Princess Ileana of Romania

Princess Ileana of Romania, also known as Mother Alexandra (5 January 1909 – 21 January 1991), was the youngest daughter of King Ferdinand I of Romania and his consort, Queen Marie of Romania. She was a great-granddaughter of Emperor Alexander II of Russia, King Ferdinand II, Queen Maria II of Portugal, and Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. She was born as Her Royal Highness Princess Ileana of Romania, Princess of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen.

Princess Ileana
Born(1909-01-05)5 January 1909
Cotroceni Palace, Bucharest, Kingdom of Romania
Died21 January 1991(1991-01-21) (aged 82)
Youngstown, Ohio, U.S.
Burial
Orthodox Cemetery of the Transfiguration, Ellwood City, Pennsylvania[1]
Spouse
(m. 1931; div. 1954)
    Dr. Stefan Nikolas Issarescu
    (m. 1954; div. 1965)
    IssueArchduke Stefan
    Archduchess Maria Ileana
    Archduchess Alexandra
    Archduke Dominic
    Archduchess Maria Magdalena
    Archduchess Elisabeth
    HouseHohenzollern-Sigmaringen
    FatherFerdinand I of Romania (officially)
    Barbu Știrbey (rumored)
    MotherMarie of Edinburgh

    Birth and early life

    Princess Ileana of Romania with her second cousin, Tsesarevich Alexei of Russia
    Princess Ileana of Romania

    Ileana was born in Bucharest on 5 January 1909, the youngest daughter of Queen Marie of Romania and King Ferdinand I of Romania. Ileana had four older siblings: Carol, Elisabeth – later Queen of Greece, Princess Maria – later Queen of Yugoslavia, and Nicholas; and a younger brother Mircea.

    Her mother wrote in her memoirs:

    Ileana  from  her  earliest  infancy  had  an  earnestness  about  her  which the  other  four  did  not  possess.  Her  large  dark  blue  eyes  looked  at  you with  deep  inquiry  and  the  child  seemed  to  understand  your  every  emotion with  almost  uncanny  lucidity.

    Ileana  was  naturally  well-behaved ; Ileana,  as  is  so  seldom  the  case, was  born  with  the  law  within  her,  it  was  never  necessary  to  teach  Ileana the  difference  between  right  and  wrong ; Ileana  knew.  But  this  did  not make  of  her  a prig,  she  was  a gay,  happy  child,  full  of  life  and  high spirits,  and  when  Mircea  appeared  early  in  the  year  1913,  Ileana  loved him  with  motherly  ardour  and  Mircea  adored  Ileana  more  than  anyone on  this  earth ; more  than  his  mother,  more  than  his  nurse.[2]

    Girl Guiding

    Before her marriage, Ileana was the organizer and Chief of the Romanian Girl Guide Movement.

    Later, Princess Ileana was involved in Guiding in Austria and served as president of the Austrian Girl Guides.[3][4] From 1935 until Girl Guiding and Scouting were banned in 1938 after the Anschluss.

    Other achievements

    Ileana was the organizer of the Girl Reserves of the Red Cross, and of the first school of Social Work in Romania.

    She was an avid sailor: she earned her navigator's papers, and she owned and sailed the "Isprava" for many years.

    Before King Michael's abdication

    Marriage

    In 1919, Ileana and her sisters Elisabeta and Maria accompanied their mother to Paris at the Peace Conference. The sovereign hoped that during her stay there she could find suitable husbands for her two eldest daughters, especially Elisabeta, already aged twenty-five. After a few months in France, the Queen and her daughters decided to return to Romania in early 1920. On the way back, they made a brief stop in Switzerland, where they found the Greek royal family, who lived in exile since the deposition of King Constantine I during the Great War.

    The king's eldest son, Crown Prince and future King George II of Greece asked for Elisabeta's hand in marriage. The Swiss visit also resulted in the engagement of Ileana's eldest brother Crown Prince Carol to Princess Helen of Greece. Both couples married a year later.

    In 1922, Queen Marie successfully arranged the marriage of her next daughter Maria to the King of Yugoslavia.

