Jump to content

Princess Marie-Auguste of Anhalt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marie Auguste of Anhalt
Princess Joachim of Prussia
Born(1898-06-10)10 June 1898
Ballenstedt, Anhalt, Germany
Died22 May 1983(1983-05-22) (aged 84)
Essen, North Rhine-Westphalia, West Germany
Spouse
(m. 1916; div. 1919)
Johannes-Michael Freiherr von Loën
(m. 1926; div. 1935)
IssuePrince Karl Franz of Prussia
Names
German: Marie Auguste Antoinette Friederike Alexandra Hilda Luise
HouseAscania
FatherEduard, Duke of Anhalt
MotherPrincess Louise Charlotte of Saxe-Altenburg

Princess Marie Auguste of Anhalt (10 June 1898 – 22 May 1983) was the daughter of Eduard, Duke of Anhalt, and his wife, Princess Louise Charlotte of Saxe-Altenburg.[citation needed] She married and divorced a son of Kaiser Wilhelm II, then married and divorced a baron.

Early life and family

[edit]
Princess Marie Auguste with her younger brothers Prince Joachim Ernst and Prince Eugen in 1910.

On 10 June 1898, Marie-Auguste was born in Ballenstedt, Anhalt, Germany, to the then Prince Eduard of Anhalt and his wife Princess Louise Charlotte of Saxe-Altenburg.[citation needed] Her father would not succeed his brother Frederick II until 1918, the year he also died. Her paternal grandparents were Frederick I, Duke of Anhalt and Princess Antoinette of Saxe-Altenburg. Her maternal grandparents were Prince Moritz of Saxe-Altenburg and Princess Augusta of Saxe-Meiningen.

Marie-Auguste was raised in Dessau, the capital of the duchy of Anhalt.[1] She had five siblings, but her elder sister Friederike and brother Leopold died while infants. Marie-Auguste was an elder sister of Prince Joachim Ernst, who would become the last Duke of Anhalt for a few months in 1918.

First marriage and divorce

[edit]
Marie-Auguste with her son.

On 11 March 1916 in Berlin, Marie-Auguste married Prince Joachim of Prussia, the youngest son of German Emperor Wilhelm II, by his first wife, Augusta Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein.[2] Marie-Auguste and Joachim, who was Wilhelm's last unmarried child, had been officially engaged since 14 October of the previous year.[3] The wedding was celebrated at Bellevue Palace, and was attended by Joachim's father and mother Empress Augusta Viktoria, the Duke and Duchess of Anhalt, as well as other relatives.[3] They had a simple Lutheran ceremony.[4]

The couple had one son, Prince Karl Franz Josef Wilhelm Friedrich Eduard Paul (15 December 1916 in Potsdam – 23 January 1975 in Arica, Chile).[5] Their grandson, Prince Franz Wilhelm, married Maria Vladimirovna of Russia, a pretender to the Imperial Russian throne.

The couple were divorced soon after the end of WWI. The direct causes of the divorce are not really known to the public, only that there had been no previous report of marital troubles before the divorce was announced.[6] According to another report, Marie-Auguste had previously abandoned her husband and child to run away with another man, had been forcibly brought back home on the orders of the Kaiser, and had filed for divorce as soon as the war ended, when she saw that her husband's family were at their lowest ebb. Regardless of the reasons, this event was one of the main reasons why Prince Joachim died by suicide only weeks after the divorce was finalized.[7]

After the divorce

[edit]

On 18 July 1920, very shortly after the divorce, Joachim shot himself in Potsdam. One source reports that he had been in financial straits and suffered from "great mental depression".[8] His own brother Prince Eitel Friedrich of Prussia commented that he suffered from "a fit of excessive dementia".[8]

After Joachim's suicide, Marie-Auguste's son Karl Franz was taken into the custody of his paternal uncle Prince Eitel Friedrich.[7] As the acting head of the House of Hohenzollern, he claimed this right, due to the fact that the Emperor Wilhelm had issued an edict placing Hohenzollern powers in Eitel's hands.[7] This action was later declared to have been unlawful, and in 1921, Marie-Auguste was given full custody of her son,[9] despite the fact that she had previously run away from her husband and despite numerous servants having testified against her,[7] with Eitel's counsel arguing that Marie-Auguste was unfit to have custody of Karl Franz.[9] However, she appeared in court and pleaded that she was heartbroken, which may have helped to win the case for her.[9] In 1922, Marie-Auguste sued her former father-in-law for the financial support that had been promised in the marriage contract between her and Prince Joachim.[10] Wilhelm's advocate argued that the laws of the House of Hohenzollern were no longer in force, so there was no longer a financial obligation to support her.[10]

Second marriage and divorce

[edit]

On 27 September 1926, she married Johannes-Michael Freiherr von Loën (b. 1902), a childhood friend.[11] They were divorced in 1935, and Marie-Auguste reverted to her maiden name.[citation needed] On 1 May 1934, she joined the Nazi Party.[12][13]

In 1980, Princess Marie-Auguste legally adopted the businessman Hans Lichtenberg, who subsequently took the name Frédéric Prinz von Anhalt. According to Prinz von Anhalt, who thereafter proceeded to sell knighthoods and marriages related to his new station, he gave her $4,000 a month (German sources say 2,000 Deutsche Mark a month) in financial support.[14][15]

Death

[edit]

Princess Marie-Auguste died on 22 May 1983 at Essen, North Rhine-Westphalia, West Germany.[citation needed]

Ancestry

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Prince Joachim's Fiancee of Oldest German Dynasty", The Washington Post, 19 October 1915
  2. ^ "Youngest Son of Kaiser Engaged", The New York Times, Amsterdam, 15 October 1915
  3. ^ a b "Prince Joachim Married", The New York Times, Amsterdam, 12 March 1916
  4. ^ "Kaiser's Son Married", The Washington Post, 12 March 1916
  5. ^ "New Grandson For Kaiser", The New York Times, Berlin, 16 December 1916
  6. ^ "Two of ex-Kaiser's Sons Bring Suits For Divorce", The New York Times, Paris, 8 January 1920
  7. ^ a b c d "Get's Ex-Kaiser's Grandson", The New York Times, Berlin, 14 October 1921
  8. ^ a b "Kaiser's Youngest Son, Joachim Shoots Himself", The New York Times, Berlin, 18 July 1920
  9. ^ a b c "Hohenzollern Laws Ruled Out of Court", The New York Times, Berlin, 28 July 1921
  10. ^ a b "Widow of Young Prince Sues Kaiser For Support", The New York Times, Berlin, 6 January 1922
  11. ^ "Princess Joachim Weds", The New York Times, Berlin, 29 September 1926
  12. ^ Bundesarchiv R 9361-IX KARTEI/560603
  13. ^ Bundesarchiv R 187/400 Aufstellung derjenigen Parteigenossen, die Angehörige fürstlicher Häuser sind S. 1 http://niqolas.de/weltlauf/adel.pdf
  14. ^ Bennetts, Leslie (6 September 2007). "It's a Mad, Mad, Zsa Zsa World". Vanity Fair.
  15. ^ Fromme, Claudia (22 December 2019). "Mit adeligen Adoptionen zu Millionen". Süddeutsche.de (in German). Retrieved 2022-02-12.