FILE - In this Thursday June, 16, 2011 file photo Britain's Queen Elizabeth II with Prince Philip arrive by horse drawn carriage in the parade ring on the third day, traditionally known as Ladies Day, of the Royal Ascot horse race meeting at Ascot, England. Buckingham Palace says Prince Philip, husband of Queen Elizabeth II, has died aged 99. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, File)
In November 1947, a dynastic union was forged between the royal houses of Greece and Great Britain. It would be one of the last of this kind of royal marriages in history – a type of union that had knitted together the continent for 1,000 years. When Philip, prince of Greece and Denmark married Elizabeth, princess of Great Britain, they reconnected two bloodlines descended from Queen Victoria. But they also renewed a kinship tie between Britain and Denmark that had been joined together numerous times, from Canute and Aelfgifu in 1015 to Edward VII and Alexandra in 1863.
For centuries, almost every European monarchy maintained diplomatic relationships with its neighbors through dynastic marriages, in a system that persisted all the way up to the 1930s, then rapidly faded away in the post-war era.
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In stark contrast, before the second world war this practice was the absolute norm – particularly seen in the dense web of intermarriages between the royal families of Sweden, Denmark and Norway in the earlier decades of the 20th century.
One of the great dreams of Queen Victoria and her husband Prince Albert – themselves the product of close dynastic union, as first cousins – was to unite the continent of Europe through kinship relations, hoping that close cousins would be less likely to go to war with one another. This proved to be politically naive – disastrously so. The Great War that followed not long after Victoria’s death pitted the forces of “Cousin Nicky” (Tsar Nicholas of Russia) and “Cousin Georgie” (King George V of Great Britain) against those of “Cousin Willy” (Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany), close kinship notwithstanding. By 1914, Britain, Russia and Germany had evolved as nation states, with modern governments, beyond the control of princely dynasticism as a political or diplomatic force.
Prince Philip’s marriage to Princess Elizabeth in 1947 thus represented one of the last iterations of this Queen Victoria’s dream. It reunited two of her descendants: Elizabeth through her father’s line, and Philip through the line of his mother, Princess Alice of Battenberg, a great-grand-daughter of Victoria. Indeed, in the previous decade, three of Philip’s four sisters had married other descendants of Victoria.
But in 1947, times had changed, and post-war Britain was not so keen to see the heir to the throne married to a foreign royal. Particularly not one whose sisters had married prominent German officers and whose family had an extremely fragile position on its throne in Greece, with a dynastic history full of abdications, military coups and plebiscites. Prince Philip was therefore “rebranded” before his marriage as Philip Mountbatten, lieutenant in the Royal Navy, naturalized British subject. But where did the name Mountbatten come from? And why before he changed his name was he called “Prince of Greece and Denmark”?
Community of nations
It is an important question for understanding the identity of the Duke of Edinburgh – and by extension, the identity of the British royal family and even Britain’s position within the wider European community of nations. It is all very intertwined. Philip himself said in an interview in 2014:
If anything, I’ve thought of myself as Scandinavian. Particularly, Danish. We spoke English at home … The others learned Greek. I could understand a certain amount of it. But then the (conversation) would go into French. Then it went into German, on occasion, because we had German cousins. If you couldn’t think of a word in one language, you tended to go off in another.
His experience is a perfect expression of the extraordinary cosmopolitan environment of the royal courts of Europe a century ago, when royal princes in Prussia and Russia almost always had English nannies, and adults conversed in polished French. Queen Elizabeth II is the product of this same nursery environment and also has very good French.
Queen Elizabeth II discusses weather, horses and Prince Philip's health in
French during a 30-minute meeting with Francois Hollande at Windsor Castle.
But why would a Greek prince consider himself Scandinavian? In the mid-19th century, when the crumbling Ottoman Empire was giving birth to newly independent states such as Bulgaria and Greece, the Great Powers of Europe determined that it was in the best interests of stability in the region to select junior members of the major royal dynasties to found new monarchies.
