メッセージ映像(2018年6月):ブラジル皇子/オルレアン=ブラガンサ公子ラファエル殿下の、君主政主義者の会合へのメッセージ映像

 将来のヴァソウラス系ブラジル帝室当主となると見込まれているブラジル皇子/オルレアン=ブラガンサ公子ラファエル殿下(ハファエル公子 : His Imperial and Royal Highness Prince Rafael of Brazil, Prince of Orléans-Braganza)による、2018年6月9日にブラジル連邦共和国のリオデジャネイロでおこなわれたらしい君主政主義者の会合へのメッセージ映像のようです。

 

Pró Monarquia – Casa Imperial do Brasil:
MENSAGEM DO PRÍNCIPE DOM RAFAEL AOS MONARQUISTAS (XXVIII ENCONTRO MONÁRQUICO) – YouTube

 

 ラファエル殿下は、英国のロンドン在住で、同地で仕事についている、と動画説明文にあります。

 伯父でブラジル帝室(ヴァソウラス系)当主のブラジル皇子/オルレアン=ブラガンサ公子ルイス殿下(His Imperial and Royal Highness Prince Luiz of Brazil, Prince of Orléans-Braganza, Head of the Imperial House of Brazil)、
 同じく伯父のブラジル皇太子ベルトランド殿下(オルレアン=ブラガンサ公子 : Prince Bertrand of Orléans-Braganza : His Imperial and Royal Highness The Prince Imperial of Brazil)、
 への挨拶が含まれています。

 

80歳(2018年6月6日):ブラジル帝室(ヴァソウラス系統)当主/ブラジル皇子/オルレアン=ブラガンサ公子ルイス殿下が80歳に

 2018年6月6日、ブラジル帝室(ヴァソウラス系)当主のブラジル皇子/オルレアン=ブラガンサ公子ルイス殿下(His Imperial and Royal Highness Prince Luiz of Brazil, Prince of Orléans-Braganza, Head of the Imperial House of Brazil)が80歳を迎えました。

 

Pró Monarquia – Casa Imperial do Brasil:
RECORDAÇÕES DO CHEFE DA CASA IMPERIAL DO BRASIL – YouTube

 

Pró Monarquia – Casa Imperial do Brasil:
PRÍNCIPE DOM LUIZ DE ORLEANS E BRAGANÇA: 80 ANOS | PERFIL – YouTube

 

インタビュー映像:ブラジル皇子/オルレアン=ブラガンサ公子ラファエル殿下へのインタビュー(2018年2月)将来のヴァソウラス系ブラジル帝室当主

 将来のヴァソウラス系ブラジル帝室当主となると見込まれているブラジル皇子/オルレアン=ブラガンサ公子ラファエル殿下(ハファエル公子 : His Imperial and Royal Highness Prince Rafael of Brazil, Prince of Orléans-Braganza)へのインタビュー映像で、2月に 収録されたものの転載のようです。

 

Pró Monarquia – Casa Imperial do Brasil:
ENTREVISTA COM O PRÍNCIPE DOM RAFAEL (TV UOL) – YouTube

 

 なお、動画説明文で、ブラジル帝位継承順位第4位となっていますが、これは当主自身を第1位として含むカウントだと思います(含まない場合は第3位)。

 

誕生(2018年2月【スペイン時間21日】【ブラジル時間20日】):ニコラス・スピアマン。オルレアン=ブラガンサ公女アメリア殿下とアレクサンダー・ジェームズ・スピアマン氏【スピアマン準男爵の一族】の次男

 2018年2月の、スペイン時間で21日、ブラジル時間で20日、ニコラス・スピアマンNicholas Spearman)が、スペイン王国マドリードで誕生したとの情報が出ています。

 (旧)ブラジル帝室ヴァソウラス系のオルレアン=ブラガンサ公女アメリア殿下(Her Royal Highness Princess Amélia of Orléans-Braganza)とアレクサンダー・ジェームズ・スピアマン氏(Alexander James Spearman)の次男になります。

※アレクサンダー・ジェームズ・スピアマン氏については、アレクサンダー・スピアマンとだけ表記されている場合と、ジェームズ・スピアマンとだけ表記されている場合があるので、とりあえず両方とも書きました。長男もアレクサンダー・スピアマンですし、一族に多数のアレクサンダー・スピアマンがいます。

