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#lady nicholas windsor
heavyarethecrowns · 10 months
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galecstatic · 8 months
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it's the fact that alex's heart was beating too fast when henry slowly placed his hands onto his heart and henry looking at him, smiling knowing that he's the reason why it's happening SOMEBODY SHOOT ME
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rockingtheorange · 5 months
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How are we feeling about Nick’s eyebrow? I think it got more prominent since the GQ event. Maybe it’s just me? 🤷🏽‍♀️ I didn’t mind it for the first event, but this time it was too much. What are your thoughts?
First of all, nothing is too much if he feels good in his skin ☺ No judgment over anyone's appearance.
Secondly, it is a bit more prominent but I'd like to point out that we don't know his personal and working life. Maybe he's playing a role, or maybe he's just trying something new.
We, as fans, shouldn't judge anything as long as it isn't harmful to us or our favs ☺
He's pretty, gorgeous, talented and hard working regardless
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royal-confessions · 1 year
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“Zenouska Mowatt is a class act in her response to the reports that young royals were not invited to the downsized coronation. On the other hand, Nicholas and/or Amelia Windsor sound so bratty & entitled by leaking how upset they are through their pals. Lmao, it's a state event & you guys are far from the mainline and not even working on behalf on the RF. Be like Zenouska.” - Submitted by Anonymous
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charlotte-of-wales · 2 months
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Happy 91st birthday to Katharine, Duchess of Kent!
Born on February 22nd 1933, Katharine Lucy Mary Worsley is the fourth child and only daughter of Sir William Worley, 4th Baronet, Lord-lieutenant of North Riding, and his wife Joyce Morgan Brunner, and wife to Prince Edward, Duke of Kent.
The couple have three children: George, Earl of St Andrews, Lady Helen Taylor, and Lord Nicholas Windsor. In the 90s Katharine stepped down from her royal duties and is now a music teacher.
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Founded in 1440 by Henry VI, Eton College (The King’s College of Our Lady of Eton besides Wyndsor), was intended as a charity school to provide free education to 70 poor boys; Henry VI also founding King’s College, Cambridge (The King’s College of Our Lady and Saint Nicholas in Cambridge), with the intention that Eton would serve as its feeder school; Henry taking William of Wykeham’s joint-founding of Winchester College and New College, Oxford, as his model, to the extent of borrowing Winchester College’s statutes and removing its Headmaster and some of Winchester’s Scholars to start Eton College.
Intending Eton should be part of a large and magnificent foundation which included a community of secular priests (10 of whom were Fellows), a pilgrimage church and an almshouse, Henry lavished a substantial income on the school and gifted Eton a huge collection of holy relics among which were fragments of what were supposed to be the True Cross and the Crown of Thorns. He even persuaded the Pope to grant a privilege unequalled anywhere in England: Eton was to have the right to grant Indulgences to penitents on the Feast of the Assumption.
Progress was interrupted however, and much of the building work left uncompleted when Henry VI (a Lancastrian King from the House of Tudor), was deposed in 1461 during the so-termed Wars of the Roses by Edward IV (a Plantagenet King from the rival House of York).
Consequently, Parliament annulled all grants made to Eton by the Lancastrians, the College’s lands were removed, and Edward IV ordered the school’s ornaments, relics and treasures be confiscated and placed instead in St George’s Chapel, Windsor – a royal palace situated on the opposite bank of the River Thames.
Bishop Waynflete (founder of Magdalen College, Oxford; a former provost of Eton and previously Head Master of Winchester College), came to the rescue and arranged for work on the Chapel of Eton College to be completed - the Chapel, still standing today (noble in its simplicity of Perpendicular Gothic design), said only to be part of what might have been one of the largest and finest churches in the country if Henry’s plans had been fully executed.
Lupton’s Range (built by Henry Redman, whose work is also to be seen at Hampton Court) was completed in 1520 with Lupton’s Tower (perhaps Eton’s most iconic image), at its centre. The fourth side of School Yard was added by Provost Allestree in 1665; its main feature is Upper School on the first floor (Eton’s second and largest classroom). In the middle of School Yard stands a bronze statue of the Founder in Garter robes. It was erected in 1719 by Provost Godolphin and is the work of Francis Bird.
