Lady Mary Victoria Douglas-Hamilton
Hereditary Princess of Monaco
BornLady Mary Victoria Douglas-Hamilton
(1850-12-11)11 December 1850
Hamilton Palace, Scotland
Died14 May 1922(1922-05-14) (aged 71)
Budapest, Kingdom of Hungary
Burial
Festetics Mausoleum
Spouse
(m. 1869; ann. 1880)
    (m. 1880)
    IssueLouis II, Prince of Monaco
    Countess Mária Matild Festetics de Tolna
    Prince György Tasziló Festetics de Tolna
    Countess Alexandra Olga Festetics de Tolna
    Countess Karola Friderika Festetics de Tolna
    HouseDouglas
    FatherThe 11th Duke of Hamilton
    MotherPrincess Marie Amelie of Baden

    Lady Mary Victoria Douglas-Hamilton, also known as Mary Victoria Hamilton[1] (11 December 1850  14 May 1922), was a Scottish noblewoman who was the great-grandmother of Prince Rainier III of Monaco, Prince Karl Johannes von Schwarzenberg and Princess Ira von Fürstenberg, and the great-great grandmother of Albert II, Prince of Monaco, as well as the maternal second cousin of Louis Alexander Mountbatten, 1st Marquess of Milford Haven, who was himself the maternal grandfather of Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh and the paternal great grandfather of King Charles III.

    Life

    She was born as the youngest child and the only daughter of William Hamilton, 11th Duke of Hamilton and of his wife, Princess Marie Amelie of Baden.

    Hereditary Princess of Monaco

    Her first marriage, on 21 September 1869 at Château de Marchais, was to Prince Albert, only child and heir apparent of Charles III, Prince of Monaco. The marriage was arranged upon the wish of the Monegasque princely house, as it had long been an ambition of his mother and grandmother to marry him to a member of the British royal house.[2] While Queen Victoria refused a match between Albert and one of her closer family members, Lady Mary was suggested as a suitable replacement.[3]

    They had a single son, Louis, who would take the throne of Monaco upon his father's death. Their marriage was annulled by the Church on 3 January 1880, although civilly it was dissolved only on 28 July 1880, by order of Prince Charles III. She supposedly hated the heat of the Mediterranean area.

    Life in Hungary

    Festetics Palace

    Lady Mary Victoria’s second marriage, on 2 June 1880, was to Count Tassilo Festetics de Tolna. The couple had four children, Countess Mária Matild Georgina (1881–1953), who married Prince Karl Emil von Fürstenberg; Prince György (1882–1941); Countess Alexandra Olga Eugénia (1884–1963), who married Prince Karl von Windisch-Graetz; and Countess Karola Friderika Mária (1888—1951), who married Oskar Gautsch Freiherr von Frankenthurn.

    During her 40-year marriage to Count, later Prince, Tassilo Festetics de Tolna, Lady Mary oversaw the enlargement and improvement of the main family seat, Festetics Palace, and its gardens, in Keszthely, western Hungary.

    On numerous occasions, she and her husband entertained her brother the Duke of Hamilton and his great friend the Prince of Wales. There are still portraits hanging in the Palace of numerous members of her family, including one of her father in full Highland dress. Outside the palace, on either side of the main entrance, there are the armorial bearings of both Lady Mary and her husband.

    The Helikon Library at the Palace contains many works that were brought to Keszthely by Lady Mary from her father’s and brother's collections at Hamilton Palace.

    The Palace grounds, on the shores of Lake Balaton, contains a Festetics family Mausoleum which is the final resting place of Lady Mary and her husband.

    References

    1. "Person Page 10128". Thepeerage.com. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
    2. Anne Edwards, The Grimaldis of Monaco, 1992
    3. Anne Edwards, The Grimaldis of Monaco, 1992
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