Princess Alexia of Greece and Denmark

Birthday July 10, 1965

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Mon Repos, Corfu, Kingdom of Greece

Age 58 years old

Nationality Greece

#35640 Most Popular

1952

The Greek Constitution of 1952 had changed Greece's order of succession to the throne from the previous Salic law, prevalent in much of the continent, and which precluded the succession of women, to male-preference primogeniture, which accorded succession to the throne to a female member of a dynasty if she has no brothers, similar to the then extant succession laws of the United Kingdom, Denmark and Spain.

Alexia grew up in exile and was raised in between Rome and London.

In Rome, she and her brothers were tutored privately by Jon Kanellopoulos.

These private lessons eventually became open to other Greek children living in Rome and lessons would take place in their summerhouse garden rooms.

The family then briefly moved to Denmark and stayed at Amalienborg Palace, and then to London the following year.

Prior to Alexia's education at the Hellenic College of London, she attended the Miss Surtee's School for Boys and Girls in Rome, Italy.

1965

Princess Alexia of Greece and Denmark (Αλεξία; born 10 July 1965) is the eldest child of Constantine II and Anne-Marie, who were King and Queen of Greece from 1964 until the abolition of the monarchy in 1973.

She was heiress presumptive to the Greek throne from her birth in 1965 until the birth of her brother Crown Prince Pavlos in 1967.

Alexia was born on 10 July 1965 at Mon Repos, a villa on the Greek island of Corfu used at the time as a summer residence by the Greek royal family.

She was the first child born to the then King Constantine II and Queen Anne-Marie of the Hellenes.

At the time of her birth, her father was King of Greece, her grandfather was King of Denmark, and her great-grandfather was King of Sweden.

1967

As the monarch's only child, between her own birth and the birth on 20 May 1967 of her brother Pavlos, Alexia was heir presumptive to the throne of the Hellenes, then an extant monarchy.

1985

After Hellenic College, she went to the Froebel College of the Roehampton Institute, a division of the University of Surrey, in 1985 and took a BA in History and Education in 1988.

1989

In 1989, she achieved a Post Graduate Certificate of Education and became a primary school teacher in the inner city area of Southwark in London between 1989 and 1992 before moving to Barcelona where she became a teacher of children with developmental disabilities.

1999

On 9 July 1999, Alexia married Carlos Javier Morales Quintana, an architect and a champion yachtsman, at St. Sophia Cathedral, London.

In May 1999, two months before their wedding, Alexia and Carlos were involved in a yachting accident on a boat named the Alexia.

Alexia and Carlos were the only two people out of the thirteen on board to be injured.

Alexia suffered a broken collarbone and Carlos a fractured kneecap.

Plans for their wedding to be delayed were in place, however both were able to recover beforehand.

At her wedding, Alexia wore a gown by the Austrian designer Inge Sprawson.

She also wore a Cartier diamond tiara that previously belonged to Margaret of Connaught.

The same tiara was worn by the brides at the weddings of Alexia's mother, Anne-Marie, and grandmother, Ingrid.

Her attendants included her sister Princess Theodora, her niece Princess Maria-Olympia, and Princess Mafalda, daughter of Kyril, Prince of Preslav, a son of former King Simeon of Bulgaria.

Their wedding was preceded by a royal ball, two days prior.

The couple have four children:

Their children's last names are "Morales y de Grecia", which translates to "Morales and of Greece", taking their father's surname and their mother's royal title.

Alexia and her family now live in her husband's native land, at Puerto Calero marina, Yaiza, Lanzarote in the Canary Islands, in a house designed by her husband.

The Canary Islands are an autonomous community of Spain, where Alexia's aunt, Queen Sofía, lives and first cousin, Felipe VI, lives and rules.