Crown Princess Mary's Patronages and Charities: 2005 - 2023


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... It may seem odd to you, and actually it seems a bit odd to me as well, that Christian Friis Bach chose to resign on a matter that apparantly wasn't his fault. Well, to me this smells of a tactical resignation.
By resigning now, before he is getting any heat, he comes out with his honor more or less intact and with his integrity more or less undamaged. Which means that he can without problems return as minister later on. Perhaps after the next election, should the government win.

I agree. I think it is sad to see him go because he was one of the most competent ministers in this government, but I think it was a very smart move of him as well. And I'm quite certain that this isn't the last we have seen of CFB (could easily imagine him getting a key role in a new S-R-SF government - perhaps even as a foreign minister). It must be quite sad for Mary as well, it seems like she and CFB were a great team.
 
:previous: It was certainly remarkable that TV2 news stated that "it was almost impossible to find someone (within political circles) who had something bad to say about Christian Friss Bach".

But to add to the misery, and perhaps also why his decision was easier to make, his wife has been diagnosed with breast cancer in January: Christian Friis Bach: Konen ramt af kræft | Billed Bladet
She seems to have pulled through and is now in the recovery phase.

It's actually the first time I hear about it, but then there is a tradition in the Danish press to respect politicians personal lives - unless in collides with their politics.
 
:previous:Sounds like a very nice organization and one that Im sure is close to Mary:flowers:
 
CP Mary has become new patron of Children, Youth & Grief:

"We are deeply thankful and proud that Crown Princess Mary has said yes to become patron of Children, Youth & Grief. We are very pleased that the Crown Princess, who herself lost her mother in a young age shows Children, Youth & Grief her support and recognition. With the Crown Princess we get a professional and beloved partner who can help to create awareness on an important, but nevertheless very taboo area."

Mary says about losing her mother in a young age: "It was like the world continued, and I stood still."


Børn, Unge & Sorg: H.K.H. Kronprinsessen bliver protektor for Børn, Unge & Sorg

Kronprinsessen er ny protektor for Børn, Unge & Sorg - kvinder.bt.dk | www.bt.dk
 
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:previous:

Thanks for the gallery, Polyesco,
I see Mary has got a nice colour after the family's private travel.

http://www.ppe-agency.com/500px/Feb2014/PPE14020331.JPG
http://www.ppe-agency.com/500px/Feb2014/PPE14020338.JPG

**

Here's a picture and an informative article
Royal hyldest til lærerne i jubilæumstale - Folkeskolen.dk

Today Mary officially opened the school's 200th anniversary.
Dressed with smiles and reflective words Mary made ​​a good impression on the audience. In her speech Mary focused on the schools' important role in personal development and as a unifying factor for the community.

"A Summer day, a schoolyard, butterflies in the stomach, a bag packed with lunch bag and pencil case, joy and expectation."

It was how Mary described her own first day of school before she revealed that the butterflies hadn't been reduced when she later in life stood on the sidelines as a parent and watched her own children standing excited and expectant in the schoolyard.

More pictures from today :)

Arriving
Image du Blog frederiketmary.centerblog.net
Image du Blog frederiketmary.centerblog.net
Image du Blog frederiketmary.centerblog.net
Image du Blog frederiketmary.centerblog.net

Inside
Image du Blog frederiketmary.centerblog.net
Image du Blog frederiketmary.centerblog.net
Image du Blog frederiketmary.centerblog.net
Image du Blog frederiketmary.centerblog.net
 
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Thanks Polyesco & Roskilde :flowers:

Mary looks pretty elegant.

Anyway, as you now know the law of public schooling was implemented some 200 years ago. And that meant that all boys (girls naturally weren't supposed to go to school, they were to be brought up to be good Christian housewives. With the notable exeption of daughters of the middle and upper class, but tht was a private matter) were to go to school to recieve a basic education.

