STEVEN
Aristocracy
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2003
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- 121
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- Belgium
Why wasn't the Count of Flandre present at Queen Elisabeth's funeral?I looked the pictures again.
King Leopold III and King Baudouin were the first, followed by Prince Albert, Grand-Duke Jean of Luxembourg, Humberto of Italy (her son in law), and her brother the Duke of Bavaria, followed by King Olav (Leopold's III brother in law )and Prince Alexandre, followed by Victor Emmanuel de Savoie and Alexander of Yougoslavie who was then Marie Pia de Savoie's husband. Royal Ladies stayed inside the cathedral.
Her second son Prince Charles, Count of Flanders was not at the funerals.
The inside of the Cathedral was terrible, with the covered royal chairs for the first two RF rows and under their chairs were oriental carpets.
When 20 years later, Charles the Count of Flanders and his brother Leopold III died , the Cathedral was in renovation and both Funerals took place at the church St Jacques sur Coudenberg. At Charles Funerals, Leopold III and Lilian were not there.
ALL SHOUD HAVE BEEN SO EASY FOR THE RF IF LEOPOLD III DID NOT MARRY LILIAN BAELS. She should be the royal Mistress as others before her.
Why wasn't the Count of Flandre present at Queen Elisabeth's funeral?
About the Princess of Rethy, I think that the causes of several problems weren't properly her and her marriage to Leopold III, but the time of this facts. I think that if only they had waited some time to marry, after the end of the war, all should have been easyer for Belgium and his (and your) Royal Family.
I second that. The Belgians were mostly outraged because the King was allowed to marry and honeymoon somewhere in Europe (wasn't is Switzerland of all places?) while they were all enduring the war, having hardly enough to eat, scared for family members who disappeared... and all the while the King pretended to undergo the same hardship as his people. Also, the memory of the beloved Queen Astrid was still to fresh. The fact that she was a "mere" commoner only added fuel to the fire, it was the proverbial last drop.
I believe Charles never forgave his mother and his brother for not allowing him to marry the woman he loved. Also, he was rather displeased when; after taking th eplace of Head of State as a Regent for Baudouin; he was simply pushed aside.
The funeral was very splendid, but then again, she was very loved and admired (though I believe many a prime minister would have wished she was a little less adventurous)