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8 Infamous Royal Scandals [Article from 15/03/24]

These scandals drew public fascination and scrutiny, compromising the mystique of monarchies across Europe.

Amy Robsart and the Earl of Leicester, circa 1827. Credit: Ashmolean Museum/Heritage Images/Getty Images

Royal scandals are nothing new. A crown does not buy immunity from trials of love, loss, and infidelity, though in many cases, it bought immunity from consequences. Most of the kings and queens of Europe claimed rule by divine right, but their very human faults cracked the mystique surrounding the monarchyโ€ฆ while giving their subjects something to talk about. Below are eight royal scandals that undermined the credibility of monarchies across Europe.

1. The Suspicious Death of Amy Robsart, 1560

Queen Elizabeth Iย of England never married, though she did have a favorite at court: Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, her Master of Horse… and a married man. โ€œRobert Dudleyโ€™s fame in Europe rested on his power and influence with the Queen of England,โ€ says Christine Hartweg, author ofย Amy Robsart: A Life and its End.

Rumours of their alleged affair intensified when Dudleyโ€™s wife, Amy Robsart, was found dead on September 8, 1560 at the foot of the stairs in her mansion with a broken neck. She was just 28 years old. Theย coronerโ€™s reportย ruled her cause of death to be โ€œmisadventure.โ€ Dudley did not attend his wifeโ€™s funeral, fanning speculation of foul play, especially after the Spanish ambassador to the English court claimed that in a conversation just months before his wifeโ€™s death, Dudley had said he would beย โ€œin a new positionโ€ in a yearโ€”a claim that seemed to substantiate rumours that he killed his wife to free himself to marry Queen Elizabeth. If this was his plan, it backfired. โ€œIt is often argued that the scandal surrounding Amy’s death prevented Elizabeth from marrying Robert Dudley,โ€ says Hartweg. โ€œDudley himself seems to have hoped for many, many years that she would eventually marry him.โ€

2. Count Philipp Christoph vonย Kรถnigsmark Disappears After Royal Affair, 1694

Princess Sophia Dorothea of Celle married her cousin, King George I of England, in 1682. Their marriage was not a happy one, and she soon ran afoul of her powerful mother-in-law and husband. Princess Sophia took a lover, Swedish Count Philipp Christoph vonย Kรถnigsmark, and made plans to run away with him. But on the scheduled day,ย the count disappearedย and was never seen again. George divorced Sophia and she lived out the rest of her days in prison. The countโ€™s body was never found and rumours persist that King George had his wifeโ€™s lover executed.

3. The Diamond Necklace Affair, 1784-5

A missing necklace costย Marie Antoinetteย of France her head. Theย 2,000,000-livres necklaceย was designed for Madame du Barry,ย mistressย of former king Louis XV. The king died before it was paid for, sending the jewellers into debt.

Enter Jeanne de Valois-Saint-Rรฉmy, a social climber who called herself the โ€œComtesse de la Motteโ€ and claimed to be descended from the royal Valois family. She became mistress to Cardinal de Rohan, who had fallen out of Marie-Antoinetteโ€™s favor and desperately wanted to regain it. La Motte pretended to be close with the queen and offered to pass letters between the cardinal and her majesty. The โ€œrepliesโ€ she passed to the cardinal were forgeries. In them, she asked the cardinal to lend her the money to buy the infamous necklace. She even arranged a late-night meeting between the cardinal and the queen at Versailles, hiring a prostitute to pose as Marie Antoinette.

When the cardinal bought the necklace on an instalment plan, La Motte had her husband sell the diamonds in London. After a missing payment, the jewellers complained to Marie Antoinette, who revealed she had no knowledge of the purchase.

Kingย Louis XVIย and Marie Antoinette prosecuted La Motte and her conspirators, but La Motte escaped from prison and spread rumours that Marie Antoinette was to blame. It would be the final grievance in aย long listย that led Marie Antoinette to theย guillotine inย 1793.

4. The Mayerling Incident, 1889

On January 30, 1889, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire wasย found deadย in his hunting lodge in Mayerling alongside the body of his teenage lover. Crown Prince Rudolf had shot Baroness Maria Vetsera before turning the gun on himself in an apparent murder-suicide. Rudolfโ€™s father,ย Emperor Franz Joseph I, concealed documents related to the case, though Rudolfโ€™s wife, Crown Princess Stephanie, published Rudolfโ€™s allegedย last letter to her: โ€œYou are relieved of my presence and vexations; be happy in your own wayโ€ฆI go calmly to my death.โ€

5. The Kotze Scandal, 1891

Within two years, another royal hunting lodge became the scene of a sex scandal that would make even the fictional Lady Whistledown blush. The court of the last German emperor,ย Kaiser Wilhelm II, was rocked in 1891 when the Kaiserโ€™s sister, Princess Charlotte, invited members of the aristocracy to Jagdschloss Grunewald to indulge in orgies. Private details about partygoers and the sex acts they performed were made public in a series of anonymous letters that included graphic drawings. Outed individuals subject to this blackmail included the kingโ€™s own master of ceremonies,ย Leberecht von Kotze.

