Crown Illusion: European Royalty and Their Disenchanted Lives
The lifestyle of the royals sometimes fascinated us, the magnificent carriages, the sparkling tiaras and jewels and the fussy titles slinking their names.
I’ve always been fascinated with the history and lifestyle of the European Royals that I made a strenuous research about their exalted circle. For 12 years now my research journey brought me closer to the intricacies of their amusing lives. The subject of the royals is one of the most complicated topics I’d ever encountered probably because of its subtleties and dimensions: the strict royal protocol, the hierarchy of their social status and the complication of its functions in the royal court. Then there’s a constant debate of how accurate your article is.
My first attempt to chronicle the life of the royals is physically draining, a tedious task that give me constant back pains and blurring vision but somehow provided me a perfect view on how to joggle into the royal world. It is an exciting experience to finally uncover the secrets of their existence; that their lives perfect as it may seems has many loopholes as ordinary folks too. The different controversies that haunted their exceptional circles, the troubled water they are traversing and the high prize they paid for being “untouchables”. Their glamorous and extravagant lifestyle maybe envied and the ancient rituals of prancing horses and gun carriages are simply mesmerizing but their lives, run by protocol and-sometimes- dictated by traditions, are excruciatingly painful and miserable.
Prior to the 20th century, royals are treated as demigods by their subjects that commoners are not allowed to mix let alone join their illustrious court. During that period in Britain, homosexuals and divorced persons are not allowed in the presence of the monarch, prompting one reporter to comment, “it is possible for a homosexual and a divorce person to enter the Kingdom of God but not in the palaces of Great Britain”. Divorce was such a disgrace state at that time that direct family of the ruling sovereign was prohibited to mix with divorce people. Anybody who attempted this suffered a sad fate. Edward VIII of England was the first modern King who voluntarily gave up his throne to marry his divorce lover whom his family despised and dismissively branded as “unholy”. No divorce person mounted the British throne since King George I, the first of the Hanoverian monarchs in the 18th century assumed the throne and no divorce sovereign ruled the Kingdom since King Henry VIII divorces his 4th wife Princess Anne of Cleves in the 16th century. Two grandsons of King Christian X of Denmark lost their princely titles and inheritance for marrying commoners and King Gustav V’s grandsons were stripped of the Prince title for not choosing wives from the existing royal houses of Europe.
Today, as the modern age slowly overtaking the medieval concept of royalty, European monarchies welcomed the new changes as part of their existence. As personal choice is stronger than royal protocol and decorum, some of the ruling sovereigns give way to the call of times. The first to submit these sweeping changes was King Olaf V of Norway, a first cousin to King George VI of Britain, when he allowed his only son and successor Prince Harald to marry the commoner Sonja in 1971, though Harald’s royal relatives wanted him to marry the Princess Irene of Greece, daughter of King Paul I of Greece and sister of Queen Sofia of Spain, the future Norwegian monarch chooses his commoner girlfriend, disappointing his relatives’ wishes. Princess Irene remained single up to these days, savoring the hopes of her failed royal match with King Harald V, she is now leaving in Spain.
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Post Commentalisa
On May 28, 2008 at 1:27 am
wow,what an astonishing reseach about royalty.I loved it.
Michael
On May 28, 2008 at 8:16 am
Sugoi Desu Yo!!! it means great and excellent job…I love it!
elvie
On May 28, 2008 at 7:47 pm
i like it
diet
On May 30, 2008 at 12:14 am
ohhhhhhhhh ahhhhhhhhhhh fabulous!
albert
On June 2, 2008 at 1:44 am
i am also interested digging the lives of the royals but no enough time for research.could you post some more about them?i like this post.
grace
On October 8, 2008 at 1:42 am
how astounding to know the flaws on the private lives of the royals when we think that they lived an almost perfect lives. Well, despite their status they remained human beings just like the rest of us.