More than five and a half centuries after the foundation, Eton College has a fame second to none. From the 70 scholars for whom Henry provided, the school has expanded to about 1,290 boys aged from 13 to 18. Eton’s ’Scholars’ are admitted by competitive examination; the remainder, known as ‘Oppidans’, are distributed between 24 boarding houses. Besides a large part-time staff, there are 143 masters and a Governing Body composed of a resident Provost and Vice-Provost together with 10 non-resident lay Fellows; successors of the 10 priest-Fellows of the original foundation.
The earliest records of school life date from the 16th century and paint a picture of a regimented and Spartan life. Scholars were awakened at 5 am, chanted prayers whilst they dressed and were at work in Lower School by 6am. All teaching was in Latin and lessons were supervised by ’Praepostors’ (senior boys appointed by the headmaster). There was a single hour of play, though football appears to have been popular, for a sentence set for Latin translation in 1519 was ’We will play with a bag full of wynde’.
The school flourished particularly under the reign of George III (1760-1820); George frequently visiting Eton and entertaining boys at Windsor Castle. The school in turn made George’s birthday, the Fourth of June, into a holiday marked by speeches, cricket, a procession of boats along the River Thames, and picnics on ‘Agar’s Plough’.
Eton College is known for its traditions, including a uniform of black tailcoat (or morning coat) and waistcoat, false-collar and pinstriped trousers. Most pupils wear a white tie that is effectively a strip of cloth folded over into a starched, detachable collar, though some senior boys are entitled to wear a white bow tie and winged collar; ’King’s Scholars’ are entitled to use the letters ’KS’ after their name and can be identified by a black gown worn over the top of their tailcoats, giving them the nickname tugs (Latin: togati, wearers of gowns).
During ’Summer Half’ (Summer Term) boys divide into ’Dry Bobs’ (those who play cricket, tennis or athletics), and ’Wet Bobs’ (those who row on the River Thames in preparation for the National Schools Regatta and the Princess Elizabeth Challenge Cup at the Henley Regatta).
One of England’s four remaining boarding schools for boys (the others being Harrow School and the colleges of Radley and Winchester), Eton has educated 19 British prime ministers and generations of the aristocracy, including Princes William and Harry; and thirty-seven ’Old Etonians’ (the term given to the alumni of Eton College) have been awarded the Victoria Cross (the largest number of alumni of any school).
The College motto is ’Floreat Etona’ (May Eton flourish). The school song is ’Carmen Etonense’. And the school colour is a distinctive blue-green known as ’Eton-Blue’; the colour being adopted by the University of Cambridge for the Boat Race against Oxford in 1836, and they have kept it ever since.
Notable Old Etonians include the writers Henry Fielding, Aldous Huxley, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Eric Blair (better know perhaps as George Orwell), and Ian Fleming; The explorers Sir Ranulph Fiennes; Composers Thomas Arne, George Butterworth, Roger Quilter, Thomas Dunhill, Philip Heseltine (known as Peter Warlock), and Hubert Parry (who wrote the song 'Jerusalem’ and the coronation anthem 'I was glad’); And the actors Eddie Redmayne, Damian Lewis, Jeremy Brett and Hugh Laurie.
Speaking of his time as an Eton College schoolboy, actor Tom Hiddleston said there are widespread misconceptions about Eton. ’People think it’s just full of braying toffs. … It isn’t true… It’s actually one of the most broad-minded places I’ve ever been. The reason it’s a good school is that it encourages people to find the thing they love and to go for it. They champion the talent of the individual and that’s what’s special about it.’
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thewales · 1 year
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Karma?
If this is true 🤭
I can disclose that the grandchildren of Queen Elizabeth's cousins - including Lady Amelia Windsor, who was named as the 'most beautiful member of the Royal Family' by Tatler magazine, and the King's godson Lord Nicholas Windsor - will not be at Westminster Abbey on Saturday.
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darlinggeorgiedear · 8 months
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George was an empathic King, while in his private life, had a personality that could be compared to a bull in a china shop
as someone whose first language isn't english, reading that idiom makes me laugh especially when it used to describe george lol any story about his chaotic private life?
Hi! George was rumored to be a drunk for a period. Many assume the rumor began in result of his indigestion that caused his skin to be blotchy and his general noisy manner. I always thought the drunk rumor perfectly illustrates how he acted sometimes, because he 100% didn't have a drinking problem, he acted the way he did, sober.
