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Showing posts with label Princess Michael of Kent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Princess Michael of Kent. Show all posts

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Royal Living: A Visit at Nether Lypiatt, Princess Michael’s Fabulous Gloucestershire Home

Nether Lypiatt Manor, the former country home of Prince and Princess Michael of Kent in Gloucestershire.

I've always been a fan of Princess Michael of Kent. Her sense of style, intelligence and courage to speak her mind out make her a royal standout. As an interior decorator and lover of everything beautiful, Nether Lypiatt Manor, which has been described as a compact, neo-Classical manor house situated in the parish of Thrupp, near Stroud in Gloucestershire, has been the recipient of her clever taste.

James Lees-Milne thought the house was really perfect. He wanted to purchase the house in the 1950s but couldn’t afford it.  In his words, it was "perfect in every way."

Christopher Hussey described it as "singularly beautiful."

Hugh Montgomery-Massingberd, author of English Manor Houses, called the house "a most covetable example of that delectable 'doll's house' style,” thanks to its “gentlemanly, well-mannered” design, a profusion of “Dutch and Classical influences” which was popular during Queen Anne’s reign. Indeed, “it's comfortable, relaxing; nothing too flashy or clever."

The staircase.

The everyday entrance hall of Nether Lypiatt Manor. Cecil Aldin prints hang over 
the paraphernalia of a country life.

The Ludwigsburg china at Nether Lypiatt Manor is presented as a decoration 
wall display in the dining room.

The house was built between 1702 and 1705 for Judge John Coxe, who was notorious for hanging convicted felons. Ironically, one of the rooms witnessed Judge Cox's son hang. To this day, his restless ghost was reportedly seen roaming around the house. But aside from his son, Judge Coxe’s prized stallion and blacksmith also pay their visit. As their death anniversaries approach every January, they would be seen entering through the main gates to the grounds of the property.

Minus the ghost, Nether Lypiatt is famous for its grandiose William and Mary staircase. A wing was added in 1923, making way for the house’s look today, a perfect square of 46 feet (14 m) on each side made more charming with sash windows, towering chimneys, hipped roofs and gate piers and railings. The house has been declared a Grade-I listed building. Such is the quaintness of the house that architectural historian Mark Girouard praised it for perfectly exemplifying the miniature look of an 18th century formal house. The house has four floors, four reception rooms, a studio, four bathrooms, two dressing rooms and staff quarters, including a tall basement and an attic floor. The early eighteenth-century paneling and original stone fireplaces survives to this day.  The house sits on 20 acres of grounds, which saw gradual improvements through the years as new gardens have been planted, including a renovated traditional flower garden to match with the authentic original arts and crafts backbone of vistas and hedges.


The panelled drawing room.


The sitting room, panelled in beech.
The yellow drawing room.  The immense scagiola table
was made in Florence just for Prince Michael.

With the passing of Judge Cox, Nether Lypiatt has been passed on to several generations of Coxes and other families. In 1914, it was sold to Corbett Woodall, who modernized and improved the house, with the help of Architect Peter Morley Horder. Bathrooms have been installed and an avenue of limes has been planted south of the house. Nine years later, Gordon and Violet Woodhouse purchased the house who left their own imprint by extending the house with the addition of the north-west pavilion, as well as improving the interior.

Prince and Princess Michael of Kent had fallen in love with Nether Lypiatt Manor and had longed to purchase it although when it came up for sale, they were initially discouraged by the high asking price, considering that the house needed a lot of fixing.

Rumors of ghost haunting dejected any chances of getting purchased at a high price. When the asking price was lowered to £300,000, the couple was quick to buy, thus, the county was called "Royal Gloucestershire", thanks to the number of Royal Family members living in the area. Not far away is Queen Mary’s World War II home, Badminton, Princess Anne’s country residence, Gatcombe Park, and Prince Charles own Highgrove.

Of the hauntings, Princess Michael retorted: "I have no doubt that many old houses have some kind of spirit presence or ghost and, if Nether Lypiatt Manor has such, he, she or it, must be benign and well disposed.

"We as a family, our guests and our pets have always felt a welcome from the house from the day we arrived, and have been extremely happy living here."

A Queen Anne bed upholstered in white
embroidered satin and dark blue plush.

Princess Michael's desk.

Woodhouse bedroom

While Princess Michael really loved Nether Lypiatt, her failing fortune and the need to downsize, eventually forced her to sell the manor house. The house was originally up for sale at £6 million, although it was eventually lowered to £5.5 million. The house was purchased by Labour Life Peer Lord Drayson for £5.75 million in 2006.

Friday, August 16, 2013

Prince and Princess Michael of Kent Become Grandparents

Prince and Princess Michael of Kent. Image: MailOnline
Prince and Princess Michael of Kent are celebrating becoming grandparents for the first time following the birth of a baby girl to their son Lord Frederick Windsor and his wife Sophie Winkleman, August, 16.

