Sigvard Bernadotte | |||||
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Prince Bernadotte prev. Duke of Uppland | |||||
Born | Prince Sigvard, Duke of Uppland 7 June 1907 Stockholm Palace, Stockholm, Sweden | ||||
Died | 4 February 2002 Stockholm, Sweden | (aged 94)||||
Burial | 15 February 2002 Royal Cemetery, Solna, Sweden | ||||
Spouse | Erica Maria Patzek
(m. 1934; div. 1943)Sonja Helene Robbert
(m. 1943; div. 1961) | ||||
Issue | Michael Bernadotte, Count of Wisborg | ||||
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House | Bernadotte | ||||
Father | Gustaf VI Adolf | ||||
Mother | Margaret of Connaught |
Sigvard Oscar Fredrik, Prince Bernadotte, Count of Wisborg (7 June 1907 – 4 February 2002) born as, and until 1934 known as, Prince Sigvard of Sweden, Duke of Uppland, was a member of the Swedish Royal Family and a successful industrial designer.
He was the second son of the future King Gustaf VI Adolf and his first wife, Princess Margaret of Connaught, eldest daughter of Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn and granddaughter of Britain's Queen Victoria. He was a Prince of Sweden from birth, but was excluded from the line of succession in 1934 when he married a woman of unequal rank, a violation of provisions prohibiting marriages between a Prince and a "private man's daughter" (Swedish: enskild mans dotter), in force at the time, contained in both the 1809 Instrument of Government and the 1810 Act of Succession, and, in addition, he lost his princely and ducal titles as decided by the King in Council.[1] As per the king's wishes, he was then to be called only Mr. Sigvard Bernadotte in Sweden. In 1951, he was granted Luxembourgian titles of nobility, the interpretation of which remained a point of contention with the Royal Court for the rest of his life, Bernadotte having formally declared in 1983 that his title was Prince Sigvard Bernadotte.
Bernadotte was a paternal uncle of King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden and a maternal uncle of Queen Margrethe II of Denmark.