His normal speaking voice was comparable to the average person's screaming voice, and his laugh carried through rooms. He also never hid his moods. He was definitely the type where if he was in a bad mood, everyone was going to be in a bad mood. In contrast, his good moods were just as contagious, and he could be extremely jolly and talkative. Mary referred to his two moods as "Devil Georgie" and "Angel Georgie."
He definitely was "chaotic" and brought a lot of drama into his otherwise peaceful life. I was trying to compare Nicholas and George, and it has always stood out to me that Nicholas, seemingly feeling the fragility of his private life (severely sick son and unbalanced wife), was incredibly passive and never wanted to rock the boat. George definitely felt secure in his family situation (maybe a little secure at times).
Also, many in his circle thought his antics were funny. His maid would later laugh with him about how he yelled at her for not arranging his things right. His son, George, also enjoyed poking fun at his dad and telling him things to specifically get him into a rage. One of my favorite "chaotic" George stories is when he caught Mary reading "Lady Chatterley's Lover," and went into a rage (saying it was immoral and disgusting), snatching the book and storming out of the room. Later, his son, George, walked into his dad's study, and to his utter shock and amusement, found his dad reading the infamous book. George, being George, went into a rage about the book again, and dramatically threw it in the fire in front of his son. Knowing what I do about George, he was genuinely disgusted by "Lady Chatterley's Lover" (adultery, description of women's sexuality, etc), which makes the whole situation even funnier since I can just imagine the flustered state he was in trying to explain himself when his son caught him reading it.
George, according to the Queen Mother, also had the habit of pinching your arm at the peak of his jokes. She said once, when you left him, your arm was purple and blue.
The ultimate "chaotic" George story (or stories, because this happened a lot) was him chastising women who dressed in the 1920s fashion. On one occasion, he was caught by Mary shouting down from Windsor Castle at a woman. Mary told him to stop at once, he obeyed, with a guilty smile. He also would speak about a woman's bobbed hair or short skirt, when the woman in question was around 5 feet away, yet would speak like she couldn't hear him.
His behavior was very uncommon for upper class British men. I think his naval training was probably the source of his slightly unrefined personality. He reminds me of Prince Philip, who was also in the Navy, and was simiarly unpredictable, blunt, and at times rude. George also, like Philip, had a very aggressive style of banter, but we love both of them anyway💛.
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Extended members of the Royal Family watch the flypast from a inner balcony at Buckingham Palace. Pictured are Timothy & Flora Vesterberg, the Earl of St. Andrews, Lord Nicholas Windsor, and Lady Gabriella and Thomas Kingston. The BBC stated the ongoing renovations at the Palace is the reason for the reduced number of people on the main balcony.
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aimeedaisies · 10 months
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Court Circular | 19th June 2023
Windsor Castle
The King, accompanied by The Queen, The Prince of Wales, The Duke of York, The Duke of Edinburgh, The Princess Royal, The Duke of Gloucester, and The Duke of Kent, today held a Chapter of the Most Noble Order of the Garter in the Throne Room, Windsor Castle.
The Princess of Wales, The Duchess of Edinburgh, Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence and The Duchess of Gloucester were present.
The Baroness Ashton of Upholland and the Lord Patten of Barnes were present.
The following Knights Companion were present: the Lord Butler of Brockwell, the Rt Hon Sir John Major, the Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers, Marshal of the Royal Air Force the Lord Stirrup, the Lady Manningham Buller, the Lord King of Lothbury, the Viscount Brookeborough, Lady Mary Fagan, the Marquess of Salisbury, Lady Mary Peters, the Baroness Amos and the Rt Hon Sir Tony Blair.
The Officers of the Order were: the Dean of Windsor (Register), Mr David White (Garter King of Arms), Miss Sarah Clarke (Lady Usher of the Black Rod) and Mr Patric Dickinson (Secretary).
Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Segrave (Secretary, Central Chancery of the Orders of Knighthood) and Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Thompson (Equerry to The King) were in attendance.
His Majesty invested the Baroness Ashton of Upholland with the Insignia of a Lady Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter and the Lord Patten of Barnes with the Insignia of a Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter.
The King later gave a Luncheon Party for the Companions of the Most Noble Order of the Garter at which The Queen, The Prince and Princess of Wales, The Duke of York, The Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, The Princess Royal and Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence, The Duke and Duchess of Gloucester, and The Duke of Kent were present.