Lord Frederick Windsor was at his wife's side during the birth of their daughter who they've named Maud Elizabeth Daphne Marina.

She was born at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Centre in Los Angeles and weighed 7 lbs.

The Royal Blogger



Christian George Acevedo is a book worm, mentor, and scholar of wide-ranging interests. He has authored hundreds of articles for various websites, and his expertise ranges from online marketing and finance to history, entertainment and many more. Follow him on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus, LinkedIn, Pinterest and Tumblr. Contact Christian at powerwordsonlinewriting@gmail.com.

Friday, July 26, 2013

Book of the Week: Cupid and the King: Five Royal Paramours


Princess Michael of Kent's winning piece Cupid and the King: Five Royal Paramours gives us a riveting tale of five of the historically-renowned royal mistresses: Nell Gwyn, Madame Pompadour, Maria Walewska, Lola Montez and Lillie Langtry. A natural successor to Crowned in a Faraway Country, Princess Michael's biography of eight princesses, Cupid and the King focuses on the women whom the mighty ruler, the richest and most powerful man the kingdom, chose to love.

The names mentioned in this book are already well-known among history-enthusiasts, but their lives are often shrouded in so much fantasy and falsehood that the only attribute which is never denied them the mystique attached to a woman who won, and held, the heart of a king. Their backgrounds differed dramatically, yet each became the beloved paramour of a monarch. It is a study of female ambition and motivation, of greed and also selflessness, of love and hate, passion and devotion as well as self-destruction. Amazon, $15.30 (Payperback)


Saturday, July 6, 2013

Celebrating Prince and Princess Michael of Kent’s 35th Wedding Anniversary


Prince and Princess Michael of Kent
While the rest of the British Royal Family and the entire nation are festively rejoicing the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II's coronation, Prince and Princess Michael of Kent have their own reason to call 2013 a milestone in their lives--they are celebrating their 35th wedding anniversary. In a family plagued by divorce and scandals, Prince and Princess Michael of Kent's marriage is something of a miracle. Given their high profile lifestyle, busy schedule and constant separation from one another due to commitments, not to mention the many tales of alleged extra-marital affairs, it is still refreshing to learn that the Prince, now 71, and the Princess, 68, still find their marriage strong and sturdy. Scandal and intrigue is nothing new to the Kents. 

After all, their marriage almost rocked the Royal Family, to the magnitude that could have matched the Edward-Wallis Affair, or the Margaret-Townsend fling, had Prince Michael been a closer heir to the Throne. But there's no need for that. While the Prince lost his rights to inherit the throne because he married the divorced, former Baroness Marie Christine von Reibnitz, the woman he truly loves, it was quick and easy for his cousin Queen Elizabeth II, to grant royal dispensation to the marriage. And so they wed in Vienna.


Prince Michael of Kent was born July 4, 1942. He is the younger son and third child of Prince George, Duke of Kent, fourth son and fifth child of King George V and Queen Mary, and of Princess Marina, youngest daughter and child of Prince Nicholas of Greece and Grand Duchess Helen of Russia. He was only seven months old when his father died of plane crash in Scotland. His elder brother, Prince Edward, assumed his father’s title as Duke of Kent. As the younger son, Prince Michael was not expected to carry out official duties, and so, he enjoyed relative obscurity as a member of the Royal Family. His marriage in 1978 to Marie-Christine Troubridge (born Baroness von Reibnitz) changed all that.

Baroness Marie-Christine von Reibnitz was born January 15, 1945. His father was Baron Gunther von Reibnitz, a German, while her mother was Countess Marianne Szapary, a Hungarian noblewoman. The future Princess Michael was married to English banker Thomas Troubridge in 1971, but their marriage ended up in separation in two years later. They were finally divorced in 1976.

Shortly afterwards, she met Prince Michael and the two fell in love with each another. Royal biographer Sarah Bradford, in Elizabeth: A Biography of Her Majesty The Queen (2002), meanwhile, mentioned that the Queen was far from overjoyed of her cousin’s marital prospects. Instead, “she would have preferred a less exotic bride.”

She was persuaded into it by Lord Mountbatten, the royal matchmaker, who felt paternal towards Michael and was charmed by Marie-Christine. Elizabeth had little room to act; rejection of a bride of a minor member of the family on the grounds that she was divorced and of the wrong religion would understandably have led to a good deal of criticism, and so, after the approval of the Privy Council, she gave her formal agreement. The wedding took place in Vienna in 1978, the birthplace of the bride’s mother. The Royal Marriages Act of 1772 barred members of the Royal Family from getting married on civil ceremonies in England.

At the last moment, the Pope, who had granted an annulment of Marie-Christine’s first marriage, refused a dispensation for a church wedding, almost certainly because the children of the first marriage were to be brought up as Protestants in order to preserve their rights of succession to the Throne.

