Prince Oscar Bernadotte
Prince Oscar Bernadotte | |||||
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Count of Wisborg prev. Duke of Gotland | |||||
Born |
Palace of the Hereditary Prince, Stockholm, Sweden | 15 November 1859||||
Died |
4 October 1953 93) Stockholm, Sweden | (aged||||
Spouse | Ebba Munck af Fulkila | ||||
Issue |
Countess Maria Bernadotte of Wisborg Count Carl Oscar Bernadotte of Wisborg Countess Ebba Sophia Bernadotte of Wisborg Countess Elsa Bernadotte of Wisborg Count Folke Bernadotte of Wisborg | ||||
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House | Bernadotte | ||||
Father | Oscar II | ||||
Mother | Sofia of Nassau |
Prince Oscar Carl August Bernadotte, Count of Wisborg (15 November 1859 – 4 October 1953) was the second son of King Oscar II of Sweden and Sofia of Nassau. He was born Prince of Sweden and Norway, and after the Norwegian secession from Sweden, he was Prince Oscar, Duke of Gotland.
Title
Through Oscar's marriage in Bournemouth on 15 March 1888 to Swedish noblewoman Ebba Munck af Fulkila, lady-in-waiting to the Crown Princess, without the consent of his father, the King, he gave up his right of succession to the Swedish throne and his royal title.
Ebba was a lady-in-waiting of the crown princess, Victoria of Baden, who in 1885 visited her brother-in-law in Amsterdam, where he was to undergo a medical examination. Ebba and Oscar visited the Norwegian sailor church during their stay in Amsterdam and fell in love: Ebba was religious and influenced Oscar in this regard. When Oscar told his family that he wished to marry Ebba, they were scandalized and he was forced to take a two years consideration period, and Ebba was dismissed as a lady-in-waiting. In 1887, Oscar told his family that he had not changed his mind, and the royal house gave its consent to the marriage on condition that Oscar's brothers signed a document promising that they should never enter a similar marriage, which they did. On 21 January 1888, a ball was arranged on the Royal Palace of Stockholm where Ebba and Oscar were allowed to dance with each other, and on 29 January 1888, the engagement was formally announced. The match was regarded as a great sorrow within the royal house, but it received a lot of sympathy from the public. It was said that a bridge had been placed between the people and the royal house: "The Munck bridge", and the fact that Oscar had to give up his royal title made people say that the king no longer had four sons but only three, as one of them "married and had to quit". When the couple left Stockholm, a large crowd had gathered on the train station to see them off and show their support.
They were married 15 March 1888 in St Stephen's Church in Bournemouth in England by the vicar Gustaf Beskow, who was close to the queen, Sofia of Nassau, in the presence of Oscar's mother, Queen Sophia, two of his brothers, Prince Carl, Duke of Västergötland, Prince Eugen, Duke of Närke and his cousin, the Danish crown princess Louise of Sweden, as well as the mother and brother of Ebba.
He and his wife were named with new titles as Prince and Princess Bernadotte as of their wedding day.[1] It has never been determined if that was a Swedish title of nobility or another form of unofficial courtesy title (such as some later dynasty members have been given). On 2 April 1892 he and his wife were given personal noble titles as Prince and Princess Bernadotte[2] when admitted into the nobility of Luxembourg by Oscar's uncle Adolphe, Grand Duke of Luxembourg, previously Duke of Nassau, and also then given a Luxembourgish hereditary title as Count and Countess of Wisborg. Wisborg was derived from Visborg, castle ruins in Oscar's former Duchy of Gotland.
Personal life
His wife was the daughter of Carl Jacob Munck af Fulkila and wife baroness Henrika Ulrika Antoinetta Cederström. They had five children;
- Countess Maria Sophie Henrietta Bernadotte af Wisborg (1889–1974)
- Count Carl Oscar Bernadotte af Wisborg (1890–1977)
- Baroness Ebba Sofia Fleetwood (1892–1936)
- Mrs Elsa Victoria Cedergren (1893–1996)
- Count Folke Bernadotte af Wisborg (1895–1948)
He was the last surviving son of Oscar II.
Arms
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Ancestry
References
- ↑ Burke's Royal Families of the World vol. I 1977, p. 512.
- ↑ original decree
- ↑ Berghman, Arvid (1944). Dynastien Bernadottes vapen och det svenska riksvapnet. Skrifter / utgivna av Riksheraldikerämbetet, 99-2298099-1 ; 1 (in Swedish). Stockholm: Svensk litteratur. pp. 69, 117. LIBRIS 1166850.