Ingrid of Sweden (Ingrid Victoria Sofia Louise Margareta; 28 March 1910 – 7 November 2000) was Queen of Denmark from 20 April 1947 to 14 January 1972 as the wife of King Frederik IX and continued to be styled Queen Ingrid of Denmark after his death.
Born into the House of Bernadotte, she was the daughter of King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden and his first wife, Princess Margaret of Connaught.
Ingrid was born on 28 March 1910, at the Royal Palace in Stockholm as the third child and the only daughter of Gustaf Adolf, Crown Prince of Sweden and his first wife, Princess Margaret of Connaught.
Her mother was a daughter of Queen Victoria's third son Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn by his wife Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia.
She was baptised Ingrid Victoria Sofia Louise Margareta in Slottskyrkan (the Royal Chapel) in Stockholm, Sweden on 5 May 1910.
Her godparents were: the King and Queen of Sweden (her paternal grandparents); the Dowager Queen of Sweden (her paternal great-grandmother); the Duke and Duchess of Connaught and Strathearn (her maternal grandparents); the Dowager Grand Duchess of Baden (her paternal great-grandmother); the Empress of Russia (her mother's paternal first cousin); Princess Alexander of Teck (her mother's paternal first cousin); the Prince of Wales (her mother's paternal first cousin); Prince Adalbert of Prussia (her maternal second cousin); the Grand Duchess of Baden (her grandaunt); and the Dowager Duchess of Dalarna (her great-grandaunt).
Ingrid and her family lived in apartments in the Royal Palace in Stockholm, in a mansion at Ulriksdal, near the capital, and in a summer residence, Sofiero Palace in Helsingborg, Scania in southern Sweden.
Crown Princess Margaret founded a school for Ingrid with a small circle of Swedish noble girls.
Ingrid was also given some domestic instruction as part of her education.
As a child, she practiced cooking in her model cottage on the palace grounds and even washed the dishes after meals.
The ability for a girl to cook, sew, and manage a household was seen as important at the time for royalty.
1920
In 1920, when Ingrid was just ten years old, her mother died from sepsis while in the eighth month of her sixth pregnancy.
After her mother's death, Ingrid spent several months of each year in the United Kingdom in the care of her grandfather.
Observers suggested that Ingrid's strong self-discipline was shaped as an effect of her mother's death.
Her father remarried Lady Louise Mountbatten three years later.
Louise was a second cousin of Ingrid's. Only a stillborn daughter resulted from her father's second marriage.
Ingrid felt betrayed by her father when he remarried, and she was unkind to Crown Princess Louise.
Ingrid and her father would not reconcile until many years later.
Ingrid was taught history, art history, political science, and learned several languages.
Her knowledge of art and culture was extended by long stays in Paris and Rome.
The question of Ingrid's marriage was a hot topic of conversation in the 1920s.
She was matched with various foreign royalties and was seen by some as a possible wife for the heir apparent to the British throne, the Prince of Wales, who was her second cousin.
Her mother, Margaret of Connaught, and the then-Prince of Wales' father, King George V, were first cousins, both being grandchildren of Queen Victoria.
1928
Ingrid made her debut at the opening of the Swedish Riksdag in 1928 when she was noted to be “smartly dressed.” She was also noted to be an accomplished linguist, horsewoman, skier and skater, and dancer.
Ingrid often played tennis against her grandfather King Gustav V.
During her young adulthood, Ingrid was often seen driving her two-seat car around Stockholm.
Besides gaining a reputation as a stylish young woman, Ingrid was known as being quite attractive.
In 1928, Ingrid met the Prince of Wales in London.
However, no engagement took place.
She was also considered as a match for Prince George of the United Kingdom, the fourth son of King George V.
1934
Along with her father, stepmother and brother Prince Bertil, Ingrid took a five-month journey through the Middle East in 1934 - 1935.
Ingrid interested in sports, especially horse-riding, skiing and tennis.
1935
In 1935, she married Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark and they had three daughters: Margrethe II, Queen of Denmark from 1972 to 2024; Benedikte, now a princess of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg; and Anne-Marie, the former queen of the Hellenes.
On 15 March 1935, shortly before her 25th birthday, she was engaged to Frederik, the Crown Prince of Denmark and Iceland, who was 11 years her senior.
They were related in several ways.
As descendants of Oscar I of Sweden, they were third cousins.
1939
After her visit to the United States in 1939, Americans described Ingrid as "tall and very slender" with a "nicely modeled mouth and exquisite teeth."
1947
In 1947, her husband became king on his father's death.
As queen, Ingrid reformed the traditions of Danish court life, abolished many old-fashioned customs at court and created a more relaxed atmosphere at official receptions.
1972
King Frederik IX died in 1972, and Ingrid's daughter Margrethe became queen.