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Amalia of Oldenburg

Amalia of Oldenburg (Greek: Αμαλία; 21 December 1818 – 20 May 1875) was a Bavarian princess who became Queen of Greece from 1836 to 1862 as the wife of King Otto Friedrich Ludwig. She was loved widely by the Greeks due to her patriotic love for the country and her beauty. During her tenure as queen, she was dedicated to social improvement and the founding of many gardens in Athens, and she was the first to introduce the worldwide Christmas tree to Greece.

Amalia of Oldenburg
Queen consort of Greece
Tenure22 December 1836 – 23 October 1862
Born(1818-12-21)21 December 1818
Oldenburg, Grand Duchy of Oldenburg
Died20 May 1875(1875-05-20) (aged 56)
Bamberg, Kingdom of Bavaria
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1836; died 1867)
Names
  • German: Amalie Marie Friederike
  • Greek: Αμαλία Μαρία Φρειδερίκη
HouseHolstein-Gottorp
FatherAugustus, Grand Duke of Oldenburg
MotherPrincess Adelheid of Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym
ReligionLutheranism
Styles of
Queen Amalia of Greece
Reference styleHer Majesty
Spoken styleYour Majesty

When she arrived in Greece in 1837, she at first won the hearts of the Greeks with her refreshing beauty. After she became more politically involved, she then became the target of harsh attacks—and her image suffered further as she proved unable to provide an heir to the throne. She and her husband were expelled from Greece in 1862, after an uprising. She spent the rest of her years in exile in Bavaria.

She acted as Regent of Greece in 1850-1851,[1] and a second time in 1861-1862[2] during the absence of Otto.

Amalia is attributed to the creation of the “romantic folksy court dress,”[3] which in return became Greece’s national costume.

Early life and marriage

Early years and family life

Duchess Amalia Maria Frederica was born on 21 December 1818 in Oldenburg to Duke Paul Frederick Augustus of Oldenburg and his wife Princess Adelheid of Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym as their first child. She was less than two years old when her mother died, on 13 September 1820. Her father remarried in 1825 to Princess Ida of Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym, though she soon died in 1828; his last marriage was with Princess Cecilia of Sweden in 1831.

Due to her father’s marriages, Amalia had 5 siblings, 4 being born as half-siblings: Duchess Frederica, Duke Nikolaus Friedrich, Duke Alexander, Duke August, and Anton Gunther Friedrich Elimar.

Marriage

On 22 December 1836, Duchess Amalia of Oldenburg married King Otto Friedrich Ludwig in Oldenburg. Born as the second son of King Ludwig I of Bavaria, Prince Otto of Bavaria had been appointed king of the newly created Kingdom of Greece in 1833. Otto visited Germany to find a bride after he had been declared to be of legal majority. He then met Amalia in Marienbad in Bohemia.

Amalia was Lutheran and Otto was Catholic, and they were wed in both a Lutheran and Catholic wedding ceremony. It was an understanding, that while they were allowed to keep their religion, any child born to them would be raised in the Orthodox religion of Greece. On 14 February 1837 she arrived in Athens, in Greece.

Queen of Greece

In the early years of the new monarchy, Queen Amalia, with her beauty and vivaciousness, brought a spirit of smart fashion and progress to the impoverished country. She laboured actively towards social improvement and the creation of many gardens in Athens, and at first won the hearts of the Greeks with her refreshing beauty and the patriotic love she demonstrated for her new home country. Amalia was the first to introduce the Christmas tree to Greece.

During her first years in Greece, Athens was a relatively small town; the king and queen resided in a small house while the Old Royal Palace was being built. Having few exceptions, the Royal Household was made up of mostly Germans.[4] The queen's chamberlain and principal lady-in-waiting were the German couple Clemens von Weichs-Glon and Dorothea von Weichs-Glon, her favourite companion being Julie von Nordenpflycht. The queen's sister, Princess Frederike, lived with her in Greece for several years until she left after the September revolution of 1843.[5]

The diarist Christiane Lüth described the queen in 1839-40:[5]

The Queen was small, beautiful and with a lovely figure. She was lively, almost too lively, spoke of various subjects and complimented Greece in favor of the Nordic countries, and was certain that we would very soon be accustomed to this beautiful nation with its lovely climate. [...] The Queen was very superstitious, she did not sit down thirteen people at dinner, and was convinced that a white or a black lady appeared before her when an event of importance occurred in Bavaria or Oldenburg. She also believed in reincarnation, and her firm character made it hard to dissuade her from something once she had made up her mind.

