Princess Ragnhild, Mrs. Lorentzen

Former

Birthday June 9, 1930

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Royal Palace, Oslo, Norway

DEATH DATE 2012-9-16, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (82 years old)

Nationality Norway

#39022 Most Popular

1930

Princess Ragnhild, Mrs Lorentzen (Ragnhild Alexandra; 9 June 1930 – 16 September 2012), was the eldest child of King Olav V of Norway and Princess Märtha of Sweden.

She was the older sister of King Harald V and Princess Astrid.

She was the first Norwegian royal to have been born in Norway since the Middle Ages.

She was christened in the Palace Chapel on 27 June 1930 and her godparents were: her paternal grandparents, The King and Queen of Norway; her maternal grandparents, The Duke and Duchess of Västergötland; her great uncle, The King of Sweden; her great aunt, Princess Victoria of the United Kingdom; her maternal aunt, Princess Axel of Denmark; and The Duke of York.

1940

In 1940, during World War II, she and her family fled the German invasion of Norway, and she spent the wartime years in exile with her mother and siblings in Bethesda, Maryland, located northwest of Washington, D.C. Before the birth of her younger brother, it was assumed she would accede to the throne in the absence of a male heir, although this would have required a constitutional amendment, as women could not inherit the throne at the time.

1947

Her Confirmation took place on 11 May 1947 in the Palace Chapel.

1948

Following the royal family's return to Norway she attended Nissen's Girls' School, obtaining her school leaving certificate in 1948.

She later spent four semesters, between 1948 and 1949, studying at a finishing school in Lausanne, Switzerland.

1952

Princess Ragnhild opened the 1952 Winter Olympics in Oslo, Norway, as her father and grandfather were attending the funeral of King George VI.

1953

In 1953 she married the industrialist Erling Lorentzen, a member of the Lorentzen family of shipping magnates.

In the same year they moved to Brazil, where her husband was an industrialist and a main owner of Aracruz Celulose.

She lived in Brazil until her death 59 years later.

Although she was the King's eldest child, she was never in the line of succession to the Norwegian throne, owing to Norway's law of agnatic succession.

Princess Ragnhild married Erling Lorentzen, a member of the Norwegian merchant upper-class (see Lorentzen family), in Asker Church on 15 May 1953.

Lorentzen was a businessman and army officer who had served as her bodyguard during the War.

Following her marriage, the couple moved to Rio de Janeiro, where her husband had substantial business holdings.

1995

Although a private person, in 1995 Ragnhild decided to write her autobiography (this was penned with the help of author Lars O. Gulbrandsen) published under the title, “Mitt liv som kongsdatter” [My Life as a King’s Daughter].

2004

A conservative, Princess Ragnhild publicly criticized her niece and nephew, Princess Märtha Louise and Crown Prince Haakon Magnus, for their choice of spouses, in 2004.

Princess Ragnhild was patron of the Norwegian Organisation for the Hearing Impaired.

Several ships, including MS Prinsesse Ragnhild, were named for her.

2012

Their residence in Brazil was originally temporary, but they eventually settled there, and remained in Rio until Ragnhild's death in 2012.

In Brazil, her husband founded Aracruz Celulose.

The couple had three children:

Princess Ragnhild died of lung cancer at her home in Rio de Janeiro on 16 September 2012, aged 82.

Her body arrived in Oslo on 24 September 2012, where her brother King Harald V and her sister Princess Astrid were present to greet her alongside her spouse Erling and their children.

The funeral of Princess Ragnhild was held on 28 September 2012 in the chapel of the Royal Palace of Oslo.

She was later cremated and privately interred in the church of Asker.

A 540 000 km2 area in Antarctica is named Princess Ragnhild Coast in her honour.

The Jahre Line (later Color Line) cruiseferry MS Prinsesse Ragnhild was named in her honour.

She was a great-great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and great-granddaughter of Edward VII of the United Kingdom, thus a second cousin to Queen Elizabeth II.

2016

She was in the line of succession to the British throne, and occupied the 16th and 17th place in that succession line during her childhood and youth.

Princess Ragnhild was the first Norwegian princess to have been born on Norwegian soil for 629 years.

She grew up at the royal residence of Skaugum near Asker, west of Oslo.

2017

At the time of her birth she was 17th in the line of succession to the British throne, and 77th at the time of her death.

Princess Ragnhild's maternal aunt was Queen Astrid of Belgium, which also made Princess Ragnhild a first cousin of kings Baudouin and Albert II of Belgium and of Joséphine-Charlotte of Belgium, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg.

Through her maternal grandmother, Princess Ingeborg of Denmark, she was also a second cousin of Queen Margrethe II of Denmark and Queen Anne Marie of Greece as well as a second cousin once removed of King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden through her maternal grandfather Prince Carl of Sweden.