'Carol II of Romania' (
15 October 1893 –
4 April 1953) reigned as
King of Romania from
June 8,
1930 until
September 6,
1940. Eldest son of
Ferdinand I, King of Romania, and his wife,
Queen Marie, a daughter of
Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, the second eldest son of
Queen Victoria.
The "playboy king"
Known rather for his romantic misadventures than for any leadership skills, Carol (
Romanian for "Charles") was first married in
Odessa, Ukraine,
31 August,
1918, in contravention of royal law, to 'Joanna Marie Valentina Lambrino', (
"Zizi" Lambrino) (1898–1953), daughter of a Romanian general; they had one son,
Mircea Gregor Carol Lambrino, and the marriage was annulled by decision of the Ilfov Tribunal in 1919. He next married, in Athens, Greece, (
10 March,
1921), Princess
Helen of Greece and Denmark (who was known in Romania as Crown Princess Elena), but the marriage soon collapsed in the wake of the king's affair with
Elena "Magda" Lupescu (1895?–1977), the Roman Catholic daughter of a Jewish pharmacist and his Roman Catholic wife. Magda Lupescu had formerly been the wife of Army officer Ion Tâmpenu. As a result of the scandal, he renounced his right to the throne in December 1925 in favour of his son by Crown Princess Elena,
Michael (Mihai), who became King in July 1927. Helena divorced Carol in 1928. Carol also had a son and a daughter by his mistress Maria Martini, a high-school student.
Through all these adventures, he became known above all as a
playboy king. Purported eyewitnesses even claim him to have gone with a famous prostitute, Foamea Neagră, from the Crucea de piatră district. A fictionalized version of the episode is narrated by
Petru Dumitriu in his novel ''Cronică de familie'' (''Family Chronicle'').
Rule
Returning to the country unexpectedly on
7 June,
1930, Carol was proclaimed King the following day. For the next decade he sought to influence the course of Romanian political life, first through manipulation of the rival Peasant and Liberal parties and anti-Semitic factions, and subsequently (January 1938) through a ministry of his own choosing (the
National Renaissance Front), with a constitution (
27 February) reserving ultimate power to the crown. In 1938, he banned the
Iron Guard, which he had supported in the 1930s.
Carol also sought to build up his own
personality cult to counter the growing influence of the
Iron Guard, for instance by setting up a
paramilitary youth organization known as ''
Straja Ţării'' in 1935.
An excellent fictionalized account of life in Bucharest in the final years of Carol's reign can be found in
Olivia Manning's novels ''The Great Fortune'' and ''The Spoilt City''.
Exile
Forced under first
Soviet and subsequently
Hungarian,
Bulgarian,
Italian and
German pressure to surrender parts of his kingdom to foreign rule, he was outmaneuvered at last by the pro-German administration of Marshal
Ion Antonescu, and abdicated in favour of Michael, settling ultimately in
Portugal.
Some believe Carol left Romania in a train laden with royal treasure -- paintings by Old Masters such as
Titian,
Rubens, and
Rembrandt, hundreds of canvasses, jewels, the armor that had decorated the walls of the royal palaces of
PeliÅŸor and
PeleÅŸ --, while others accuse his son, Michael, of the same things. A
death squad of Iron Guard legionnaires fired on the royal train, but failed to stop it. The sale in
Portugal of much of this treasure gave him enormous wealth, which he spent lavishly, living a life of wasteful luxury.
He and Magda Lupescu were married in
Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil, on
3 June,
1947, Magda taking the title of Princess Elena von Hohenzollern. Carol remained in exile for the rest of his life.
His remains returned to Romania
Carol died in
Portugal in 1953; his remains were returned to Romania in 2003. His remains now lie in the
Curtea de ArgeÅŸ monastery, but outside the cathedral that is the burial place of most Romanian kings. His son and successor,
Mihai, did not participate in the ceremony, being represented by Princess
Margarita and Prince
Radu.
Ancestry
Foreign honors
The
UK awarded Carol the
Order of the Garter.
See also
★
Kings of Romania