![]() |
Prince George of Greece and Denmark(From Wikipedia) |
|
Prince George of Greece and Denmark, known as Uncle Goggy to his family, (Greek: Πρίγκιπας Γεώργιος) (24 June 1869–25 November 1957) was the second son of King George I of Greece and Grand Duchess Olga. He acted as high commissioner of Crete during its transition towards independence from Ottoman rule and union with Greece.
In 1883, King George had taken the boy to Denmark to enlist him in the Danish navy, and consigned him to the care of his brother, Prince Valdemar of Denmark, who was an admiral in the Danish fleet. Feeling abandoned by his father on this occasion, George would later tell his fiancée, Princess Marie Bonaparte, "From that day, from that moment on, I loved him and I have never had any other friend but him...You will love him too, when you meet him."[1]
In 1891, he accompanied Tsar Nicholas II on his trip to Asia as Tsarevich, and saved him from an assassination attempt in Japan, in what became known as the Otsu Incident.
Prince George, along with his brothers Constantine and Nicolas, were involved with the organization of the 1896 Summer Olympics in Athens. George served as president of the Sub-Committee for Nautical Sports.
Although much of modern Greece had been independent since the 1820s, Crete remained in Ottoman hands. For the rest of the 19th century, there had been many rebellions and protests on the island. A Greek force arrived to annex the island in 1897 and the Great Powers acted, occupying the island and dividing it into British, French, Russian and Italian areas of control.
In 1898, Turkish troops were ejected and a national government was set up, still nominally under Ottoman suzerainty. Prince George, not yet thirty, was made High Commissioner and a joint Muslim-Christian assembly was part-elected, part-appointed. However, this was not enough to satisfy Cretan nationalists.
Eleftherios Venizelos was the leader of the movement to reunite Crete with Greece. He had fought in the earlier revolts and was now a member of the Assembly, acting as minister of justice to Prince George. They soon found themselves opposed. Prince George, a staunch royalist, had assumed absolute power.[citation needed] Venizelos led the opposition to this. In 1905, however, he summoned an illegal revolutionary assembly in Theriso, in the hills near Chania, the then capital of the island.[citation needed]
During the revolt, the newly-created Cretan Gendarmerie remained faithful to Prince George. In this difficult period, the Cretan population were divided: in the 1906 elections the pro-Prince parties took 38,127 votes, while pro-Venizelos parties took 33,279. But the Gendarmerie managed to execute its duties without taking sides. Finally, British diplomats brokered a settlement and in September 1906 Prince George was replaced by former Greek prime minister Alexandros Zaimis, and left the island. In 1908, the Cretan Assembly unilaterally declared "enosis" with Greece.
Prince George was married in 1907 to Princess Marie Bonaparte, daughter of Prince Roland Bonaparte, an heiress to the Blanc fortune through her mother. They had two children - Petros and Evgenia. Peter (1908-1980) was an anthropologist, while their daughter Eugenie (1910-1988) married HSH Prince Dominic Radziwill (1939), whom she divorced in 1948. Her second husband was HSH Prince Raymundo della Torre e Tasso, Duke of Castel Duino whom she married in 1949 and divorced in 1965.
On 21 February, 1957 Princess Marie and her husband celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. Prince George died only four days later, aged eighty-eight. Prince George was the longest-living dynast of the House of Oldenburg of his generation.
Georgioupolis, a coastal resort between Chania and Rethimno, was named after Prince George.
| Styles of Prince George of Greece |
|
| Reference style | His Royal Highness |
|---|---|
| Spoken style | Your Royal Highness |
| Alternative style | Sir |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
{{lifetime|1869|1957|George of Greece, Prince]]
