Prince Thibaut, Count of La Marche

note:
As of August 2020.

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


Prince Thibaut
Count of La Marche
Born (1948-01-20)20 January 1948
Sintra, Portuguese Riviera
Died 23 March 1983(1983-03-23) (aged 35)
Bangui, Central African Republic
Burial
Chapelle royale de Dreux
Spouse
Marion Mercedes Gordon-Orr (m. 1972)
Issue Prince Robert, Count of La Marche
Prince Louis Philippe
Full name
Thibaut Louis Denis Humbert Marie d’Orléans
House Orléans
Father Prince Henri, Count of Paris
Mother Princess Isabelle of Orléans-Braganza
Religion Roman Catholicism

Prince Thibaut d’Orléans, Fils de France, comte de La Marche (Thibaut Louis Denis Humbert Marie; 20 January 1948 in Sintra, Portuguese Riviera – 23 March 1983 in Bangui, Central African Republic), was the son of the late Henri Robert Ferdinand Marie Louis Philippe d’Orléans (the Orleanist claimant to the French throne from 1940 until his death) and Isabelle Marie de Orléans Bragança.

Early life

Prince Thibaut was born in Sintra, Portugal. His godparents were King Umberto of Italy and Queen Amelie of Portugal. He was given the title Count of La Marche, a territory that has been nominally part of the French Crown lands since 1527.

Family

He married Marion Mercedes Gordon-Orr (born 4 September 1942, Santiago, Chile, the daughter of James Gordon-Orr and Mercedes Devia), on 23 September 1972 in Edinburgh, Scotland; the couple had two sons:

  • Robert Benoit Paul Henri James Marie d’Orléans, Prince de France (born 6 September 1976, Edinburgh).
  • Louis-Philippe d’Orléans (18 April 1979, Edinburgh – 2 January 1980, Thoiry)[1]

Princess Luisa Maria of Belgium, Archduchess of Austria-Este

note:
As of August 2020.

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


Princess Luisa Maria
Archduchess of Austria-Este (more)
Born (1995-10-11) 11 October 1995 (age 24)
Saint Jean Hospital, Brussels, Belgium
Full name
Luisa Maria Anna Martine Pilar
House Austria-Este
Father Archduke Lorenz of Austria-Este
Mother Princess Astrid of Belgium

Princess Luisa Maria of Belgium, Archduchess of Austria-Este (Luisa Maria Anna Martine Pilar; born 11 October 1995) is the fourth child and second daughter of Lorenz, Archduke of Austria-Este, and Princess Astrid of Belgium. She was born at the Saint Jean Hospital in Brussels, Belgium,[1] and is currently ninth in line to the Belgian throne.

Biography

All of her grandparents and great-grandparents are either royal or noble; she descends from the Austrian, Belgian, Italian, Swedish, French, Danish, British, Portuguese, Spanish, and German royal families. As she was born after the 1991 change of the Belgian constitution, which abolished Salic Law, she is the first Belgian princess to be born with full succession rights to the throne.

She has two older brothers, Amedeo (b. 1986) and Joachim (b. 1991), one older sister, Maria Laura (b. 1988), and one younger sister, Laetitia Maria (b. 2003).

After having been educated at Sint-Jan-Berchmans School in Brussels – as most young members of the royal family are – she attended Sevenoaks School in Kent, England, from 2009, a school already attended by her eldest brother, Amedeo. She is attending university at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. In 2017, she traveled through Australia with a group of university friends.

She was a bridesmaid with her younger sister at the wedding of their oldest brother in 2014.

Titles and styles

  • 11 October 1995 – 7 February 1996: Her Imperial and Royal Highness (HI&RH) Princess Luisa Maria of Belgium, Archduchess of Austria-Este, Princess Royal of Hungary and Bohemia.
  • 7 February 1996 – present: Her Imperial and Royal Highness (HI&RH) Princess Luisa Maria of Belgium, Archduchess of Austria-Este, Princess Royal of Hungary and Bohemia, Princess of Modena.

All the children of Princess Astrid bear the title of “Prince(ss) of Belgium” by Belgian Royal Decree of 2 December 1991, in addition to their traditional Austrian titles, i.e. “Archduke/Archduchess of Austria-Este, Prince(ss) Royal of Hungary and Bohemia, Prince(ss) of Modena”. Internationally, Luisa Maria is styled as HI&RH Princess Luisa Maria of Belgium, Archduchess of Austria-Este.

Line of succession to the former Württemberger throne

In Wikipedia, this article’s name is(was) Line of succession to the former throne of Württemberg.

note:
As of July 2020.

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


The monarchy of Württemberg came to an end in 1918 along with the rest of the monarchies that made up the German Empire. The last member of the dynasty to reign as King of Württemberg was William II.