The following had the honour of being invited: the Duke of Abercorn and the Lady Sophie Hamilton, the Lord and Lady Butler of Brockwell, the Rt Hon Sir John Major, the Lord and Lady Phillips of Worth Matravers, Marshal of the Royal Air Force the Lord and Lady Stirrup, the Baroness Manningham-Buller and the Hon Lady Parsons, the Lord and Lady King of Lothbury, the Viscount and Viscountess Brookeborough, Lady Mary Fagan and Captain Christopher Fagan, the Marquess and Marchioness of Salisbury, Lady Mary Peters and Mrs Susan Gaunt, the Rt Hon Sir Tony and Lady Blair, the Baroness Amos and Mr Michael Amos, the Baroness Ashton of Upholland and Mr Peter Kellner, the Lord and Lady Patten of Barnes, the Dean of Windsor, Mr David White, Miss Sarah Clarke, Mr Patric Dickinson, Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Segrave and Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Thompson.
An Installation Service was held in St George’s Chapel this afternoon at which the Baroness Ashton of Upholland and the Lord Patten of Barnes were installed as a Lady Companion and a Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter.
His Majesty’s Body Guard of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms and The King’s Body Guard of the Yeomen of the Guard were on duty in the Chapel.
The King was represented by Sir Kenneth Olisa (His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of Greater London) at the Funeral of Sir David Brewer KG (formerly His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of Greater London and Lord Mayor of London) which was held in the Chapel Royal, St James’s Palace, this morning.
The Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh were represented by Mrs Angus Galletley.
The Princess Royal was represented by Mrs Susanna Cross.
Princess Alexandra, the Hon Lady Ogilvy was represented by Mrs Diane Duke.
St James’s Palace
The Princess Royal, Patron, the Wellington Trust, was represented by Captain Sir Nicholas Wright RN (Extra Equerry to Her Royal Highness) at the Service of Thanksgiving for Captain Stephen Taylor RN (formerly Chairman) which was held in St Bartholomew’s Church, Habin Hill, Rogate, Petersfield, Hampshire, today.
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ladykinrannoch · 2 years
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Vintage Katharine Windsor nee Worsley - Duchess of Kent
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Katharine, Duchess of Kent, GCVO (born Katharine Lucy Mary Worsley; 22 February 1933) is a member of the British royal family.She is married to Prince Edward, Duke of Kent, a first cousin of Queen Elizabeth II.. 
Mother to George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews, Lady Helen Taylor, Lord Nicholas Windsor
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heavyarethecrowns · 2 years
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Regal Weddings Part 4
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corallapis · 10 months
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Henry ‘Chips’ Channon: The Diaries (Vol. 1), 1918-38, entry for 29th June 1923
— Friday 29th June Lunched at Lady Cunard’s. The usual potpourri and brilliant chat. She told Lord Balfour he was like God and ‘yet so Christ-like’! Dined with Michael Horby¹ at Shelley House² and we went to Stop Flirting, the popular revue in which two charming little people, Americans, called Fred and Adele Astaire, are the stars.³ Later a most lovely ball at Someries House⁴ ... Lady Zia Wernher’s.⁵ It was successful indeed and starts a new era in entertaining .... I was presented to a tallish gentleman, the Crown Prince of Sweden⁶ ... he is to marry the Lady Louise Mountbatten.⁷ It will be announced next week. What luck for her as she has only about £300 a year and is living in obscurity at Kensington Palace. The Mountbattens after being degraded during the war⁸ to the rank of mere marquises and earls are now much on the ascendant ... they are ever a lucky family, poverty-stricken, they specialise in brilliant marriages. I sat in the garden with Lady Desborough⁹ and found her witty and wily as ever ... does everyone realise, as I do, that she is the character of the age?
1. Michael Charles St John Hornby (1899-1987), son of St John Hornby, was the founding partner of WH Smith.
2. The Hornby family’s house in Chelsea.
3. Frederick Austerlitz (1899-1987), who took the name Fred Astaire, was an American actor, dancer and singer who achieved worldwide fame in the 1930s in a series of Hollywood musicals renowned for their dance routines; and his sister Adele Marie (1896-1981), with whom he began a vaudeville act as children as 1905, when they changed their name to Astaire. By 1923 they had a Broadway act, which they were touring in London.