    From then on Marie's focus was on finding her last unmarried daughter a suitable partner. An engagement to the Crown Prince of Italy was reported, but denied by Marie, and rumors of a marriage to the Tsar of Bulgaria were debunked by its royal court. In 1930, Ileana was briefly engaged to Count Alexander of Hochberg. Queen Marie favored the match, being pleased by the English blood and wealth of Alexander's family. The engagement was broken, however, when Alexander's homosexuality came to light.[5]

    In Sinaia on 26 July 1931, Ileana married the Archduke Anton of Austria, Prince of Tuscany at Peles Castle, Sinaia.[6] This marriage was encouraged by Ileana's brother, King Carol II, who was jealous of Ileana's popularity in Romania and wanted to get her out of the country.[7] After the wedding, Carol claimed that the Romanian people would never tolerate a Habsburg living on Romanian soil, and on these grounds refused Ileana and Anton permission to live in Romania.[7]

    After her husband was conscripted into the Luftwaffe, Ileana established a hospital for wounded Romanian soldiers at their castle, Sonnburg, outside Vienna, Austria. She was assisted in this task by her friend Sheila Kaul. In 1944, she and the children moved back to Romania, where they lived at Bran Castle, near Brasov.[8] Archduke Anton joined them but was placed under house arrest by the Red Army. Ileana established and worked in another hospital in Bran village, which she named "The Hospital of the Queen's Heart" in memory of her beloved mother, Queen Marie of Romania.

    After exile

    After Michael I of Romania abdicated, Ileana and her family were exiled from the newly Communist Romania. They escaped by train to the Russian sector of Vienna, at that time divided into three sectors. After that they settled in Switzerland, then moved to Argentina and in 1950, she and the children moved to the United States, where she bought a house in Newton, Massachusetts.

    The years from 1950 to 1961 were spent lecturing against communism, working with the Romanian Orthodox Church in the United States, writing two books: I Live Again, a memoir of her last years in Romania,[9] and Hospital of the Queen's Heart, describing the establishment and running of the hospital.

    Ileana and Anton officially divorced on 29 May 1954. On 19 June 1954 in Newton, Massachusetts, she married Dr. Stefan Nikolas Issarescu. Her second marriage ended in divorce (without issue) in 1965.

    In 1961, Ileana entered the Orthodox Monastery of Our Lady of All Protection/ Notre Dame de Toute Protection, in Bussy-en-Othe, France. On her tonsuring as a monastic, in 1967, Sister Ileana was given the name Mother Alexandra. She moved back to the United States and founded the Orthodox Monastery of the Transfiguration in Ellwood City, Pennsylvania, the first English language Orthodox monastery in North America.[10] She was the third female descendant of Queen Victoria to become a Mother Superior in a convent of her own foundation along with Princess Alice of Battenberg and Princess Elisabeth of Hesse. She served as abbess until her retirement in 1981, remaining at the monastery until her death.

    She visited Romania again in 1990, at the age of 81, in the company of her daughter, Sandi.

    In January 1991, she suffered a broken hip in a fall on the evening before her eighty-second birthday, and while in hospital, suffered two major heart attacks. She died four days after the foundations had been laid for the expansion of the monastery.

    Archives

    Princess Ileana's personal papers (including family correspondence and photographs) are preserved in the "Queen Marie of Romania Papers" collection in the Library of Kent State University (Kent, Ohio, USA),[11] and also in the "Mother Alexandra Papers" collection in the Hoover Institution Archives (Stanford, California, USA).[12] In addition, Ileana's correspondence with the Romanian diplomat George I. Duca between 1924 and 1985 is preserved in the "George I. Duca Papers" collection in the Hoover Institution Archives (Stanford, California, USA).[13]

    Family

    Queen Marie of Romania (left), Prince Nicolae of Romania and Princess Ileana of Romania aboard the SS Leviathan on 27 October 1926

    Issue

    Ileana and Anton had six children; they were raised in the Catholic faith of her husband and of the country:

    • Archduke Stefan of Austria, Prince of Tuscany (5 August 1932 12 November 1998); married morganatically Mary Jerrine Soper (19 June 1931 14 July 2015), and had five children, who received in 1990 the title of Count/Countess von Habsburg for them and their descendants in the male line:
      • Christopher Habsburg-Lothringen (born 26 January 1957).
      • Ileana Habsburg-Lothringen (born 4 January 1958).
      • Peter Habsburg-Lothringen (born 19 February 1959).
      • Constanza Habsburg-Lothringen (born 2 October 1960)
      • Anton Habsburg-Lothringen (born 7 November 1964)
    • Archduchess Maria Ileana of Austria, Princess of Tuscany (Minola) (18 December 1933 – 11 January 1959); married Count Jaroslaw Kottulinsky, Baron von Kottulin (3 January 1917 – 11 January 1959) (both were killed in the crash of Lufthansa Flight 502), and had one daughter:
      • Countess Maria Ileana Kottulinska, Baroness von Kottulin (Mino) (25 August 1958 – 13 October 2007); married Jonkheer Noel van Innis (born 15 December 1939) on 10 October 1997.
    • Archduchess Alexandra of Austria, Princess of Tuscany (Sandi) (born 21 May 1935); married Duke Eugen Eberhard of Württemberg, son of Princess Nadezhda of Bulgaria (2 November 1930 – 26 July 2022) on 3 September 1962 and had no issue. They divorced in 1972 and she married Victor, Baron von Baillou (born 27 June 1931) on 22 August 1973.
      • Son von Baillou (stillborn 17 March 1975).
    • Archduke Dominic of Austria, Prince of Tuscany (Niki) (born 4 July 1937), inheritor of Bran Castle; married Engel von Voss (31 March 1937 – 27 September 2000) on 11 June 1960, and had two sons. He divorced her in 1999 and married Emmanuella Mlynarski (born 14 January 1948) on 14 August 1999.
      • Count Sandor von Habsburg (born 13 February 1965); married Priska Vilcsek (born 18 March 1959) on 15 May 2000 and were divorced on 22 December 2009. They had one son. He remarried Herta Öfferl on 24 December 2010.
        • Count Constantin von Habsburg (born 11 July 2000)
      • Count Gregor von Habsburg (born 20 November 1968); married Jacquelyn Frisco (born 17 November 1965) on 13 August 2011.
    • Archduchess Maria Magdalena of Austria, Princess of Tuscany (Magi) (2 October 1939 – 18 August 2021[14]); married Hans Ulrich, Baron von Holzhausen (born 1 September 1929) on 27 August 1959, and had three children:
      • Johann Friedrich Anton, Baron von Holzhausen (born 29 July 1960 in Salzburg, Austria), married Brunilda Castejón-Schneider (born 14 July 1962 in Madrid, Spain) on 23 September 2001 in Wartberg, Germany, and had one son:
        • Laurenz, Baron von Holzhausen (born 21 June 2001 in Vienna, Austria)
      • Georg Ferdinand, Baron von Holzhausen (born 16 February 1962 in Salzburg, Austria), married Elena, Countess von und zu Hoensbroech (born 1 May 1965) on 30 April 1993 in Vienna, Austria, and had three children:
        • Alexander von Holzhausen (born 28 November 1994 in Vienna, Austria)
        • Tassilo von Holzhausen (born 4 May 1997 in Vienna, Austria)
        • Clemens von Holzhausen (born 26 April 2003 in Vienna, Austria)
      • Alexandra Maria, Baroness von Holzhausen (born 22 January 1963 in Salzburg, Austria), married Christian Ferch (born 4 August 1959 in Salzburg, Austria) on 2 July 1985 in Salzburg, Austria, and had four children:
        • Ferdinand Georg Botho Ferch (born 17 October 1986 in Salzburg, Austria)
        • Leopold Anton David Ferch (born 18 August 1988 in Gmunden, Austria)
        • Benedikt Peter Nikolaus Ferch (born 22 March 1993 in Munich, Germany)
        • Elisabeth Patricia Katharina Ferch (born 23 February 1995 in Munich, Germany)
    • Archduchess Elisabeth of Austria, Princess of Tuscany (Herzi) (15 January 1942 2 January 2019), married Dr. Friedrich Josef Sandhofer (born 1 August 1934 in Salzburg, Austria) on 3 August 1964 in Mondsee, Austria, and had four children:
      • Anton Dominic Sandhofer (born 26 October 1966 in Salzburg, Austria), married Katarzyna Marta Wojkowska (born 23 November 1962 in Warsaw, Poland) on 29 May 1983, and had one son:
        • Dominik Alexander Sandhofer (born 7 January 1994 in Innsbruck, Austria)
      • Margareta Elisabeth Sandhofer (born 10 September 1968 in Innsbruck, Austria), married Ernst Helmut Klaus Lux (born 13 September 1954 in Graz, Austria) on 20 June 1992, and had two sons:
        • Maurito Maria Ernst Lux (born 29 April 1999 in Vienna, Austria)
        • Dorian Augustinius Maria Sandhofer(born 12 May 2001 in Vienna, Austria)
      • Andrea Alexandra Sandhofer (born 13 December 1969 in Innsbruck, Austria), married Jörg Michael Zarbl (born 25 September 1970 in Vienna, Austria) on 30 August 1996 and had two sons:
        • Ferdinand Hans Friedrich Konstantin Maria Zarbl (born 8 December 1996 in Salzburg, Austria)
        • Benedikt Bonifatius Maria Manfred Rainer Zarbl (born 19 February 1999)
      • Elisabeth Victoria Madgalena Sandhofer (born 16 November 1971 in Innsbruck, Austria), unmarried and without issue.