With the death of William II in 1921, succession to the royal claim bypassed the former Duke of Teck and the Duke of Urach, both of whom descended from morganatic marriages, and the headship of the royal house was inherited by Albrecht, Duke of Württemberg, of the Roman Catholic, Altshausen branch of the royal family. The current head of the House of Württemberg is Carl, Duke of Württemberg. His elder brother Duke Ludwig Albrecht had previously renounced his succession rights for himself and his issue.

The succession is determined by Article 7 of the 1819 Constitution of the Kingdom of Württemberg, which states, “The right of the succession to the throne belongs to the male line of the royal house; the order of the same is determined by the succession of lines according to primogeniture.” The current order of succession is:

  • Duke Albrecht (1865–1939)
    • Duke Philipp Albrecht (1893–1975)
      • Duke Carl (born 1936)
        • Duke Friedrich (1961–2018)
          • (1) Duke Wilhelm (born 1994)
        • (2) Duke Eberhard (born 1963)
          • (3) Duke Alexander (born 2010)
        • (4) Duke Philipp (born 1964)
          • (5) Duke Carl Theodor (born 1999)
        • (6) Duke Michael (born 1965)
    • Duke Albrecht Eugen (1895–1954)
      • (7) Duke Ferdinand Eugen (born 1925)
      • (8) Duke Eugen Eberhard (born 1930)
      • (9) Duke Alexander Eugen (born 1933)

 

 

Line of succession in 1918

  • Duke Frederick II Eugene (1732–1797)
    • King Frederick I (1754–1816)
      • King William I (1781–1864)
        • King Charles I (1823–1891)
      • Prince Paul (1785–1852)
        • Prince Frederick (1808–1870)
          • King William II (b. 1848)
    • Duke Alexander (1771–1833)
      • Duke Alexander (1804–1881)
        • Duke Philipp (1838–1917)
          • (1) Duke Albrecht (b.1865)
            • (2) Duke Philipp Albrecht (b.1893)
            • (3) Duke Albrecht Eugen (b.1895)
            • (4) Duke Karl Alexander (b.1896)
          • (5) Duke Robert (b.1873)
          • (6) Duke Ulrich (b.1877)

Line of succession to the former Albanian throne

note:
As of August 2020.

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


The line of succession to the former Albanian throne is an ordered list of those eligible to succeed to the headship of the Royal House of Albania, grand mastership of the dynastic orders and ascend the throne of Albania in the event the monarchy is restored. The native monarchy of Albania was deposed in 1939. The current head of the royal house is Leka (II), Prince of the Albanians.

House of Wied

The first modern Albanian monarchy, the Principality of Albania was established on 21 February 1914. The German prince William of Wied was selected by the Great Powers to rule the newly independent country.

Prince William left Albania on 3 September 1914 due to serious unrest in the country. Prince William never renounced his claim to the throne and was succeeded upon his death in 1945 by his only son Carol Victor, Hereditary Prince of Albania. With the childless death of the Hereditary Prince in 1973 the Wied claim to the Albanian throne is unclear.

Current situation

As of 2015:

  • Hermann, 4th Prince of Wied (1814-1864)
    • Elisabeth of Wied, Queen of Romania (1843-1916)
    • William, 5th Prince of Wied (1845–1907)
      • William Frederick, 6th Prince of Wied (1872-1945)
        • Hermann, Hereditary Prince of Wied (1899-1941)
          • Friedrich Wilhelm, 7th Prince of Wied (1931-2000)
            • Prince Alexander (b 1960), renounced rights, unmarried
            • Carl, 8th Prince of Wied (1961-2015)
              • Maximilian, 9th Prince of Wied (b 1999)
              • Prince Friedrich Wilhelm (b 2001)
            • Prince Wolff-Heinrich (b 1979)
          • Prince Metfried Alexander (b 1935)
            • Prince Friedrich Christian (b 1968)
              • Prince Ferdinand Constantin (b 2003)
              • Prince Friedrich Conrad (b 2006)
              • Prince Friedrich Carl (b 2007)
              • Prince Friedrich Christian (b 2010)
            • Prince Magnus Alexander (b 1972)
        • Prince Dietrich (1901-1976)
          • Prince Maximilian (1929-2008)
          • Prince Ulrich (1931-2010)
            • Prince Ulrich (b 1970)
              • Prince Wilhelm (b 2001)
              • Prince Georg (b 2004)
              • Prince Philipp (b 2010)
          • Prince Wilhelm (1936-1937)
          • Prince Ludwig-Eugen (1938-2001)
            • Prince Edzard (b 1968)
      • William, Prince of Albania as: Vidi I or Scanderbeg II (1876-1945)
        • Carol Victor, Hereditary Prince of Albania (Skënder) (1913-1973)

 

 

House of Zogu

Main article: House of Zogu

The second Albanian monarchy was established on 1 September 1928 when President Ahmet Zogu was proclaimed King of the Albanians. He reigned until 1939 when he was forced to flee the country following an invasion by Mussolini’s Italy.