Greece, independent since 1832, had first been governed by a Bavarian prince, Otto, but in 1863, he was deposed, and the 17-year-old Prince William of Denmark chosen instead. Denmark’s ruling family, the House of Oldenburg, one of the oldest in Europe, was known for its liberal views, and it was hoped that a young prince from such a family would help the Greeks establish a democratic monarchy along the lines of Denmark, or its closely related ally, England.
The reign of Prince William, as King George I of Greece, was long and fairly calm. His son, Constantine I, was another matter, and after a disastrous war with Turkey (1919-1922) he was forced to abdicate. His younger brother, Prince Andrew, had fought in the war, and was sent into exile, along with his infant son, Prince Philip.
Philip was thus raised as an exile, first in Paris, then in England, where he boarded at Cheam School in Hampshire. He began a career in the British navy in 1939, served with distinction during WWII, then retired from active service once his wife became the Queen in 1952. He had been naturalized as a British subject in the summer of 1947, a few months before his wedding, and assumed a version of his mother’s name, Battenberg – itself anglicised to Mountbatten at the height of anti-German sentiment in England in 1917.
The Battenbergs were also from an ancient ruling family, the House of Hesse, territorial princes in the heart of Germany since the 13th century. Philip wasn’t alone in representing the Greek royal family in Britain: a decade before, his cousin Princess Marina had married the youngest son of George V, the Duke of Kent, and had charmed the nation with her elegance and cosmopolitan style.
Wedding of Prince George, Duke of Kent and Princess Marina of Greece, showing the bride and bridegroom, with their Royal parents in London on Nov. 29, 1934. From left to right: King George V; Princess Elizabeth of York; Princess Elena of Greece (the bride’s mother); the Royal bride and bridegroom; Lady Mary Cambridge (bridesmaid); the Queen, and Prince Nicholas of Greece. (AP Photo)
Philip was firmly tied to the UK through his uncle, Earl Mountbatten, a British naval hero during the war – but, at the same time, he remained closely linked to the old continental system. One of his aunts, Mountbatten’s sister, was Queen Louise of Sweden.
Louise Mountbatten died in 1965, and Marina of Greece in 1968 and, by the 1970s, royal marriages were seen as affairs of the heart, not affairs of state – or indeed as points of reunion and reconnection for these ancient royal dynasties.
With the passing of the Duke of Edinburgh, one of the last representatives of a system that had endured for a millennium passes into history.![]()
Photos: Remembering Britain's Prince Philip, 1921-2021
1946: Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip
Britain's Princess Elizabeth, second from left , later Queen Elizabeth II, and members of her family are escorted to Romsey Abbey, Hampshire, by Prince Philip of Greece, far right, later to become her husband, Oct. 26, 1946. From left to right, King George VI, Princess Elizabeth, Princess Margaret Rose, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip. The princesses were bridesmaids at the wedding of Lord Brabourne and the Hon. Patricia Mountbatten. (AP Photo/Eddie Worth)
1947: Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten
This official picture of Britain's Princess Elizabeth, heir presumptive to the British throne and her fiance, Lieut. Philip Mountbatten, was made on July 10, 1947 in London. The Princess' engagement ring can be seen on her finger. (AP Photo)
1947: Royal wedding
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and her husband the Duke of Edinburgh wave to the crowd from the balcony of Buckingham Palace, London, Nov. 20, 1947. From left to right, King George VI, Princess Margaret, Lady Mary Cambridge, the bride and bridegroom, Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary. (AP Photo)
1947: Royal wedding
This is the official wedding picture of Princess Elizabeth and her new husband Prince Philip,Duke of Edinburgh, made after their return to Buckingham Palace after their marriage in Westminster Abbey, Nov. 20, 1947. (AP Photo)
1947: Royal honeymoon