4. A Crown State property rented by the Wernhers in Regent’s Park, designed by John Nash and damaged by bombing during the Second World War. It was demolished in 1958.
5. Countess Anastasia Mikhailovna of Torby (1892-1977), elder daughter of the Grand Duke Michael Mikhailovich of Russia, and therefore a great-granddaughter of Tsar Nicholas I. She married, in 1917, Harold Wernher (1893-1973), later 3rd Bt. She was granted the rank and precedence of an earl’s daughter after her marriage and stopped using her Russian title, being known as Lady Zia Wernher thereafter.
6. Oscar Fredrik Wilhelm Olaf Gustaf Adolf (1882-1973), from 1950 King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden. He was the widower of Princess Margaret of Connaught (1882-1920), whom he had married in 1905; she was the cousin of King George V, and had died suddenly while eight months pregnant with her sixth child. 7. Louise Alexandra Marie Irene Mountbatten (1889-1965), previously Princess Louise of Battenberg, married the Crown Prince of Sweden (vide supra) in 1923, and was Queen Consort of Sweden from 1950. She was daughter of Prince Louis of Battenberg, who became 1st Marquess of Milford Haven when renouncing the German titles in 1917. She had earlier turned down proposals from King Manuel II of Portugal and had been secretly engaged to Prince Christopher of Greece, who was unable to marry her because he had no money; a second engagement was to Stuart Hill, an artist, whom she met while nursing in the Great War and who turned out to be homosexual. 8. There was a protracted debate between Lloyd George, King George V and Lord Stamfordham, the King’s private secretary, in 1917 about the titles to be bestowed on German members of the King’s family who had pledged allegiance to him and had been prepared to forfeit their German ranks. The King was cautioned against granting too many titles and to avoid bestowing any dukedoms. The Mountbatten marquessate was a compromise and their rise would indeed be unstoppable, with the surname of members of the House of Windsor becoming Mountbatten-Windsor in 1960, thirteen years after the marriage of the future Queen Elizabeth II to Philip Mountbatten. 9. Ethel ‘Ettie’ Fane (1867-1952), married in 1887 William Henry Grenfell (1855-1945), 1st Baron Desborough, a former Liberal MP who had joined the Conservatives in 1893 over his disagreement with the second Home Rule Bill for Ireland. Their three sons (qqv) predeceased them, two killed in the Great War and a third in a car crash.
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Fun question. Say if all five survived. Who would YOU see married to the Romanov kids? (Including Saint Alexei, if he survived past the disease he have.)
Hmm, well, Olga wanted to "remain Russian," but being the eldest daughter I think there would still be pressure on her for an equal marriage. Dmitri Pavlovich would be off the table after the Rasputin stuff, obviously. So she might have ended up with perhaps Prince Konstantin Konstantinovich, who apparently fancied her.  Another option might be Roman Petrovich. These two are 'only' princes, but they are Romanovs, and she could stay Russian. She'd basically be doing what Xenia did with Sandro, or Olga Alexandrovna's first marriage to Peter of Oldenburg. Also . . . Olga and Vladimir Paley is an interesting idea. He's morganatic so that might be a problem, but he was a thinker and a poet, like her. They could be an interesting match! 