Here is a typical classroom from that time, with no less than four seperate classes recieving "lessons" at the same time! https://app.box.com/s/yk07x18cf2gqsz6npgno

And here is a typical school teacher, with his "main-tool for education": https://app.box.com/s/e4jkgm38tsqcd9c10ouo

School teachers in public school were not trained teacher, they were employed at genuin and private schools or as private tutors, so teachers in public schools were basically inskilled laboures who could read and write at least to some degree and who first and foremost were reasonably well versed in the bible. Apart from that they were more often than not otherwise unemployable, alcoholics and with sadistic tendencies.
They were underpaid, drunk or slept rather than taught, that is when they weren't busy "admonishing" the pupils.

Children went to school four hours in the forenoon and three hours in the afternoon, or until sunset, whatever came first.
The main purpose of the whole thing was to bring up the children to be good Lutheran Christians, so they were drilled, repeat drilled, in Luther's Cathesism each and every day. And only then, if there was time... if the teacher was in the mood... or sober... or competent did the children learn basic reading, writing and arithmetics.

Those who could afford it send their children to private schools, socalled "Latin schools", where the education was orders of magnitudes better. Or they employed private teachers or send their children to boarding schools.

That doesn't mean that children of ordinary people didn't recieve education before that. In the centuries before that the local clergy kept an eye on the brightest boys in his parish and such boys were selected to go to "latin schools" to be destined either to become civil servants, go to the university or pursue a career in the church. Such children were sponsored either by the local noble (a kind of "my peasants are brighter than your peasants", because there was a good deal of competition between nobles in that respect) or in the towns typically by a local guild or merchant.

The beginning of the public school was to put it mildly problematic but by 1860, according to a US historian, (I'll dig up his name if you wish) Denmark, Sweden and the US mid west (the farm belt) had an almost 100 % literacy rate. The top three in the world at that time.

There were quite a few public schools prior to 1814, put these were set up and run locally. And there was no national standard for anything. The reform that was started by the Crown Prince in 1809 and passed in 1814, ensured a number of basic standards in regards to the lessons and the teachers, but it took years before these standards were lived up to.
 
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I'm always in favour of education for all, adults included, should they not have been privileged to have education early on, and the history of any education establishment is always interesting.

As for Mary; I think she looks excellent, and what she's wearing looks elegant, well-balanced and professional yet not too stiff.
 
great to celebrate the school, it is a big part of our lives and as i understand it will there continue to be focus on the school troughout the year

mary certainly has a sunny glow, she looks lovely and happy , still wonder where in the world they have been on vacation, looks to be a sunny place.
 
A winter type like Mary shouldn't dye her hair so orange-reddish. Mon dieu......
 
To return to the subject of schooling for a moment.
This week is week #6. And it so happens that the number seks (six) is pronounced exactly like sex - so that's also when sexual education is the main theme in many if not most public schools.

Here is an amusing blog from a Scottish ex-pat, living in DK and married to a Dane, about that (in English): Week six? (More) Sex at school! – Diane's Daily Denmark
M&F's children are still a little too young for dedicated teaching of the subject, but Christian will be there in a couple of years.

- The material used now is pretty tame however compared to the notorious Elle-Belle-Bolle-Bogen from the 70's! Some Danes here may remember it.
Difficult to translate but that was illustrated sexual education in your face!
I can still remember one of the verses from the book (about Donald Duck BTW) but tact prohibits me from writing it here...:p
Actually you can't even get access to the book from the state libraries nowadays without coming up with very good reason!
 
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A couple of tidbits from BB, written by our learned reporter, Ulrik Ulriksen.

Of Mary attending the 200th anniversary of the public school reform.

The white blouse Mary wore is by Max Azria.
Mary told a little bit from her own school days in her speech: "I still remember my own very first day at school: a smart, brandnew uniform, a new bag, my first school-photo for the family album, many new faces and names and a feeling of being - just that day - a little bit grown up. A beautiful but perhaps also a bit hazy memory, which I recently refreshed when our two oldest started at school.
To experience the first day at school as parents is however completely different, but the butterflies came along.
From my own time at school I remember my old maths-teacher. And she was really old, very strickt (*) and she threw chalk.
There was also my chemistry/science-teacher who was very inspirational. My athletics-teacher who shared from his wisdom. And then there was one teacher, who wasn't my teacher, but who made it possible for me to take up my passion for horses".