Christiane Lüth describes the court in Athens as a small community full of gossip: "The least pleasant thing was that there was always a German lackey on the servant seat who heard every word said; for the entire court staff was with few exceptions German. There was endless gossip, as the Queen felt an interest for the least important things, so that everything which could be forwarded to her by lackeys, lady's maids and chamber maids was „gefundenes Fressen“"[5] and that the queen was a "master" of gossip.[5]

Queen Amalia loved to dance and ride,[5] arranged balls at court and could be seen riding in and around Athens, and in leisure activities which was common for upper-class women in Western Europe but new in Greece where women had normally lived in seclusion during the Ottoman Empire.

 
A portrait of Queen Amalia of Greece in 1859: Spyridon Hatzigiannopoulos

Succession crisis and political activity

As King Otto and his Bavarian advisers became more enmeshed in political struggles with Greek political forces, the queen became more politically involved, also. She became the target of harsh attacks when she became involved in politics. She remained a Protestant in an almost universally Orthodox country throughout her husband's reign.

Christiane Lüth describes the role of the queen during the 3 September 1843 Revolution:[5]

Uhlan continually circled around the [p]alace on horseback, to ensure that no one escaped, and all of the military stood in a threatening position ready to fire on command. Thousands of people filled the great square and you could hear them call: "Live the Constitution!" [...] The Queen was with the King all the time and told him, that there was but two alternatives: entweder underschreiben oder entsagen (either sign or abdicate).

Lüth described the queen as nervous and pessimistic during the days following the revolution. She did not wish to hear sermon and had her books packed ready to leave if necessary, and advised her sister Princess Friederike to leave Greece since she could no longer guarantee her safety. The king and queen wrote to King Louis of Bavaria to ask for his assistance, but the queen remarked that they could not expect a response for six weeks, and by that time „und Gott weiss wo wir dann sind“ ['God's know how things stand'].[5] On the queen's name day no ball was given at the Palace: "... it was not seen wise, one would not risk having a Gustav III Masquerade. There are daily rumours that Athens will be set alight on all four corners, so to speak, and everyone massacered."[5]

Initially, Queen Amalia's Lutheran religion was not given much attention, but the aversion to it grew when she did not give birth to a child which could be raised Orthodox. One of the biggest crises of Otto's reign, as well as Amalia's unpopularity, was the succession crisis. The cause of the childlessness of Otto and Amalia has been the cause of debate. During this time period, infertility was commonly considered the fault of the woman, and Amalia's frequent dancing and riding were blamed for it.[5] She was exposed to various fertility treatments until her 35th birthday. Otto's brothers were given the right to the throne after him, but it was rumoured that queen Amalia wished to have her own brother Elimar of Oldenburg appointed heir instead.

The queen was eventually given more influence. Amalia was given the right to govern as regent in the case of the absence or incapability of the monarch or the heir to the throne.[6] She acted as Regent of Greece in 1850-1851 when Otto was in Germany for health reasons,[7] and a second time in 1861-1862, when Otto visited his family in Bavaria to discuss the succession crisis.[8]

Her political influence was controversial. Her favorites were considered to have influence over her, notably her principal lady-in-waiting Baroness Wilhelmine von Plüskow was widely rumored to influence state affairs, particularly in matters relating to Austria, through both the queen and the king, which exposed her to controversy.[9]

Fashion influence

 
Type of Amalia dress
 
Amalia wearing Amalia dress

When she arrived in Greece as a queen in 1837, she had an immediate impact on social life and fashion. She realised that her attire ought to emulate that of her new people, and so she created a romantic folksy court dress, which became a national Greek costume still known as the Amalía dress.[10]

It follows the Biedermeier style with a loose-fitting, white cotton or silk shirt, often decorated with lace at the neck and cuffs, over which a richly embroidered jacket or vest is worn, usually of dark blue or claret velvet. The skirt was ankle-length, unpressed-pleated silk, the color usually azure. It was completed with a soft cap or fez with a single, long, golden silk tassel, traditionally worn by married women, or with the kalpaki (a toque) of the unmarried woman, and sometimes with a black veil for church. This dress became the usual attire of all Christian townswomen[citation needed] in both Ottoman Empire-occupied and liberated Balkan lands as far north as Belgrade.