Another option was Prince Christopher of Greece; according to Agnes de Stoeckl, who was a lady-in-waiting of Christopher’s sister Maria Georgievna, he once expressed interest in marrying Olga and went so far as to ask Nicholas about it, who gently turned him down saying Olga was too young. But he was about as “Russian” as a foreign prince could be, having been born at Pavlovsk, speaking the language fluently, and his mother Olga Konstantinovna thought he had inherited a ‘Russian soul’ from her.  I'm torn with Tatiana, because on the one hand she's the most devoted to Alix, so she might want to marry someone in Russia so she could remain with Alix, sort of like Helena and Beatrice did with Queen Victoria. But on the other hand . . . she was clearly the most natural born queen among the girls, and her talents might be wasted if she weren't on a throne somewhere. The most lofty would be David, that is the future Edward VIII/Duke of Windsor. Allegedly he preferred her after their meeting at Cowes. But that would require her changing her religion and perhaps even her name (and I don't think he'd make a good husband), so Alexander of Serbia/Yugoslavia or George II of the Hellenes (Greece) might be a better option. I feel like Maria is the most likely to follow in Olga Alexandrovna's footsteps and marry an officer rather than a prince. I also feel like there would be generally less pressure on the younger daughters to make 'good' matches. I don't think running away with some random soldier she met at the hospital would ever, ever fly, but the officers of the fancy Petersburg regiments were generally well educated and from good, noble and/or military families, and it was pretty clear that Maria had little interest in some grand marriage to a foreign prince. Carol, of course, was a serious contender as her preferred her to Olga, but he was an absolutely terrible husband so I think she'd be much happier with an OA/Kulikovsky type scenario. But I could also see her, like with Olga, marrying a minor relative--after all, most of the Romanov men had military careers, so she could get her ‘soldier’ that way, too!  Anastasia is the biggest mystery to me! I could see her never marrying and remaining the fun, quirky aunt, or surprising everyone by becoming a queen despite being the youngest. The Danish crown prince was about her age, and according to gossip Queen Alexandrine (who had a Romanov mother herself) was hoping for one of the Little Pair for her son. She might fit right in with the fun-loving Danes, and I'm sure Maria Feodorovna would be delighted to see one of her granddaughters marrying back into the Danish family. With Alexei, I tend to think one of the daughters of Elena Vladimirovna would just make a TON of sense. Ileana is an option too, but she's several years younger than him so he would have to wait for her to grow up. She also didn't really have any experience with Russia at all; in contrast, Olga (1903), Elizabeth (1904) and Marina (1906) spent time in Russia every year up until 1914 visiting their Russian relatives so they would be much more familiar with the culture and customs and know more people than Ileana would. It would also be an almost 'Romeo and Juliet' scenario in that the girls were from the Vladimirovichi branch of the family; Alexei marrying one of them would unite the two rival branches, and maybe the Vladimirs would chill out seeing one of their own married to the Heir.
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greymount · 8 months
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#greymount. a multimuse blog featuring canon and original characters. private and selective. extremely low activity. weaved by leaf (25+, she/they, uk). triggering themes present. rules and muse list below cut.
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rules.
rules are incredibly simple: don't be a dick, don't take control of my characters, don't create drama. we're here to have fun. 21+ only. this is a low activity blog so expect limited formatting and no icons. i'm too lazy to make a gdocs/carrd so all information can be found on this blog. duplicate friendly.
muse list.
a song of ice and fire.
aegon targaryen. young griff. bisexual. avan jogia. book canon.
alicent hightower. queen of the seven kingdoms. lesbian. nur fettahoğlu. book canon.
renly baratheon. lord of storm's end. pretender to the iron throne. gay. david corenswet. book canon.
dragon age.
brilwyn lavellan. herald of andraste. bisexual. emilia clarke. inquisitor. original character. info.
edmund grey. lord of portsmouth and dragonmount. gay. nicholas galitzine. companion. original character. info.
rosemund grey. lady of portsmouth and dragonmount. lesbian. ella hunt. companion. original character. info.
fandomless.
stígandr ragnvaldrson. úlfhéðnar. bisexual. leo suter. original character. info.
how to train your dragon.
hiccup horrendous haddock iii. chief of berk. bisexual. jack kane. canon.
lord of the rings.
arwen undómiel. the evenstar. bisexual. beren saat. canon.
marvel.
peter parker. spider-man. bisexual. andrew garfield. earth-616 canon.
red, white, and royal blue.
alexander claremont-diaz. first son. bisexual. taylor zakhar perez. canon.
henry fox-mountchristen-windsor. prince of england. gay. nicholas galitzine. canon.
star wars.
kanan jarrus. spectre one. bisexual. ekin koç. canon (not bad batch compliant).
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charlotte-of-wales · 1 year
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Happy 90th birthday to Katharine, Duchess of Kent!
Born on February 22nd 1933, Katharine Lucy Mary Worsley is the fourth child and only daughter of Sir William Worsley, 4th Baronet, Lord-lieutenant of North Riding, and his wife Joyce Morgan Brunner, and wife to Prince Edward, Duke of Kent.
The couple have three children: George, Earl of St Andrews, Lady Helen Taylor, and Lord Nicholas Windsor. In the 90s Katharine stepped down from her royal duties and is now a music teacher.
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