The 'House of Battenberg' was a cadet branch of the
House of Hesse-Darmstadt, rulers of the
Grand Duchy of Hesse in Germany. The first member was
Julia von Hauke whose brother-in-law, Grand Duke Louis III of Hesse, created her Countess of Battenberg at her
morganatic marriage to his brother,
Prince Alexander of
Hesse, in
1851 and Princess of Battenberg in 1858. The name Battenberg was last used by her youngest son,
Prince Francis Joseph of Battenberg, who died childless in 1924; most members of the family, residing in the
United Kingdom, had renounced their German titles in 1917, during World War I, and changed their name to
Mountbatten, an anglicised version of Battenberg.
Creation
Prince Alexander (1823–1888) was the third son of
Grand Duke Louis II of
Hesse and by Rhine and of Wilhelmina of
Baden. His spouse, Julia von Hauke (1825–1895), was a mere countess – the orphaned daughter of
John Maurice von Hauke who had been a Russian general and then Deputy Minister of War of
Congress Poland – and therefore of insufficient rank for her children to qualify for the succession to the throne of Hesse. For this reason, her brother-in-law
Grand Duke Louis III created the title Countess of Battenberg () for her and for the couple's future descendants. (A previous family of counts of Battenberg had become extinct in the 14th century.) In 1858 the title, which referred to the town of
Battenberg, Hesse, was elevated to princely status. There was never a corresponding Principality of Battenberg; the title was a non-sovereign one in the nobility of the
Grand Duchy of Hesse.
The children of this union bore the title of Prince () or Princess () and the style
Serene Highness (). Battenberg thus became the name of a morganatic
cadet branch of the Grand Ducal family of Hesse, without right of succession.
Members
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Princess Julia of Battenberg (1825–1895)
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Princess Marie of Battenberg (1852–1923), married the Prince of Erbach-Schönberg in 1871
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Prince Louis of Battenberg (1854–1921), renounced his title in 1917 to become
Marquess of Milford Haven
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Princess Alice of Battenberg (1885–1969), married
Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark in 1903
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Princess Louise of Battenberg (1889–1965), renounced her title in 1917 to become Lady Louise Mountbatten (later Queen of Sweden)
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Prince George of Battenberg (1892–1938), renounced his title in 1917 to become Earl of Medina (later Marquess of Milford Haven)
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Prince Louis of Battenberg (1900–1979), renounced his title in 1917 to become Lord Louis Mountbatten (later
Earl Mountbatten of Burma)
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Prince Alexander of Battenberg (1857–1893), became Prince of Bulgaria in 1879 (later Count Hartenau)
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Asen of Hartenau (1890-1965)
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Tsvetana of Hartenau (1893-1935)
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Prince Henry of Battenberg (1858–1896)
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Prince Alexander of Battenberg (1886–1960), renounced his title in 1917 to become
Marquess of Carisbrooke
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Princess Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg (1887–1969), married the
King of Spain in 1906
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Prince Leopold of Battenberg (1889–1922), renounced his title in 1917 to become Lord Leopold Mountbatten
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Prince Maurice of Battenberg (1891–1914)
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Prince Francis Joseph of Battenberg (1861–1924)
Relations to royal families
One of the original couple's sons,
Prince Alexander of Battenberg, was made Sovereign Prince of
Bulgaria; he was later kidnapped and forced to abdicate.
Another son,
Prince Henry of Battenberg, married
The Princess Beatrice, the youngest daughter of
Queen Victoria; their daughter,
Victoria Eugenia Julia, became
queen consort of
Spain. Her uncle
Edward VII elevated her style to
Royal Highness, so that she would have the "necessary" status to marry into the Spanish royal house.
Alexander and Julia's eldest son,
Prince Louis of Battenberg, became the
First Sea Lord of the
Royal Navy. Due to
anti-German feelings prevalent in Britain during
World War I, he
anglicised his name to
Mountbatten, as did his children and nephews, the sons of Prince Henry and Princess Beatrice. They renounced all German titles and were granted
peerages by their cousin, King
George V: Prince Louis became the 1st
Marquess of Milford Haven, while
Prince Alexander, Prince Henry's eldest son, became the 1st
Marquess of Carisbrooke.
Prince Louis's youngest son
Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma served as the last
Viceroy of India and his grandson
Prince Philippos of Greece and Denmark married the heiress presumptive of the British throne, later
Elizabeth II, after having renounced his Greek titles and taken his grandfather's and uncle's surname, Mountbatten, which his mother had never born. The name Battenberg, in its anglicised form, is now a part of the personal surname,
Mountbatten-Windsor, of some members of the
British Royal Family.