Assassination attempt

In February 1861, a university student named Aristeidis Dosios (son of politician Konstantinos Dosios)[11] unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate the queen. He was sentenced to death, though Queen Amalia intervened and he was pardoned, and sentenced to life imprisonment. He was hailed as a hero for his attempt by certain factions, but the attempt also provoked among the people spontaneous feelings of sympathy towards the royal couple.

Expulsion

 
The expulsion of King Otto and Queen Amalia in 1862, as portrayed in a popular colour lithography

Just over a year later, an uprising took place in Athens while the royal couple were on a visit to the Peloponnese. The Great Powers, who had supported Otto, urged them not to resist, and Otto's reign came to an end. They left Greece aboard a British warship, with the Greek royal regalia that they had brought with them. It was reported in the press that the royal courtiers weren’t aspersed, however, the queen's controversial favorite, Wilhelmine von Plüskow, was exposed to sarcasm from the crowd when she left.[12]

It has been suggested that the king would not have been overthrown had Amalia borne an heir, as succession was also a major unresolved question at the time of uprising.[13] It is also true, however, that the Constitution of 1843 made provision for Otto to be succeeded by his two younger brothers and their descendants.

Exile and death

Otto and Amalia spent the rest of their years in exile, at home in Bavaria. They decided to speak Greek each day between 6 and 8 o'clock to remember their time in Greece.[citation needed]

Otto died in 1867. Queen Amalia survived her husband by almost eight years and died in Bamberg on 20 May 1875. She was buried beside the king at the Theatinerkirche in Munich.

The cause of the royal couple's infertility remained contested even after an autopsy was performed on the queen.[14]

Legacy

Queen Amalia founded the National Gardens of Athens in 1839, and an orphanage in Amaléion in 1855.

The town of Amaliada in Elis and the village of Amaliapolis in Magnesia were named after the queen.

Archives

Queen Amalia's letters to her sister-in-law, Princess Mathilde Caroline of Bavaria, Grand Duchess of Hesse, written between 1837 and 1861, are preserved in the Hessian State Archive (Hessisches Staatsarchiv Darmstadt) in Darmstadt, Germany.[15]

Queen Amalia's letters to her brother Peter II, Grand Duke of Oldenburg, written between 1861 and 1862, are preserved in the Niedersächsisches Landesarchiv in Oldenburg, Germany.[16]

Titles

  • 21 December 1818 – 20 May 1875: Her Highness Duchess Amalie of Oldenburg, Princess of Holstein-Gottorp
  • 22 December 1836 – 23 October 1862: Her Majesty The Queen of Greece
  • 23 October 1862 – 20 May 1875: Her Majesty Queen Amalia of Greece

Ancestry

References

  1. ^ Édouard Driault et Michel Lhéritier, Histoire diplomatique de la Grèce de 1821 à nos jours : Le Règne de Georges Ier avant le traité de Berlin (1862-1878) - Hellénisme et slavisme, t. III, PUF, 1926
  2. ^ Leonard Bower, Otho I : King of Greece, a biography, Royalty Digest, 2001 (ISBN 1905159129)
  3. ^ Susan (19 May 2013). "Amalia of Oldenburg, Queen of Greece". Unofficial Royalty. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  4. ^ Leonard Bower, Otho I : King of Greece, a biography, Royalty Digest, 2001 (ISBN 1905159129).
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i Lüth C. Fra Fredensborg til Athen: Fragment af en Kvindes Liv. Copenhagen; Gyldendalske; 1926.
  6. ^ Robert Phillimore:Commentaries Upon International Law
  7. ^ Édouard Driault et Michel Lhéritier, Histoire diplomatique de la Grèce de 1821 à nos jours : Le Règne de Georges Ier avant le traité de Berlin (1862-1878) - Hellénisme et slavisme, t. III, PUF, 1926
  8. ^ Leonard Bower, Otho I : King of Greece, a biography, Royalty Digest, 2001 (ISBN 1905159129)
  9. ^ Marysville Daily Appeal, Number 14, 17 January 1863
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 10 October 2016. Retrieved 31 March 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) National Costume of Greece.
  11. ^ Brekis, Spyros, L Ph.D.; Ίστορια της Νεωτέρας Ελλάδος (History of Modern Greece) [in Greek], 2003.
  12. ^ Marysville Daily Appeal, Number 14, 17 January 1863.
  13. ^ John Van der Kiste, Kings of the Hellenes (Sutton Publishing, 1994) ISBN 0-7509-2147-1.
  14. ^ The infertility of the first royal couple of Greece (1833–1862)
  15. ^ "Briefe an Großherzogin Mathilde von ihrer Schwägerin, Königin Amalie von Griechenland". Hessisches Staatsarchiv Darmstadt.
  16. ^ "Privatschreiben der Königin Amalie von Griechenland an den Erbgroßherzog Nikolaus Friedrich Peter (aus Athen und München)". Niedersächsisches Landesarchiv Oldenburg.
  • Brekis, Spyros L. Ph.D.; Ιστορια της Νεωτερας Ελλαδος (History of Modern Greece) (in Greek) (coursebook in the 'History of Modern Greece' course of the University of Athens)
  • Zaoussis, Alexander L.; Αμαλια και Οθων (Amalia and Othon) (in Greek) Okeanida, 2002. ISBN 960-410-254-0