(*) All maths-teachers are strickt - or insane.
German-teachers are subject-idiots. There is nothing outside teaching German. - And they are usually mad as well.
Athletics teachers are unusually short-tempered and prone to smack you, or kick a ball at you. - Or just mad.
Science-teachers are excentrics.
Biology-teachers are vindictive and borderline mad.
History-teachers have tendencies to have nervous break-downs - in class.
Music-teachers are more than willing to smack you and pull your ears off while dragging you out of the class.
 
Thanks, Roskilde. :flowers:

For your general info: KFUM = YMCA.
 
Mary participates as a patron of the 'School for 200 years' anniversary at the 'Schools Song days' in the Concert Hall in DR Byen:

There wasn't enough room so that all 1,500 children could get close to Mary. And what do you then do? You handle the situation like this :lol:
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/3/542703.jpg
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/4/542704.jpg

More pictures
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/5/542705_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/12/542712_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/7/542707_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/2/542702_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg (Selfies with Mary)

And here the entire gallery: Kronprinsessen fejrede skolen - sn.dk - sn.dk - Sjælland
 
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Mary participates as a patron of the 'School for 200 years' anniversary at the 'Schools Song days' in the Concert Hall in DR Byen:

There wasn't enough room so that all 1,500 children could get close to Mary. And what do you then do? You handle the situation like this :lol:
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/3/542703_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/4/542704_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg

More pictures
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/5/542705_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/12/542712_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/7/542707_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/2/542702_700_415_0_0_0_0_2.jpg (Selfies with Mary)

And here the entire gallery: Kronprinsessen fejrede skolen - sn.dk - sn.dk - Sjælland

Thanks, great photos. The children looked ready to go squeeze through the fence in the first one.
 
Mary participates as a patron of the 'School for 200 years' anniversary at the 'Schools Song days' in the Concert Hall in DR Byen:

There wasn't enough room so that all 1,500 children could get close to Mary. And what do you then do? You handle the situation like this :lol:
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/3/542703.jpg
http://www.sn.dk/modules/xphoto/cache/4/542704.jpg

haha what you dont do to meet mary..cute photos.,

here another articel from se og hør called "watch mary shaking her but":D because they have a video of mary and the others shaking buts in a dance:D
Mary ryster numsen til Skolernes Sangdag i DR's Koncerthus - SE og HØR
 
A video from BB of the visit to the school, which lasted about an hour: Kronprinsesse Mary besøger Sønderbro Skole - YouTube

As you can tell it's an immigrant heavy school and there is a delightful interview with four third-graders. The first one: Explains that it was "utterly crazy" to be visited by Mary and the boy telss us that he was excited and slightly tensed before the royal visit.
The sweetest moment is the girl giggling.
 
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Does anyone know why the children in this photo were behind the fence and not in the crowds outside? It just seems a little strange. I apologise for sounding negative, but curiosity got the better of me so I decided to ask. :)
 
Does anyone know why the children in this photo were behind the fence and not in the crowds outside? It just seems a little strange. I apologise for sounding negative, but curiosity got the better of me so I decided to ask. :)

Roskilde had mentioned in her post that "There wasn't enough room so that all 1,500 children could get close to Mary"
i guess some kids improvised and reach out through the fence ;)
 
:previous: :lol: Somewhat eerie pics actually. They reminded me of zombies or that Roman Polanski film about a girl who believe men are reaching out for her from the walls.

However, the-sweetest-pic-of-the-day award must go to the ones of the girl presenting flowers to Mary, which she must have picked herself.

This is the pic I referred to earlier: http://b.bimg.dk/node-images/298/7/2048x-u/7298696-.jpg

Which is scoring high on the aww-ain't-that-sweet scale.
 
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Does anyone know why the children in this photo were behind the fence and not in the crowds outside? It just seems a little strange. I apologise for sounding negative, but curiosity got the better of me so I decided to ask. :)
It's not really a fence, as you can see in the BB video posted by Muhler, but part of the gallery (?) where Mary was standing.
The children actually were in the crowd outside. Those in the middle of the crowd had free sight and those at the side had that wood construction in front of them.
 
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