 アメリア公女殿下は、結婚に伴い、(旧)ブラジル皇帝位継承権の放棄と、ブラジル皇女【Princess of Brazil】の称号の剥奪がおこなわれており(同等身分結婚=君主の家同士の結婚ではないため)、今回産まれたニコラス・スピアマンにもブラジル皇帝位継承権はありません。
 アレクサンダー・ジェームズ・スピアマン氏は、英国の連合王国準男爵/スピアマン準男爵の一族で、(おそらく)子息ともども準男爵位のリメインダー(継承順位)に並んでいるものと思われます。

 

 (ポルトガル語:ブラジル帝室公式フェースブックアカウント)Pró Monarquia – NASCE O SEGUNDO FILHO DA PRINCESA DONA… | Facebook

Line of succession to the former Brazilian throne

note:
As of July 2020.

See also:
Line of succession to the former Monarchical throne and others : From (deleted) Wikipedia’s articles.


The Brazilian monarchy came to an end on November 15, 1889, following a military coup which overthrew Emperor Dom Pedro II and established a republic. According to the Imperial Constitution (1824), the Brazilian monarchy was hereditary according to male-preference primogeniture among the dynastic descendants of Emperor Pedro I of Brazil, and the crown could only be inherited by one who held Brazilian nationality.[1] The Imperial constitution also states that the monarch and the first in line should be Catholic,[2][3] and the marriage of a female heir presumptive required consent of the emperor or the Assembly.[4]

Claimants to headship of the post-monarchic Brazilian imperial legacy descend from Emperor Pedro II, including the senior agnates of two branches of the House of Orléans-Braganza; the so-called Petrópolis and Vassouras lines.[5] Prince Pedro Carlos of Orléans-Braganza (born 1945) heads the Petrópolis line, while the Vassouras branch is led by his second cousin, Prince Luiz of Orléans-Braganza.[1] Rivalry within the family erupted in 1946 when Dom Pedro Gastão (1913–2007) repudiated the renunciation to the throne of his late father, Pedro de Alcântara, Prince of Grão-Pará (1875–1940), for himself and his future descendants, when he made a non-dynastic marriage in 1908.[1] Pedro de Alcântara was the eldest son of the Princess Imperial Isabel (1846–1921) who, as Pedro II’s elder daughter and heir presumptive when he was dethroned, became the last undisputed head of the family after her father’s death in exile in 1891.[1] Pedro Carlos is Dom Pedro Gastão’s eldest son. Dom Luiz descends from Isabel’s younger son, Prince Luís (1878–1920) who, by a Bourbon princess, fathered Prince Pedro Henrique (1909–1981). Dom Luiz is Pedro Henrique’s son by a Bavarian princess and upholds his dynastic claim to the same legacy.

Overview

In 1908, Dom Pedro de Alcântara wanted to marry Countess Elisabeth Dobržensky de Dobrženicz (1875–1951) who, although a noblewoman of the kingdom of Bohemia, did not belong to a royal or reigning dynasty. Although the constitution of the Brazilian Empire did not require dynasts to marry equally,[6] it made the marriage of the heir to the throne dependent upon the sovereign’s consent. Princess Isabel, then head of the Brazilian Imperial Family, considered that Brazilian dynasts should adhere to European marital tradition, within which royalty married royalty. Prince Dom Pedro wanted to marry with his mother’s blessing, and so it was agreed that she would consent to the marriage on condition that he resigned his position in the line of succession. As a result, Dom Pedro de Alcantara renounced his rights to the throne of Brazil on 30 October 1908.[7][8][9][10][11][12][13] To solemnize this, Dom Pedro, aged thirty-three, signed the document translated here:

I, Prince Pedro de Alcântara Luiz Filipe Maria Gastão Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga of Orleans-Braganza, having maturely reflected, have resolved to renounce the right that, by the Constitution of the Empire of Brazil, promulgated on 25 March 1824, accords to me the Crown of that nation. I declare, therefore, that by my free and spontaneous will I hereby renounce, in my own name, as well as for any and all of my descendants, to all and any rights that the aforesaid Constitution confers upon us to the Brazilian Crown and Throne, which shall pass to the lines which follow mine, conforming to the order of succession as established by article 117. Before God I promise, for myself and my descendants, to hold to the present declaration. Cannes 30 October 1908 signed: Pedro de Alcântara of Orleans-Braganza[14]

This renunciation was followed by a letter from Isabel to royalists in Brazil:

9 November 1908, Château d’Eu

Most Excellent Gentlemen Members of the Monarchist Directory,

With all my heart I thank you for the congratulations upon the marriages of my dear children Pedro and Luiz. Luiz took place in Cannes on the 4th with the brilliance that is desired for so solemn an act in the life of my successor to the Throne of Brazil. I was very pleased. Pedro´s shall take place next on the 14th. Before the marriage of Luis he signed his resignation to the crown of Brazil, and here I send it to you, while keeping here an identical copy. I believe that this news must be published as soon as possible (you gentlemen shall do it in the way that you judge to be most satisfactory) in order to prevent the formation of parties that would be a great evil for our country. Pedro will continue to love his homeland, and will give all possible support to his brother. Thank God they are very united. Luis will engage actively in everything with respect to the monarchy and any good for our land. However, without giving up my rights I want that he be up to date on everything so that he may prepare himself for the position which with all my heart I desire that one day he will hold. You may write to him as many times as you may want to so that he shall be informed of everything. My strength is not the same as it once was, but my heart is still the same to love my homeland and all those who are so dedicated to us. I give you all my friendship and confidence,

a) Isabel, comtesse d’Eu

If the 1908 renunciation of Pedro de Alcântara was valid, his brother Luiz (and eventually, Pedro Henrique) became next in the line of succession after their mother.[8][9][10][11][12][13] Isabel’s headship of the Brazilian Imperial House lasted until her death in 1921, when she is widely considered to have been succeeded by her grandson, Prince Pedro Henrique of Orléans-Braganza.[8][9][10][11][12][13] Pedro Henrique was the elder son of Prince Luiz, second child of Isabel and a veteran of World War I who had died in 1920 from an illness he contracted in the trenches.[15]

Prince Pedro de Alcântara did not dispute the validity of the renunciation.[16] Though he did not claim the headship of the Imperial House himself in 1937, he did say in an interview that his renunciation “did not meet the requirements of Brazilian Law, there was no prior consultation with the nation, there was none of the necessary protocol that is required for acts of this nature and, furthermore, it was not a hereditary renunciation.”[17]

The dynastic dispute over the Brazilian crown began after 1940 when Prince Pedro Gastão of Orléans-Braganza, eldest son of Pedro de Alcântara repudiated his father’s renunciation and claimed the headship of the Brazilian Imperial House.[18]

After the death of Pedro Gastão in 2007, his eldest son Prince Pedro Carlos and younger children declared themselves republicans.[19] Several of Pedro Gastão’s grandchildren also have dual citizenship.[20]

During the thirty years between abolition of the Brazilian monarchy in 1889 and repeal of the law of banishment against members of the former Imperial family in 1920, all of the dynastic descendants of Pedro II, including the ancestors of the so-called Vassouras and Petropolis rival branches of the family, lived in exile,[1] despite occasional efforts of some of the House of Orléans-Braganza to visit the country.

The descendants of the marriage of Emperor Pedro’s younger daughter, Princess Leopoldina of Brazil (1847–1871), with Prince Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha ((1845–1907), also took up residence in Europe: Prince August Leopold of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1867–1922) became a career officer in Austria’s navy, marrying Archduchess Karoline Marie of Austria in Vienna in 1894.[1] Their daughter, Princess Teresa Cristina of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1902–1990), although born in Austria, became the first of Leopoldina’s descendants to repatriate to Brazil,[1] moving there in 1938 with Baron Lamoral Taxis von Bordogna und Valnigra (1900–1966), a Tyrolean courtier whom she had wed in Salzburg in 1930.[1] On 18 October 1950, their four children, all born in Europe, were retroactively recognized as Brazilian citizens since birth,[1] and on 25 October 1951 the Rio de Janeiro court of justice rendered decision No. 13.036 changing their surname to “Tasso de Saxe-Coburgo e Bragança”.[1][21]

