Prince Gustav of Denmark explained

Prince Gustav
Full Name:Christian Frederik Wilhelm Valdemar Gustav
House:Glücksburg
Birth Date:4 March 1887
Birth Place:Charlottenlund Palace, Copenhagen, Denmark
Death Place:Egelund Palace, Copenhagen, Denmark
Father:Frederik VIII of Denmark
Mother:Louise of Sweden
Burial Place:Roskilde Cathedral
Signature:Signature of Prince Gustav of Denmark.svg

Prince Gustav of Denmark (Christian Frederik Vilhelm Valdemar Gustav; 4 March 1887 – 5 October 1944) was a member of the Danish royal family. He was the fourth and youngest son and seventh child of King Frederik VIII and Queen Louise.

Early life

Prince Gustav was born on 4 March 1887 at his parents' country residence, the Charlottenlund Palace north of Copenhagen, during the reign of his paternal grandfather, King Christian IX.[1] He was the seventh child and fourth son of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark and his wife Louise of Sweden.[1] His father was the eldest son of King Christian IX and Louise of Hesse-Kassel, and his mother was the only daughter of King Charles XV of Sweden and Norway and Louise of the Netherlands. He was baptised with the names Christian Frederik Wilhelm Valdemar Gustav, and was known as Prince Gustav.[1]

Prince Gustav was raised with his siblings in the royal household in Denmark and grew up between his parents' residence in Copenhagen, the Frederik VIII's Palace at the Amalienborg Palace complex, and their country retreat, the Charlottenlund Palace, located by the coastline of the Øresund strait north of the city.

Prince Gustav remained unmarried and had no children.[1]

Later life

On 2 February 1935 in the Russian Orthodox Church in Copenhagen he was, together with his cousin Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia and her husband colonel Nikolai Kulikovsky, a godparent at the christening of Alexander Schalburg, son of first lieutenant in the Royal Danish Life Guards and a leading figure of the Danish Waffen-SS unit Free Corps Denmark, Christian Frederik von Schalburg.[2]

Prince Gustav died on 5 October 1944 at his estate Egelund House north of Copenhagen in North Zealand, Denmark.[1]

Title, style and honours

Title and style

Honours

Ancestry

See also: Descendants of Christian IX of Denmark.

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Montgomery-Massingberd. Hugh. Hugh Massingberd. Burke's Royal Families of the World. 1. London, U.K.. Burke's Peerage Ltd. 1977. 71.
  2. Book: . Kirkebog . . 1915-1945 . Fødte Mandkøn . 14 . 1934 . Born Males . . Danish .