External links

  • Greek royal tombs
  • . www.annaswebart.com. Archived from the original on 26 January 2008. Retrieved 11 June 2008.
  • "Amalie, Marie Friederike" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
  • Henry Gardiner Adams, ed. (1857). "Amelia". A Cyclopaedia of Female Biography: 37. Wikidata Q115654495.
Amalia of Oldenburg
Born: 21 December 1818 Died: 20 May 1875
Greek royalty
New title Queen consort of Greece
22 December 1836 – 23 October 1862
Vacant
Title next held by
Olga Constantinovna of Russia
as Queen of the Hellenes

amalia, oldenburg, greek, Αμαλία, december, 1818, 1875, bavarian, princess, became, queen, greece, from, 1836, 1862, wife, king, otto, friedrich, ludwig, loved, widely, greeks, patriotic, love, country, beauty, during, tenure, queen, dedicated, social, improve. Amalia of Oldenburg Greek Amalia 21 December 1818 20 May 1875 was a Bavarian princess who became Queen of Greece from 1836 to 1862 as the wife of King Otto Friedrich Ludwig She was loved widely by the Greeks due to her patriotic love for the country and her beauty During her tenure as queen she was dedicated to social improvement and the founding of many gardens in Athens and she was the first to introduce the worldwide Christmas tree to Greece Amalia of OldenburgPortrait by Joseph Karl StielerQueen consort of GreeceTenure22 December 1836 23 October 1862Born 1818 12 21 21 December 1818Oldenburg Grand Duchy of OldenburgDied20 May 1875 1875 05 20 aged 56 Bamberg Kingdom of BavariaBurialTheatinerkirche Munich SpouseOtto of Greece m 1836 died 1867 wbr NamesGerman Amalie Marie FriederikeGreek Amalia Maria FreiderikhHouseHolstein GottorpFatherAugustus Grand Duke of OldenburgMotherPrincess Adelheid of Anhalt Bernburg Schaumburg HoymReligionLutheranismStyles of Queen Amalia of GreeceReference styleHer MajestySpoken styleYour MajestyWhen she arrived in Greece in 1837 she at first won the hearts of the Greeks with her refreshing beauty After she became more politically involved she then became the target of harsh attacks and her image suffered further as she proved unable to provide an heir to the throne She and her husband were expelled from Greece in 1862 after an uprising She spent the rest of her years in exile in Bavaria She acted as Regent of Greece in 1850 1851 1 and a second time in 1861 1862 2 during the absence of Otto Amalia is attributed to the creation of the romantic folksy court dress 3 which in return became Greece s national costume Contents 1 Early life and marriage 1 1 Early years and family life 1 2 Marriage 2 Queen of Greece 2 1 Succession crisis and political activity 2 2 Fashion influence 2 3 Assassination attempt 2 4 Expulsion 3 Exile and death 4 Legacy 4 1 Archives 5 Titles 6 Ancestry 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and marriage EditEarly years and family life Edit Duchess Amalia Maria Frederica was born on 21 December 1818 in Oldenburg to Duke Paul Frederick Augustus of Oldenburg and his wife Princess Adelheid of Anhalt Bernburg Schaumburg Hoym as their first child She was less than two years old when her mother died on 13 September 1820 Her father remarried in 1825 to Princess Ida of Anhalt Bernburg Schaumburg Hoym though she soon died in 1828 his last marriage was with Princess Cecilia of Sweden in 1831 Due to her father s marriages Amalia had 5 siblings 4 being born as half siblings Duchess Frederica Duke Nikolaus Friedrich Duke Alexander Duke August and Anton Gunther Friedrich Elimar Marriage Edit On 22 December 1836 Duchess Amalia of Oldenburg married King Otto Friedrich Ludwig in Oldenburg Born as the second son of King Ludwig I of Bavaria Prince Otto of Bavaria had been appointed king of the newly created Kingdom of Greece in 1833 Otto visited Germany to find a bride after he had been declared to be of legal majority He then met Amalia in Marienbad in Bohemia Amalia was Lutheran and Otto was Catholic and they were wed in both a Lutheran and Catholic wedding ceremony It was an understanding that while they were allowed to keep their religion any child born to them would be raised in the Orthodox religion of Greece On 14 February 1837 she arrived in Athens in Greece Queen of Greece EditIn the early years of the new monarchy Queen Amalia with her beauty and vivaciousness