Descendants of Princess Leopoldina

The Saxe-Coburg-Braganza branch is descended from Princess Leopoldina of Brazil, second daughter of D. Pedro II, and her husband, Prince Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Due to several years of difficulties that the Princess Imperial Isabel experienced in producing an heir to the Brazilian throne, clauses were included in the marriage contract between Leopoldina and her husband who ensured that the couple should, among other things, reside part of the year in Brazil and have their children in Brazilian territory, as heirs presumptive of Isabel: Pedro Augusto, Augusto Leopoldo, and José Fernando.[22] With the birth of D. Pedro de Alcântara, Prince of Grão-Pará and eldest son of Princess Isabel, the Saxe-Coburg-Braganza branch yielded first place in the line of succession to the Orleans-Braganza branch.

The only members of the Saxe-Coburg-Braganza branch who still retain Brazilian nationality, which was a constitutional requirement to succeed to the now defunct Brazilian throne, are the descendants of Princess Teresa Cristina of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, daughter of Augusto Leopoldo.[23] The Brazilian nationality of princess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha was recognized by the government of Brazil only in 1922. Their four children were registered in the consulate of Brazil in Vienna as Brazilian citizens.[23] Carlos Tasso de Saxe-Coburgo e Bragança, Baron Taxis-Bordogna-Valnigra and son of Princess Teresa Cristina, is the current head of this branch.

Line of succession (Vassouras)

  • Emperor Pedro II (1825–1891)
    • Isabel, Princess Imperial and Countess of Eu (1846–1921)
      • Prince Luís of Orléans-Braganza (1878–1920)
        • Prince Pedro Henrique of Orléans-Braganza (1909–1981)
          • Prince Luiz of Orléans-Braganza (born 1938)
          • (1) Prince Bertrand of Orléans-Braganza (b. 1941)
          • (2) Prince Antônio of Orléans-Braganza (b. 1950)
            • (3) Prince Rafael of Orléans-Braganza (b. 1986)
            • (4) Princess Maria Gabriela of Orléans-Braganza (b. 1989)
          • (5) Eleanora, Princess of Ligne (b. 1953)
            • (6) Henri Antoine, Hereditary Prince of Ligne (b. 1989)
    • Leopoldina, Princess Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1847–1871)
      • Prince August Leopold of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1867–1922)
        • Princess Teresa Cristina, Baroness Taxis of Bordogna and Valnigra (1902–1990)
          • (7) Carlos Tasso, Baron Taxis of Bordogna and Valnigra (b. 1931)
            • (8) Afonso Carlos Tasso de Saxe-Coburgo e Bragança (b. 1970)

The succession line continues through other descendants of Princess Teresa Cristina of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha who still retain Brazilian nationality.[24][25]

 

 

Line of succession (Petrópolis)

  • Emperor Pedro II (1825–1891)
    • Isabel, Princess Imperial and Countess of Eu (1846–1921)
      • Pedro de Alcântara, Prince of Grão-Pará (1875–1940)
        • Prince Pedro Gastão of Orléans-Braganza (1913–2007)
          • Prince Pedro Carlos of Orléans-Braganza (born 1945)
            • (1) Prince Pedro Thiago of Orléans-Braganza (b. 1979)[26]

 

 

Line of succession in November 1889

  • Emperor Pedro I (1798–1834)
    • Emperor Pedro II (born 1825)
      • (1) Isabel, Princess Imperial and Countess of Eu (b. 1846)
        • (2) Pedro de Alcântara, Prince of Grão-Pará (b. 1875)
        • (3) Prince Luís (b. 1878)
        • (4) Prince Antônio Gastão (b. 1881)
      • Leopoldina, Princess Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1847–1871)
        • (5) Prince Pedro Augusto of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (b. 1866)
        • (6) Prince August Leopold of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (b. 1867)
        • (7) Prince Ludwig Gaston of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (b. 1870)
    • (8) Princess Januária, Countess of Aquila (b. 1822)
    • (9) Francisca, Princess of Joinville (b. 1824)