This is the first image of the royal newly-weds H.RH. British Princess Elizabeth - Duchess of Edinburgh, and H.RH. Prince Philip - Duke of Edinburgh, in the grounds of Broadlands (the home of Earl Mountbatten, governer-general of India), at Ramsey, Hampshire, where they are spending their honeymoon, November 23, 1947. Here the royal couple shares a loving look. (AP Photo)
1948: Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip
Britain's Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh walk on April 23, 1948 in a courtyard of Windsor Castle, Windsor, England. They were invested with the Order of the Garter. (AP Photo)
1949: Philip Mountbatten, Margaret duPont, Louise Brough
Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, left, chats with U.S. tennis players Louise Brough, center, and Margaret duPont at Lady Crosfield's pre-Wimbledon garden party, June 13, 1949, in the grounds of her house at Highgate Hill, London. (AP Photo/John Rider-Rider)
1951: Duke of Edinburgh
Princess Elizabeth, not shown, currently touring Canada with her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, smiles as he participates in a square dance at Government House in Ottawa, Ont. on Oct. 11, 1951. (AP Photo)
1951: Philip Mountbatten
The Duke of Edinburgh, in Rome with Princess Elizabeth, is shown during workout to play in the annual tournament between Italian teams and teams from Malta, April 13, 1951. (AP Photo)
1951: Royal family
In this Aug. 1951 file photo, Princess Elizabeth stands with her husband Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, and their children Prince Charles and Princess Anne at the couple's London residence at Clarence House. (AP Photo/Eddie Worth, file)
1952: Prince Philip
The Duke of Edinburgh accepts the Cicero Cup on behalf of his polo team here on June 2, 1952 in Sussex, England. The duke scored one of three goals as his team defeated Breechwood in a match for the cup. (AP Photo)
1953: Queen's coronation
This is a June. 2, 1953 file photo of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, as they wave to supporters from the balcony at Buckingham Palace, following her coronation at Westminster Abbey. London. (AP Photo/Leslie Priest, File)
1955: Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip
Queen Elizabeth II, during a colorful ceremony on June 2, 1955 at Balmoral Palace in Scotland, presented new colors to the 1st Battalion, of the Queen's own Cameron highlanders on May 30. The Duke of Edinburgh, right, was dressed in full ceremonial garb and carried the silver-hilted claymore the camerons presented him at Luneburg, Germany. Left is Maj. Gen. D.N. Wimberly. The groups are walking to the saluting base for the ceremony of New Colors. The Queen's children, Prince Charles and Princess Anne, watched the military pageantry from a castle window. (AP Photo)
1957: Prince Philip with Prince Charles
Prince Philip smiles from cockpit of his speed boat after being towed to home of a friend when the vessel broke down as he was boating on the Medina River in Cowes, England on August 7, 1957. The Prince is shown here as he arrives at the home of Uffa Fox, his yachting adviser, at Cowes, Isle of Wight, England with Philip is Prince Charles. (AP Photo)
1959: Duke of Edinburgh
Britain's Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh during a tour of an distillation plant which is under construction at Clifton Park near Nassau in the Bahamas during a four day visit from April 24 - 28 1959. He viewed the construction and talked with workers and officials. (AP Photo/Valentine)
1959: Royal family
The British royal family stroll at Balmoral castle, Scotland, with Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, the Prime Minister of Ghana on August 12, 1959. Dr. Nkrumah, right, who was born a West African Tribesman, wears western dress while the Queen's husband, Prince Philip, left, and their children, Prince Charles and Princess Anne, wear kilts. Nkrumah was made a privy counselor by Queen Elizabeth II during his visit and discussed possibility of a royal tour later. (AP Photo)
1962: Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip
Prince Philip wore traditional gray topper as he escorted Queen Elizabeth II to the races at Ascot, England on June 19, 1962. The Royal couple headed a title-studded group at the fashionable track. The Queen waved as she and the Prince rode in an open carriage around the track prior to the race program. (AP Photo)
1965: Prince Philip