    Major family events

    • In 1954, her marriage to Anton ended in divorce. Later that year, she married Dr. Stefan Nikolas Issarescu in Newton, Massachusetts.
    • Eldest son Stefan suffered a debilitating illness in 1961 which required extensive nursing, which his wife and his mother provided.
    • Eldest daughter Marie Ileana and her husband were killed in a plane crash in Brazil, along with their unborn second child. They left an infant daughter.
    • Son Dominic was awarded retroactive rights to Bran Castle in May 2006 by the Romanian authorities as inheritance from his mother Ileana.

    Award

    Ranks

    Military

    National

    Foreign

    Ancestry

    References

    1. Find a Grave
    2. Marie, Queen (1934). The story of my life [by] Marie, queen of Romania. State Library of Pennsylvania. C. Scribner’s sons. p. 521.
    3. Pribich, Kurt (2004). Logbuch der Pfadfinderverbände in Österreich (in German). Vienna: Pfadfinder-Gilde-Österreichs. p. 279.
    4. Pribich, Kurt (2004). Logbuch der Pfadfinderverbände in Österreich (in German). Vienna: Pfadfinder-Gilde-Österreichs. p. 106.
    5. "A Balkan Soap Opera: The Broken Engagement of Princess Ileana of Romania & Count Alexander von Hochberg, Baron zu Fürstenstein".
    6. "Glamorous Royal Wedding 1931". British Pathe News.
    7. Pakula, Hannah (1985). The last romantic : a biography of Queen Marie of Roumania. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-78598-2.
    8. Middleton, Christopher (11 May 2014). "Buy a stake in Dracula's castle". Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 May 2014.
    9. Complete text of I Live Again from the Internet Archive
    10. "Mother Alexandra". The Orthodox Monastery of the Transfiguration.
    11. "Queen Marie of Romania Papers". Department of Special Collections and Archives. Kent State University Libraries and Media Services. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
    12. "Mother Alexandra Papers". Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
    13. "George I. Duca Papers". Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
    14. "Arhiducesa Maria Magdalena a Austriei, In Memoriam | Familia Regală a României / Royal Family of Romania". Retrieved 2021-08-18.
    15. "Princess Ileana of Romaia / IN MEMORIAM Princess Ileana–Mother Alexandra". Archived from the original on 2014-12-04. Retrieved 2014-12-04.
    16. "Princess Ileana of Romania / I Live Again - Chapter 27". Archived from the original on 2007-12-11. Retrieved 2014-12-04.
    17. "The Very Reverend Abbess Mother Alexandra (Nee H.R.H. Princess Ileana of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen of Romania)".
    18. "Princess Ileana of Romania / I Live Again - Dustjacket". Archived from the original on 2007-12-19. Retrieved 2014-12-04.
    19. "Princess Ileana of Romania / I Live Again - Chapter 3". Archived from the original on 2014-12-04. Retrieved 2014-12-04.
    20. "TipsImages : Stock Photography". Archived from the original on 2014-12-08. Retrieved 2014-12-04.
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