'Ernst August, Prince of Hanover' (''German: Ernst August Albert Otto Rupprecht Oskar Berthold Friedrich-Ferdinand Christian-Ludwig Prinz von Hannover'', in English also known as 'Ernest Augustus of Hanover') (born
26 February 1954 in
Hanover,
Lower Saxony,
Germany) is the eldest son of
Ernest Augustus IV, Prince of Hanover (1914–1987) and his first wife, Princess
Ortrud of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg (1925–1980).
He is usually styled ''
His Royal Highness The Prince of Hanover'' and sometimes as ''Ernest Augustus V''.
He is the third and present husband of Princess
Caroline of Monaco,
heiress presumptive to the throne of
Monaco. He is the
pretender to the throne of Hanover.
Name and ancestry
As the senior male-line descendant of
George V of Hanover and hence also of
George III of the United Kingdom, Ernst August is head of the
House of Welf and is enumerated as 'Ernest Augustus V'. As such he is the Hanoverian pretender to the royal throne of
Hanover and the ducal throne of
Brunswick. Hence, he according to German tradition
styles himself 'His Royal Highness The Prince of Hanover, Duke of Brunswick and Lunenburg, Prince of Great Britain and Ireland'
[1]. None of these titles are valid under either German, British or Irish modern law, but the titles are used for courtesy at European courts and formally recognized by the state of
Monaco. In Germany royal and noble titles were abolished in 1918, legally being considered only as surnames.
As heir of the
Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale, Ernst August has the right to petition under the
Titles Deprivation Act 1917 for the restoration of his ancestors' British peerages but has not done so, even though his father, also called
Ernst August, successfully claimed British nationality after
World War II by virtue of long-dormant provisions of the
Sophia Naturalization Act 1705.
The Prince is also a great-grandson of the last German emperor,
William II. Until his marriage to Princess Caroline he was 385th in the
line of succession to the British throne. Upon his marriage to Caroline, a
Roman Catholic, he was excluded from the line of succession under provisions of the
Act of Settlement 1701. His three children remain in the line of succession since they are being raised as
Protestants.
Family
He first married, civilly on
28 August 1981 and religiously on
30 August 1981,
Chantal Hochuli, heiress to a Swiss chocolate fortune. They had two children:
★
Prince Ernst August of Hanover (b.
19 July,
1983)
★
Prince Christian of Hanover (b.
1 June,
1985)
Ernst August and Chantal Hochuli divorced on
23 October 1997.
He married secondly, on
23 January 1999,
Princess Caroline of Monaco, who was pregnant at the time with their daughter:
★
Princess Alexandra of Hanover (b.
20 July,
1999)
Since he was born in the line of succession to the British crown he was bound by the
Royal Marriages Act 1772. Thus before his marriage to Princess Caroline he made a formal request to obtain permission from
Queen Elizabeth II, which request was granted by the
Queen in Council. Without the
Royal Assent, the marriage would have been void in Britain, and may have threatened Ernst August's
right to petition for resumption of the dormant
Duchy of Cumberland. Similarly the
Monégasque court officially notified
France of Caroline's marriage to Prince Ernst August and received assurance that there was no objection, in compliance with the
1918 Franco-Monégasque Treaty.
Controversy
Ernst August has had moments of controversy. In 1998 he was fined £30,000 after breaking the nose of a television cameraman, and has had other scuffles with photographers and with a police officer. He was photographed urinating on the Turkish Pavilion at the Expo 2000 event in Hanover, causing a diplomatic incident and a complaint from the Turkish Embassy accusing him of insulting the Turkish people. He sued those who published (''Bild-Zeitung'') the photo for invasion of privacy. He was awarded 33,900 euros.
[2] The paper had previously published a photo of the prince urinating outside a hospital in Austria.
[3]
Recent events
On Monday,
3 April 2005, the prince was admitted to hospital with
acute pancreatitis. The next day, he fell into a deep
coma, one day before the death of his father-in-law,
Rainier III, Prince of Monaco. On Friday,
8 April 2005, hospital officials reported that the prince was no longer in a coma but remained in
intensive care. A report the same day on
BBC World described his present condition as "serious but not irreversible." On
9 April 2005, according to a report on BBC, a hospital spokesman reported that the prince was receiving "permanent medical care." He has since been released and is often seen in public with his wife. He stopped drinking after this incident, resulting in a considerable improvement of his public behaviour: no attacks on journalists have been reported since.
Ancestry
External links
★
Official site of the House of Welf (in German)
★
About Ernst August, Prince of Hanover
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