Prince Philip pulls his mount up sharp during a polo match at Windsor, Berkshire, June 20, 1965. He captured Windsor Park in the final of the Royal Windsor cup against Cowdray Park. The Duke's team won the match. (AP Photo)
1966: Prince Philip with Princess Grace
Britain's Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh with Princess Grace of Monaco on Dec. 11, 1966 in the Monaco Palace gardens. (AP Photo)
1972: Royal family
In this Nov. 20, 1972 file photo, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip are surround by their family in Buckingham Palace, in London, on the occasion of the royal couples silver wedding. From left in the picture are shown: Prince Charles, Prince Edward, the youngest child (aged 8), the Queen, Prince Philip, Prince Andrew (aged 12) and Princess Anne, (22). (AP Photo, File)
1972: Summer Olympics
Great Britain's Prince Philip, left, and Princess Anne, center, visit Olympic team members on Aug. 30, 1972 during the Summer Olympic Games in Munich, Germany. (AP Photo)
1974: New Zealand Commonwealth Games
Britain's Duke of Edinburgh picks up the feather as he receives a tradditional Maori welcome on arrival in the Queen Elizabeth II Park Stadium, in Christchurch, New Zealand, on Jan. 24, 1974, to open the Tenth Commonwealth Games. In this ancient Maori challenge, the feather is thrown at the feet of the Duke, with the chant, Do you come as friend or foe, by picking up the feather the Duke was accepted and welcomed. (AP Photo)
1982: Prince Philip
Prince Philip at World's Affairs Council luncheon at Century Plaza, Los Angeles, on Sept. 21, 1982. (AP Photo/Wally Fong)
1982: Queen Elizabeth II Prince Philip
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Philip, walk on the grounds of Sandringham House, Norfolk on Feb. 4, 1982, to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Queen’s accession to the throne. (AP Photo)
1984: Nancy Reagan and Prince Philip
First Lady Nancy Reagan, left, is greeted by Britain's Prince Philip on arrival at Buckingham Palace, Saturday, June 9, 1984, London, England. Mrs. Reagan was accompanying Pres. Ronald Regan to attend a banquet hosted by Queen Elizabeth for Economic summit leaders. (AP Photo/Lana Harris)
1987: Prince Philip
Sam Wanamaker, left, and Robert Corder, coordinators of International Shakespeare Week, applaud as Prince Philip unveils a timber pile during a ground-breaking ceremony for the Globe Theatre, London, July 16, 1987. The project will reconstruct Shakespeare's Globe Theatre close its original site on the south bank of the River Thames. (AP Photo/Gerald Penny)
1991: George H.W. Bush, Barbara Bush, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip
In this Tuesday, May 14, 1991 file photo President George H.W. Bush and First Lady Barbara Bush accompany Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip across the South Lawn of the White House. (AP Photo/Doug Mills, File)
1997: Prince Philip, Prince William, Earl Spencer, Prince Harry, Prince Charles
Prince Philip, Prince William, Earl Spencer, Prince Harry and Prince Charles follow the coffin of Diana, Princess of Wales along Horse Guards Parade toward Westminster Abbey, London for the funeral service in this Saturday Sept. 6, 1997 file photo. (AP Photo/David Brauchli)
2002: Prince Philip
Britain's Prince Philip stands beside a cartoon of his wife Britain's Queen Elizabeth II behind the bar in the Old Vic pub from the TV show Eastenders drawn by Trogg for the Golden Jubillee, Wednesday, Dec. 4, 2002. The Duke was on a visit to the Cartoon Art Trust's Kings and Queens exhibition at the Mall Galleries, London, of which he is a patron. (AP Photo/Chris Harris/The Times/WPA pool)
2003: Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip and Nelson Mandela
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, center, and Prince Philip, left, meet Nelson Mandela, during a reception at Buckingham Palace in London, Monday, Oct. 20, 2003, to mark the centenary of the Rhodes Trust, started by the 19th century entrepreneur, Cecil John Rhodes, which provides scholarships for students around the world to study at Oxford University. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, pool)
2005: Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip
Prince Philip, holds up an umbrella for his wife Britain's Queen Elizabeth II before she unveiled a plinth to inaugurate the Grand Harbour Marina in Vittoriosa, during her state visit to Malta, where she attends the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), Thursday Nov. 24, 2005. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
2006: Prince Philip
Britain's Prince Philip takes part in the 2006 Houpetoun estate horse driving trials at a two-day event on the Hoptoun estate, at South Queensferry near Edinburgh, Scotland, on Sunday May 28, 2006. "The Duke of Hazard: The Wit and Wisdom of Prince Philip," a book which catalogues the prince's history of verbal gaffes, was released Wednesday, May 31, 2006. (AP Photo/Andrew Milligan,PA)
2006: Prince Philip, Prince William, Prince Harry
Britain's Prince Philip, left, talks to his grandsons, Prince William, center, and Prince Harry, right, following The Sovereign's Parade at the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst, England, Wednesday April 12, 2006. Harry, 21, second son of Prince Charles, began training at the Royal Military Academy last May to become an army officer in the Blues and Royals regiment of the Household Cavalry, one of the British army's oldest units. (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)
2008: Prince Philip
Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, receives information as he visits traffic monitoring center in Istanbul, Turkey, Thursday, May 15, 2008. Britain's Queen Elizabeth II is making her first visit to Turkey in nearly 37 years to highlight the importance Britain attaches to the predominantly Muslim country that is vying for European Union membership. (AP Photo/Salih Zeki Fazlioglu, Pool)
2010: Queen's Speech
Queen Elizabeth II sits on the throne beside Prince Philip, right, in the House of Lords prior to delivering the Queen's Speech at the Palace of Westminster in London Tuesday, May, 25, 2010. Queen Elizabeth II has opened Parliament nearly 60 times, but she will have an unfamiliar task Tuesday as she sets out the legislative program of a coalition government _ the country's first since World War II. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, Pool)
2016: Duke of Edinburgh, Queen Elizabeth II, Barack Obama and Michelle Obama
President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama are greeted by Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip as they arrive on Marine One at Windsor Castle in Windsor, England, Friday, April 22, 2016. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
2017: Prince Philip
Britain's Prince Philip, in his role as Captain General of the Royal Marines, attends a Parade on the forecourt of Buckingham Palace, in central London, Wednesday Aug. 2, 2017. The 96-year-old husband of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip made his final solo appearance to mark the finale of the Royal Marines Charity, 1664 Global Challenge. (Hannah McKay/Pool via AP)
2017: Prince Philip
Britain's Prince Philip, right, in his role as Captain General of the Royal Marines, talks to troops as he attends a Parade on the forecourt of Buckingham Palace, in central London, Wednesday Aug. 2, 2017. The 96-year-old husband of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip made his final solo appearance to mark the finale of the Royal Marines Charity, 1664 Global Challenge. (Hannah McKay / Pool via AP)
2018: Prince Philip
In this Friday, Oct. 12, 2018 file photo, Britain's Prince Philip waits for the bridal procession following the wedding of Princess Eugenie of York and Jack Brooksbank in St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, near London, England. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant, file)
2020: Prince Philip
Prince Philip, The Duke of Edinburgh, at Windsor Castle speaks to Assistant Colonel Commandant, Major General Tom Copinger-Symeas during a ceremony for the transfer of the Colonel-in-Chief of the Rifles from the Duke to Camilla Duchess of Cornwall, at Windsor Castle, England, Wednesday July 22, 2020. (Adrian Dennis/Pool via AP)
2020: Prince Philip
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip the Duke of Edinburgh pose for a photo June 1, 2020, in the quadrangle of Windsor Castle, in Windsor, England, ahead of his 99th birthday on Wednesday, June 10. The Queen is wearing an Angela Kelly dress with the Cullinan V diamond brooch, while Prince Philip is wearing a Household Division tie. (Steve Parsons/Pool via AP)
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