SHARE
COPY LINK

ROYAL FAMILY

How serious are the divisions in Denmark’s royal family?

Denmark's Queen Margrethe's recent decision to strip four of her grandchildren of their titles has sparked unprecedented royal drama in Copenhagen and led her enraged son to air the family's dirty laundry in public.

How serious are the divisions in Denmark's royal family?
Denmark's Queen Margrethe with Crown Prince Frederik (L) and Prince Joachim (R). The Queen's recent decision to remove the titles of prince and princess from Joachim's children has caused a rare public fall out at the Danish palace. Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

Queen Margrethe II announced last week that the four children of her youngest son, 53-year-old Prince Joachim, would no longer be able to use the title of prince and princess after January 1st.

She apologised on Monday for the hurt caused.

But Margrethe stood by the decision which was intended to allow Nikolai, 23, Felix, 20 — born from Joachim’s first marriage — Henrik, 13, and Athena, 10, to live normal lives without royal obligations.

The move followed a trend among other European royal families to slim down their monarchies, including in Britain where the Windsors face their own family feud.

“Holding a royal title involves a number of commitments and duties that, in the future, will lie with fewer members of the royal family,” Europe’s only reigning queen said in a statement.

But Prince Joachim saw it as a snub and was quick to speak out in the media.

“On May 5th I was presented with a plan. That this whole issue of my children’s identity would be removed when they each turned 25. Athena will turn 11 in January”, he told Danish tabloid B.T.

“Then, I received five days’ notice” that the decision had been accelerated.

READ ALSO: Denmark’s Prince Joachim says children ‘harmed’ by loss of titles

His first wife Alexandra also told B.T. she and her children were “shocked”, while her eldest son expressed his sadness.

¨”I’m very bewildered as to why this had to happen like this”, Nicolai told tabloid Ekstra Bladet.

The outpourings sparked surprise in the Scandinavian country, coming just days after the hugely popular royal family had celebrated the queen’s 50th anniversary on the throne with pomp and smiles.

There is “no tradition in Denmark of members of the royal family discussing with each other in public”, historian Lars Hovbakke Sørensen told AFP.

Prince Joachim said he had “unfortunately” had no contact with his mother or elder brother Crown Prince Frederik since the queen’s announcement.

“It’s also family. Or whatever one could call it”, he told B.T.

In another swipe, his French-born wife Princess Marie said the couple’s relationship with Crown Prince Frederik and his Australian-born wife Mary was “complicated”.

The media then dug up another old family spat, namely Joachim and Marie’s claims that their 2019 move to Paris — where Joachim is the Danish embassy defence attache — was not of their “own choice”.

Yet the queen’s decision did not surprise royal watchers.

It’s “natural, reasonable and necessary”, said historian Sebastian Olden-Jørgensen.

The queen’s four other grandchildren born to Crown Prince Frederik, 54, will retain their titles.

Back in 2016 the queen decided however that when they come of age only the future king, Prince Christian, will receive an appanage.

Stripping Joachim’s children’s titles is just another move in the same direction, experts said.

“She has wisely chosen to do this herself and not to leave it to her successor, the Crown Prince”, Olden-Jørgensen said.

“It is much easier for her to do to this to her son than for him to do it later to his brother,” he added.

Nonetheless, the heated reactions by Joachim’s family “indicate there is a conflict and a total breakdown in communication,” columnist Jacob Heinel Jensen wrote in B.T.

The queen’s apology on Monday came in a statement.

“I have underestimated the extent to which my younger son and his family feel affected … and for that I am sorry,” she said.

“I now hope that we as a family can find the peace to find our way through this situation.”

An opinion poll conducted by Voxmeter suggested 50.6 percent of Danes support her decision while 23.3 percent disagree.

This is not the royal family’s first scandal, though rarely have they been so sensational.

In 2002, the late Prince Consort Henrik made headlines when he fled to his chateau in southern France to “reflect on life”, complaining he didn’t receive enough respect in Denmark, after Crown Prince Frederik was chosen to represent the queen at a New Year’s ceremony instead of him.

And just months before his 2018 death, Henrik, who suffered from dementia, announced he did not want to be buried next to his wife because he was never made her equal.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

ROYAL FAMILY

IN PICS: Danish royal couple kick off cruising season on royal yacht

Denmark's King Frederik X and Queen Mary on Thursday inaugurated the start of their summer's cruising on Denmark's royal yacht Dannebrog.

IN PICS: Danish royal couple kick off cruising season on royal yacht

Christian X, King of Denmark from 1912 to 1947, was the first Danish ruler to take an annual summer yacht cruise. 

It was he who had the royal yacht “Dannebrog” built in 1931, with the ship used as a private and official residence for the royal family ever since.

His successors Frederik IX, Queen Margrethe and now Frederik X have continued the traditionm taking cruises every summer. 

Frederik X has announced that the royal couple plan this year to sail to Sweden, Norway, Greenland and the Faroe Islands, with trips to Bornholm, Ærø, Assens and Vejle scheduled for the August.

The couple began their inauguration of the cruising season when they arrived at Nordre Toldbod, the old customs house next door to the Kastellet fortress in central Copenhagen, where they were greeted by waving well-wishers.

Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix
 
They then boarded a tender vessel which took them across the harbour to the Refshaleøen peninsular, where Dannebrog was moored. 

Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix
 

Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix

Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix

From there, the royal couple sailed out of the harbour and up the Øresund strait to Helsingør, where they were met by a marching band, dignitaries and a crowd up well-wishers. 

Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix
 
Here you can see a marching band with the Kronborg Castle in the background.   
 

Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix

Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix
 
On arrival in Helsingør, the King and Queen waved at the crowds from the deck. 
 

Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix
 
They then came down and greeted a selected group of dignitaries waiting in line. 
 

Finally they posed for photos before being driven away to he Danish royal family’s spring and autumn residence, Fredensborg Palace. 

Photo: Thomas Traasdahl/Ritzau Scanpix

SHOW COMMENTS