brought a spirit of smart fashion and progress to the impoverished country She laboured actively towards social improvement and the creation of many gardens in Athens and at first won the hearts of the Greeks with her refreshing beauty and the patriotic love she demonstrated for her new home country Amalia was the first to introduce the Christmas tree to Greece During her first years in Greece Athens was a relatively small town the king and queen resided in a small house while the Old Royal Palace was being built Having few exceptions the Royal Household was made up of mostly Germans 4 The queen s chamberlain and principal lady in waiting were the German couple Clemens von Weichs Glon and Dorothea von Weichs Glon her favourite companion being Julie von Nordenpflycht The queen s sister Princess Frederike lived with her in Greece for several years until she left after the September revolution of 1843 5 The diarist Christiane Luth described the queen in 1839 40 5 The Queen was small beautiful and with a lovely figure She was lively almost too lively spoke of various subjects and complimented Greece in favor of the Nordic countries and was certain that we would very soon be accustomed to this beautiful nation with its lovely climate The Queen was very superstitious she did not sit down thirteen people at dinner and was convinced that a white or a black lady appeared before her when an event of importance occurred in Bavaria or Oldenburg She also believed in reincarnation and her firm character made it hard to dissuade her from something once she had made up her mind Christiane Luth describes the court in Athens as a small community full of gossip The least pleasant thing was that there was always a German lackey on the servant seat who heard every word said for the entire court staff was with few exceptions German There was endless gossip as the Queen felt an interest for the least important things so that everything which could be forwarded to her by lackeys lady s maids and chamber maids was gefundenes Fressen 5 and that the queen was a master of gossip 5 Queen Amalia loved to dance and ride 5 arranged balls at court and could be seen riding in and around Athens and in leisure activities which was common for upper class women in Western Europe but new in Greece where women had normally lived in seclusion during the Ottoman Empire A portrait of Queen Amalia of Greece in 1859 Spyridon Hatzigiannopoulos Succession crisis and political activity Edit As King Otto and his Bavarian advisers became more enmeshed in political struggles with Greek political forces the queen became more politically involved also She became the target of harsh attacks when she became involved in politics She remained a Protestant in an almost universally Orthodox country throughout her husband s reign Christiane Luth describes the role of the queen during the 3 September 1843 Revolution 5 Uhlan continually circled around the p alace on horseback to ensure that no one escaped and all of the military stood in a threatening position ready to fire on command Thousands of people filled the great square and you could hear them call Live the Constitution The Queen was with the King all the time and told him that there was but two alternatives entweder underschreiben oder entsagen either sign or abdicate Luth described the queen as nervous and pessimistic during the days following the revolution She did not wish to hear sermon and had her books packed ready to leave if necessary and advised her sister Princess Friederike to leave Greece since she could no longer guarantee her safety The king and queen wrote to King Louis of Bavaria to ask for his assistance but the queen remarked that they could not expect a response for six weeks and by that time und Gott weiss wo wir dann sind God s know how things stand 5 On the queen s name day no ball was given at the Palace it was not seen wise one would not risk having a Gustav III Masquerade There are daily rumours that Athens will be set alight on all four corners so to speak and everyone massacered 5 Initially Queen Amalia s Lutheran religion was not given much attention but the aversion to it grew when she did not give birth to a child which could be raised Orthodox One of the biggest crises