Kotze was briefly imprisoned by the emperor. Upon his release, he began to challenge the men who had been at the private parties to duels, hoping to root out who had betrayed him to the public. He eventually died in one of the duels. Historians point toย Princess Charlotte as the likely whistleblower, though the true author has never been confirmed.

6. Edward VIIIโ€™s Abdication, 1936

Edward VIIIย was the first English monarch to abdicate the throne voluntarily. Heย gave up the crownย in 1936 after his choice of bride-to-be caused a national scandal.

Wallis Simpson, an American heiress, had been divorced twice and was technically still married to her second husband when she began her affair with the heir to the British throne.ย The Church of Englandย condemned remarriage after divorce, and when Edward became king in January of 1936, he also became the Head of the Church of England, prompting then-Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin to threaten to have his cabinet resign if Edward married Simpson.

The Kingโ€™s choice of partner was debated inย Parliamentย and made front page news across Britain. Edward VIII abdicated the British throne on December 10, 1936. In a radio broadcast a day later, he explained his choice to his subjects: โ€œI have found it impossible to carry on the heavy burden of responsibility and to discharge the duties of king, as I would wish to do, without the help and support of the woman I love.โ€

Some scholars have contested that the marriage scandal was a front for a more troubling trait in the king: Hisย Naziย sympathies. Afterย marrying Simpson on June 3, 1937, the former king spent part of hisย honeymoon in Nazi Germany, where he met with Gestapo founderย Hermann Gรถring, Propaganda Ministerย Joseph Goebbels, and evenย Hitlerย himself.

Did you know?ย Winston Churchillย was so concerned about Edwardโ€™s loyalties duringย World War IIย that he named him governor of the Bahamas and kept Edward there for the duration of the war.

7. Juan Carlos I of Spain Shoots His 14-Year-Old Brother Dead, 1956

On March 29, 1956, the 14-year-old Infante [Prince] Alfonso of Spain was shot in the forehead with a .22-caliber revolver. Several accounts of what happened that night exist, but one thing is clear: The shooter was the princeโ€™s own brother, 18-year-old Juan Carlos. The boysโ€™ father, Infante Juan, rushed into the room and attempted to revive his son, but the teenager died in his arms. The death was ruled accidental and no autopsy was performed. After his burial, the exiled kingย threw the pistolย that had fired the fatal shot into the ocean.

This was far from the last controversy to plague Juan Carlos. Heย abdicated the throne in 2014ย and left Spain in 2020 following a series ofย financial scandals.

8. Queen Elizabethโ€™s ‘Annus Horribilis,’ 1992

Queen Elizabeth IIย called 1992 her โ€œAnnus Horribilisโ€ after a series of misfortunes plagued the royal family. Prince Andrew, Princess Anne, andย Prince Charlesย announced their divorces;ย Windsor Castle caught fire; and leaked phone calls and an explosive book intensified the โ€œWar of the Walesesโ€ between heir to the throne Prince Charles and Princess Diana.

Andrew Mortonโ€™sย Diana: Her True Storyย namedย Camilla Parker Bowlesย as Prince Charlesโ€™s lover and divulged details aboutย Princess Dianaโ€™sย mental health struggles.ย โ€œMortonโ€™s book effectively shattered the mystique of the monarchy,โ€ saysย Carly Ledbetter,ย a senior reporter at HuffPost who covers the royal family. โ€œOne could easily conclude that The Firm was messy, it was human, and it wasnโ€™t as impenetrable as everyone thought.โ€

Scrutiny intensified when phone conversations between Diana and her lover, James Gilbey, were released, followed by a private conversation between Charles and Camilla. The media had a field day, nicknaming the scandals โ€œSquidgeygateโ€ and Tampongateโ€ based on intimate details from the calls. โ€œTampongate and Squidgeygate had an enormous impact on the credibility of the royal family,โ€ says Ledbetter. โ€œThe recorded phone calls greatly impacted the public perception of the heir to the throne and called into question Charlesโ€™ ability to one day be king.โ€

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