Romania and the Bahá'í Faith, by author Della L. Marcus.
- Science fiction author Joanna Russ also mentions Marie of Romania in her 1975 novel, The Female Man.
See also
External links
References
- Easterman, A.L., King Carol, Hitler, and Lupescu, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd. (1942)
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