of Otto s reign as well as Amalia s unpopularity was the succession crisis The cause of the childlessness of Otto and Amalia has been the cause of debate During this time period infertility was commonly considered the fault of the woman and Amalia s frequent dancing and riding were blamed for it 5 She was exposed to various fertility treatments until her 35th birthday Otto s brothers were given the right to the throne after him but it was rumoured that queen Amalia wished to have her own brother Elimar of Oldenburg appointed heir instead The queen was eventually given more influence Amalia was given the right to govern as regent in the case of the absence or incapability of the monarch or the heir to the throne 6 She acted as Regent of Greece in 1850 1851 when Otto was in Germany for health reasons 7 and a second time in 1861 1862 when Otto visited his family in Bavaria to discuss the succession crisis 8 Her political influence was controversial Her favorites were considered to have influence over her notably her principal lady in waiting Baroness Wilhelmine von Pluskow was widely rumored to influence state affairs particularly in matters relating to Austria through both the queen and the king which exposed her to controversy 9 Fashion influence Edit Type of Amalia dress Amalia wearing Amalia dress When she arrived in Greece as a queen in 1837 she had an immediate impact on social life and fashion She realised that her attire ought to emulate that of her new people and so she created a romantic folksy court dress which became a national Greek costume still known as the Amalia dress 10 It follows the Biedermeier style with a loose fitting white cotton or silk shirt often decorated with lace at the neck and cuffs over which a richly embroidered jacket or vest is worn usually of dark blue or claret velvet The skirt was ankle length unpressed pleated silk the color usually azure It was completed with a soft cap or fez with a single long golden silk tassel traditionally worn by married women or with the kalpaki a toque of the unmarried woman and sometimes with a black veil for church This dress became the usual attire of all Christian townswomen citation needed in both Ottoman Empire occupied and liberated Balkan lands as far north as Belgrade Assassination attempt Edit In February 1861 a university student named Aristeidis Dosios son of politician Konstantinos Dosios 11 unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate the queen He was sentenced to death though Queen Amalia intervened and he was pardoned and sentenced to life imprisonment He was hailed as a hero for his attempt by certain factions but the attempt also provoked among the people spontaneous feelings of sympathy towards the royal couple Expulsion Edit The expulsion of King Otto and Queen Amalia in 1862 as portrayed in a popular colour lithography Just over a year later an uprising took place in Athens while the royal couple were on a visit to the Peloponnese The Great Powers who had supported Otto urged them not to resist and Otto s reign came to an end They left Greece aboard a British warship with the Greek royal regalia that they had brought with them It was reported in the press that the royal courtiers weren t aspersed however the queen s controversial favorite Wilhelmine von Pluskow was exposed to sarcasm from the crowd when she left 12 It has been suggested that the king would not have been overthrown had Amalia borne an heir as succession was also a major unresolved question at the time of uprising 13 It is also true however that the Constitution of 1843 made provision for Otto to be succeeded by his two younger brothers and their descendants Exile and death EditOtto and Amalia spent the rest of their years in exile at home in Bavaria They decided to speak Greek each day between 6 and 8 o clock to remember their time in Greece citation needed Otto died in 1867 Queen Amalia survived her husband by almost eight years and died in Bamberg on 20 May 1875 She was buried beside the king at the Theatinerkirche in Munich The cause of the royal couple s infertility remained contested even after an autopsy was performed on the queen 14 Legacy EditQueen Amalia founded the National Gardens of Athens in 1839 and an orphanage in Amaleion in 1855 