The Vatican eventually relented and the couple were given formal blessings in July 1983 in a ceremony at Westminster Cathedral. Their marriage was gifted by two children, Lord Frederick, born 1979, and Lady Gabriella, born 1983. The Queen gave them a grace-and-favor apartment at Kensington Palace, while they maintained their country home at Nether Lypiatt, a 17th century mansion in Gloucestershire.

As junior male representative of the Kent family, Prince Michael is not required to carry out official engagements. The couple does not also receive any public funds and their activities are not recorded at the Court Circular. But there were certain occasions when they carried out official functions on behalf of the Crown. In 1981, the couple represented the Queen at the independence celebrations for Belize and in 1982, Princess Michael represented Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother on certain engagements.

Prince and Princess Michael remain actively involved in various interests. Prince Michael is running his own consultancy firm, Cantium Services, while Princess Michael busies herself in writing books and doing lecture works, not to mention that they continue attending state and royal events. On top of that, they do also have their own charities to support and causes to espouse, making them as busy as other working members of the Royal Family.

The couple’s marriage is never far from perfect. There were times when their marital bliss was rocked by scandals and intrigued of infidelity, but at the end of the day, couple remains together and through the years their marriage continues to be a royal match to last a lifetime.

About the Author

Christian George Acevedo is a librarian, mentor, and scholar of wide-ranging interests. He has authored hundreds of articles for various websites, and his expertise ranges from online marketing and finance to history, entertainment and many more. Follow him on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus, LinkedIn, Pinterest and Tumblr. Contact Christian at powerwordsonlinewriting@gmail.com.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Lord and Lady Frederick Windsor are expecting a baby

Lord and Lady Frederick Windsor (image source: hellomagazine.com)

Lord and Lady Frederick Windsor are very excited for the coming of their first child. Lord Frederick Windsor is the elder child and only son of Prince and Princess Michael of Kent. It was revealed that Lady Frederick, more popularly known as the actress Sophie Winkleman is four months pregnant and is due to deliver their first-born this August. The couple lives in Los Angeles, where Lord Frederick works as an investment banker while Sophie has a recurring role in the sitcom Two and a Half Man.


The met each other in 2007 and tied the knot on a lavish ceremony at the Royal Chapel in Hampton Court Palace in 2009. 

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Prince Michael of Kent writes off £750,000 losses

Prince and Princess Michael of Kent

After years of reported losses, Prince and Princess Michael of Kent have finally decided to write off the debts of Cantium Services, the umbrella firm that handles their commercial activities. Telegraph online reports that according to Mandrake, Prince Michael, a cousin to Queen Elizabeth II, "has  written off £750,000 in losses" of his firm. The company's capital was also reduced, from  from one million shares, with a nominal value of £1 each, to 250,000. The couple owns the company's entire stocks.


Last financial year, Cantium Services posted a profit of £148,755. The company specializes in offering "international commercial advice." It was revealed by Company Check that as of the 2012 financial period, the company's net worth was valued at £455,189.

The Prince was hounded by intrigue when, last August, reports surfaced that Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky has given the prince £320,000 in six years' time to finance the cost of maintaining the couple's household.

“The original donation came about because Mr Berezovsky has a high regard for the Prince, and, in particular, the work of the foundation which he set up in Russia in 2004 to promote heritage, culture and health,” said one of Prince Michael's close friends.

Prince and Princess Michael are the only members of the British Royal Family not to perform official duties, although they carry out their own activities in support of numerous charities. The couple does not receive Civil List payments, too. Since 2009, they have been paying £120,000 in rent for their five-bedroom apartment in Kensington Palace.

“Prince Michael is grateful that there was a positive outcome to last year’s trading," Prince Michael's spokesman told Telegraph.


About the Author

Christian George Acevedo is a librarian, mentor, and scholar of wide-ranging interests. He has authored hundreds of articles for various websites, and his expertise ranges from online marketing and finance to history, entertainment and many more. Follow him on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus, LinkedIn, Pinterest and Tumblr. Contact Christian at powerwordsonlinewriting@gmail.com.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Prince and Princess Michael receives knee-bending curtsies from writer

Prince and Princess Michael of Kent
Prince and Princess Michael of Kent receive a floor-skimming curtsey, a sign of respect to royals, from author Leonie Frieda, reports The Daily Mail. Frieda attended a launch party held in her honor by the royal couple for her new book, The Deadly Sisterhood, in Kensington Palace. Prince and Princess Michael of Kent are friends with Frieda.

 


Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Princess Michael dons ala-Farrah Fawcett


Princess Michael steps back in time with this unusually big hair-do of hers last April 26 while wearing grey overcoat with matching gloves, while carrying an oversize black-and-white handbag while attending launching of her memoir, Orient Express: A Personal Journey.