With the death in exile of King Zog in 1961 he was succeeded as claimant to the throne and head of the House of Zogu by his only son Leka, Crown Prince of Albania, who was proclaimed King of the Albanians by the Albanian National Assembly in exile.[1] King Leka remained head of the house and claimant to the throne until his death in 2011 when he was succeeded by his only son, Leka II.

Zogu law of succession

The following articles of the Albanian kingdom’s constitution of 1928 set out the succession to the throne:[2]

Article 51. The Heir to the Throne shall be the King’s eldest son and the succession shall continue generation after generation in the direct male line.
Article 52. Should the Heir die or lose his rights to the Throne, his eldest son shall succeed. Should the Heir to the Throne die or lose his rights and leave no son, the succession shall pass to the brother coming after him.
Article 53. Should there be no Heir to the Throne under articles 51 and 52, the King shall select his successor from among the male members of his family, but the King’s selection shall be with the consent of Parliament. Should the King not use his prerogative, and the succession remain vacant, Parliament shall then select a male member of the King’s family as successor to the Throne. In case no heirs exist in the King’s family, or such as may exist are held incapable by a special parliamentary decision taken by a two-thirds majority of the members of the House, Parliament shall select a successor from the line of the King’s daughters or sisters, but such successor must be of Albanian origin. When there are no males in the families above mentioned, Parliament shall select a successor of Albanian origin. Should the Throne remain vacant, the Council of Ministers shall exercise the Royal powers until the question of the successor is settled.
Upon the establishment of the monarchy as King Zog had no son, in accordance with the constitution he appointed his nephew Tati Esad Murad Kryeziu as heir to the throne.[3] Prince Tati was displaced in 1939 by the birth of Leka, Crown Prince of Albania, the only son of King Zog.[1]

Situation as of 2012

Crown Prince Leka II, the only living descendant of King Zog I and the head of the royal house as of 2012, has no sons. The current heir presumptive to Prince Leka is Skënder Zogu, his first-cousin once removed.[4] After him the following currently living male members of the Zogu family could also become heirs:

  • Xhemal Pasha Zogu (1860–1911)
    • Prince Xhelal Bey Zogu (1881–1944)
      • (1) Skënder Zogu (b. 1933)[1]
      • (2) Mirgin Zogu (b. 1937)[1]
        • (3) Alexandre Zogu (b. 1963)[1]
        • (4) Michel Zogu (b. 1966)[1]
    • King Zog I (1895–1961)
      • King Leka I (1939–2011)
        • Crown Prince Leka II (born 1982)

 

 

Princess Mafalda of Bulgaria

note:
As of August 2020.

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


Princess Mafalda
Born (1994-07-27) July 27, 1994 (age 26)
London, England
United Kingdom
Full name
Mafalda Cecilia von Saxe-Coburg und Gotha-Koháry
House Saxe-Coburg and Gotha-Koháry
Father Kyril, Prince of Preslav
Mother María del Rosario Nadal y Fuster de Puigdorfila
Occupation singer, songwriter

Princess Mafalda Cecilia of Bulgaria, Duchess in Saxony (born 27 July 1994), known by her stage name Mafalda, is a British singer-songwriter and member of the Bulgarian royal family. She is a granddaughter of Simeon II, the last reigning Tsar of Bulgaria.

Early life and family

Mafalda was born on 27 July 1994 in London to Doña María del Rosario Nadal y Fuster de Puigdorfila and Kyril, Prince of Preslav.[1][2] She is a granddaughter of Simeon II of Bulgaria, who was the last Tsar of the Kingdom of Bulgaria and later served as the Prime Minister of the Republic of Bulgaria.[3][4]

In 1999 she served as a bridal attendant in the wedding of Princess Alexia of Greece and Denmark and Carlos Morales Quintana.

She grew up in London and later moved to the United States to attend Berklee College of Music in Boston, where she was a student for three years.[2][5]

Music career

Mafalda describes her music as “dark pop” and cites Lana Del Rey, Cat Power, Lauryn Hill, The Strokes, Belle & Sebastian, and Kaiser Chiefs as musical influences.[5][6] She started writing music when she was fourteen years old.[7][5] She released her first single, Don’t Let Go, in 2015 while she was a student at Berklee. She released an extended play titled Daisy Chain in June 2019, which was produced by Ian Barter and Doug Schadt.[5]

In 2016 she performed for a Valentino fashion show at Island Club on the Athens Riviera in Greece.[8] Mafalda has performed in New York Fashion Week and went on a music tour in Italy in 2019.[5]

Personal life

Mafalda moved to New York City in 2017 and lives in Lower Manhattan.[5]

In 2016 she was featured in a society list of New Modern Swan by Town & Country.[9]