The town of Amaliada in Elis and the village of Amaliapolis in Magnesia were named after the queen Archives Edit Queen Amalia s letters to her sister in law Princess Mathilde Caroline of Bavaria Grand Duchess of Hesse written between 1837 and 1861 are preserved in the Hessian State Archive Hessisches Staatsarchiv Darmstadt in Darmstadt Germany 15 Queen Amalia s letters to her brother Peter II Grand Duke of Oldenburg written between 1861 and 1862 are preserved in the Niedersachsisches Landesarchiv in Oldenburg Germany 16 Titles Edit21 December 1818 20 May 1875 Her Highness Duchess Amalie of Oldenburg Princess of Holstein Gottorp 22 December 1836 23 October 1862 Her Majesty The Queen of Greece 23 October 1862 20 May 1875 Her Majesty Queen Amalia of GreeceAncestry EditAncestors of Amalia of Oldenburg8 Prince Georg Ludwig of Holstein Gottorp4 Peter I Grand Duke of Oldenburg9 Sofie Charlotte of Schleswig Holstein Sonderburg Beck2 Augustus Grand Duke of Oldenburg10 Frederick II Eugene Duke of Wurttemberg5 Duchess Frederica of Wurttemberg11 Princess Friederike of Brandenburg Schwedt1 Amalia of Oldenburg12 Charles Louis Prince of Anhalt Bernburg Schaumburg Hoym6 Victor II Prince of Anhalt Bernburg Schaumburg Hoym13 Benjamine Gertrude Keiser Amalie Eleonore of Solms Braunfels3 Princess Adelheid of Anhalt Bernburg Schaumburg Hoym14 Charles Christian Prince of Nassau Weilburg7 Amelia of Nassau Weilburg15 Princess Carolina of Orange NassauReferences Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Queen Amalia of Greece Edouard Driault et Michel Lheritier Histoire diplomatique de la Grece de 1821 a nos jours Le Regne de Georges Ier avant le traite de Berlin 1862 1878 Hellenisme et slavisme t III PUF 1926 Leonard Bower Otho I King of Greece a biography Royalty Digest 2001 ISBN 1905159129 Susan 19 May 2013 Amalia of Oldenburg Queen of Greece Unofficial Royalty Retrieved 18 March 2022 Leonard Bower Otho I King of Greece a biography Royalty Digest 2001 ISBN 1905159129 a b c d e f g h i Luth C Fra Fredensborg til Athen Fragment af en Kvindes Liv Copenhagen Gyldendalske 1926 Robert Phillimore Commentaries Upon International Law Edouard Driault et Michel Lheritier Histoire diplomatique de la Grece de 1821 a nos jours Le Regne de Georges Ier avant le traite de Berlin 1862 1878 Hellenisme et slavisme t III PUF 1926 Leonard Bower Otho I King of Greece a biography Royalty Digest 2001 ISBN 1905159129 Marysville Daily Appeal Number 14 17 January 1863 Archived copy Archived from the original on 10 October 2016 Retrieved 31 March 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link National Costume of Greece Brekis Spyros L Ph D Istoria ths Newteras Ellados History of Modern Greece in Greek 2003 Marysville Daily Appeal Number 14 17 January 1863 John Van der Kiste Kings of the Hellenes Sutton Publishing 1994 ISBN 0 7509 2147 1 The infertility of the first royal couple of Greece 1833 1862 Briefe an Grossherzogin Mathilde von ihrer Schwagerin Konigin Amalie von Griechenland Hessisches Staatsarchiv Darmstadt Privatschreiben der Konigin Amalie von Griechenland an den Erbgrossherzog Nikolaus Friedrich Peter aus Athen und Munchen Niedersachsisches Landesarchiv Oldenburg Brekis Spyros L Ph D Istoria ths Newteras Ellados History of Modern Greece in Greek coursebook in the History of Modern Greece course of the University of Athens Zaoussis Alexander L Amalia kai O8wn Amalia and Othon in Greek Okeanida 2002 ISBN 960 410 254 0External links Edit Wikisource has the text of an 1879 American Cyclopaedia article about Amalia of Oldenburg Greek royal tombs The Costume in 1800s www annaswebart com Archived from the original on 26 January 2008 Retrieved 11 June 2008 Amalie Marie Friederike New International Encyclopedia 1905 Henry Gardiner Adams ed 1857 Amelia A Cyclopaedia of Female Biography 37 Wikidata Q115654495 Amalia of OldenburgHouse of OldenburgBorn 21 December 1818 Died 20 May 1875Greek royaltyNew title Queen consort of Greece22 December 1836 23 October 1862 VacantTitle next held byOlga Constantinovna of Russiaas Queen of the Hellenes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amalia of Oldenburg amp oldid 1127642322, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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