Sophie af Grækenland
Sophie af Grækenland | |
---|---|
Personlig information | |
Kæle/øgenavn | Tiny |
Født | 26. juni 1914 Mon Repos, Grækenland |
Død | 24. november 2001 (87 år) München, Bayern, Tyskland |
Gravsted | Schliersee |
Far | Andreas af Grækenland |
Mor | Alice af Battenberg |
Søskende | Cecilie af Grækenland, Margarita af Grækenland, Theodora af Grækenland, Prins Philip, hertug af Edinburgh |
Ægtefæller | Christoph af Hessen-Kassel (1930-1943), Georg Wilhelm af Hannover (1946-2001) |
Børn | Rainer af Hessen, Karl af Hessen, Welf Ernst af Hannover, Georg af Hannover, Friederike af Hannover, Christina af Hesse, Dorothea af Hessen, Clarissa af Hessen |
Familie | Prins Edward af Storbritannien (nevø, gudsøn) |
Uddannelse og virke | |
Beskæftigelse | Aristokrat |
Information med symbolet hentes fra Wikidata. Kildehenvisninger foreligger sammesteds. |
Prinsesse Sophie af Grækenland og Danmark (græsk: Πριγκίπισσα Σοφία της Ελλάδας και Δανίας) (født 26. juni 1914, død 24. november 2001) var en græsk prinsesse, der var den yngste datter af Prins Andreas af Grækenland og Prinsesse Alice af Battenberg. Prinsesse Sophie blev gift to gange med tyske prinser: med Prins Christoph af Hessen i 1930, og efter dennes død med Prins Georg Vilhelm af Hannover i 1946.
Hun tilhørte Huset Slesvig-Holsten-Sønderborg-Glücksborg og var storesøster til den tidligere britiske prinsgemal Prins Philip, hertug af Edinburgh.
Referencer
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Litteratur
- Bramsen, Bo (1992). Huset Glücksborg. Europas svigerfader og hans efterslægt (2. udgave). København: Forlaget Forum. ISBN 87-553-1843-6.
Eksterne henvisninger
Spire Denne artikel om en kongelig eller fyrstelig person er en spire som bør udbygges. Du er velkommen til at hjælpe Wikipedia ved at udvide den. |
Spire Denne artikel om en kongelig eller fyrstelig person er en spire som bør udbygges. Du er velkommen til at hjælpe Wikipedia ved at udvide den. |
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Forfatter/Opretter: Odejea, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
Couronne royale en héraldique allemande
Source : Héraldique Européenne
July 1922: Princess Sophie of Greece, sister of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, at the wedding of20th-century black and white portrait photographs of boyso the Countess of Ashley. She married Prince Christopher of Hesse, and in 1946 married Prince George William of Hanover. (Photo by Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
Coat of arms of the Kingdom of Greece in 1936–1973
- Royal Coat of Arms of Greece under the Glücksburg dynasty, created after the restoration of King George II to the throne in 1935, to the exile of King Constantine II in 1967 and finally until the abolition of the monarchy in 1973.
- The Escutcheon features the white cross on a dark blue field of Greece. The Inescutcheon features the Arms of the Greek line of the House of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg. The shield is then topped with a golden Royal Crown.
- It features an escutcheon divided by the red and white cross of the Order of the Danneborg, the first quarter features the arms of Denmark (three crowned blue lions and nine hearts in yellow field). The second of Schleswig (two blue lions passant in yellow field). The third divided into four; the chief features the three royal crowns in blue field of Sweden, the second half with a crowned stockfish on red field of Iceland and the last half divided between the ram of the Faroe Islands and a polar bear of Greenland, both on blue fields. The fourth quarter is divided between two halves, the chief depicts a yellow field with a blue lion passant over nine red hearts of the King of the Goths, the lower half depicts a crowned golden lindorm on a red field of the King of the Wends.
- Upon it is another inescutcheon in red, divided into four quarters: the first a a silver nettle leaf of Holstein, the second the a swan with a golden crown of Stormarn, the third a knight dressed in golden armor on a silver horse of Dithmarschen and the fourth of a golden horse's head of Lauenburg.
- Upon it is another inescutcheon divided the first features the red and yellow bars of Oldenburg, the second a golden cross on a blue field of Delmenhorst.
- The escutcheon rests on a golden pedestal and supported by two human figures representing the Greek mythological hero Herakles (Heracles), holding a wooden club and wearing the skin of the Nemean lion.
- The escutcheon is surrounded by the ribbon and cross of the Order of the Redeemer, the cross depicts Christ Pantocrator, surrounded by the order's motto:"Η ΔΕΞΙΑ ΣΟΥ ΧΕΙΡ, ΚΥΡΙΕ, ΔΕΔΟΞΑΣΤΑΙ ΕΝ ΙΣΧΥΙ" or "Thy right hand, O Lord, is become glorious in power" from Exodus, 15:6.
- The motto of the Coat of arms and of the dynasty, depicted on a golden ribbon below the pedestal reads: "Ἰσχύς μου ἡ ἀγάπη τοῦ λαοῦ" or "The people's love, my strength"
- The coat of arms is then surrounded by a dark blue mantle and topped with another royal crown.