(Redirected from Olga, Queen of Greece)
'Olga Konstantinovna of Russia' later 'Queen Olga of Greece' (in
Russian Великая Княжна Ольга Константиновна in
Greek Βασίλισσα Όλγα της Ελλάδος) (
3 September 1851 -
18 June 1926), was the
queen consort of King
George I of Greece and briefly in
1920, Regent of Greece.
Early life
A granddaughter of Tsar
Nicholas I and
first cousin of Tsar
Alexander III, she was born in
Pavlovsk the daughter of
Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich of Russia and
Alexandra Iosifovna, a Princess of Saxe-Altenberg. The young King
George I of Greece visited
Russia in
1863 to thank her uncle Tsar
Alexander II for his support during George's election to the throne of
Greece. Whilst there George met the then twelve-year old Olga for the first time.
[''The Times (London)'' Monday 21 June 1926 p.19 col.A]
George visited Russia again in
1867 to meet with his sister
Dagmar, who had married
Tsarevitch Alexander the year before. George and Olga fell in love and married on
October 27,
1867 (
Gregorian calendar), when she was sixteen years old. Queen Olga was a direct
matrilineal of the
Byzantine Empress Euphrosyne Doukaina Kamatera (c 1155-1211), the Empress-consort of, and the true power behind,
Emperor Alexios III Angelos, the ruler of Constantinople and of the entire Byzantine Empire between 1195 and 1203.
Together George and Olga had eight children:
★
Constantine (
1868-
1923), who succeeded his father as king.
★
George (
1869-
1957), High Commissioner of
Crete.
★
Alexandra (
1870-
1891), married
Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich of Russia (son of
Alexander II of Russia). Mother of
Dmitri Pavlovich Romanov, assassin of
Grigori Rasputin.
★
Nicholas (
1872-
1938)
★
Marie (
1876-
1940), married first
Grand Duke George Mikhailovich of Russia (1863-1919) and second
Pericles Ioannides.
★ Olga (
1881, died when three months old)
★
Andrew (
1882-
1944), father of
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
★
Christopher (
1888-
1940), father of
Prince Michael of Greece.
Queen
Olga was a genuinely popular Queen and was extensively involved in charity work, endowing the ''Evangelismos'' (Annunciation) Hospital, Greece's largest, in downtown
Athens, as well as a Russian hospital in
Piraeus.
In
1898 she insisted on continuing her engagements without a military guard even though shots had been fired at her husband and daughter.
During visits to wounded servicemen in the
Greco-Turkish War (1897) she became aware that they were unable to read the
Bible. The version used by the
Church of Greece included the
Septuagint version of the
Old Testament and the original Greek language version of the
New Testament. Both were written in
Koine Greek while her contemporaries used either
Katharevousa or the so-called Demotic version of
Modern Greek. Olga decided to have the Bible translated into a version which could be understood by most of her contemporary Greeks rather than those educated in Koine Greek.

The Royal Couple of Greece in 1903.
In November
1901 her publication of a translation of the New Testament from Koine into Modern Greek, without the authorisation of the Greek
Holy Synod, led to riots in
Athens, and ultimately the fall of the government of
Georgios Theotokis and the resignation of the
Metropolitan bishop.
[1][2]
The translation had been completed by
Alexandros Pallis (1851 - 1935), a major supporter of a literary movement supporting the use of Demotic in written language. However supporters of Katharevousa considered this language "unclean" and wanted to "purify" it. Katharevousa actually contained archaicised forms of modern words, purged of "non-Greek" vocabulary from other European languages and
Turkish and a (simplified) archaic grammar. Publication of the translation started in serial form in the newspaper "Acropolis" on
9 September,
1901.
Almost immediately theologians denounced this version as a "ridicule of the most valuable ethnic heritage" while a faction of Greek press started accusing Pallis and his Demoticists supporters of "atheism" and "treason".
Ecumenical Patriarch Joachim III of Constantinople denounced this translation, adding further fuel to the opposition. The riots were started by students of the
National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, who had been organized by their own professors. They requested the
excommunication of Pallis and anyone involved with this translation and its publication, including
Procopios, Metropolitan of Athens who had been a favorite of Olga and had supervised the translation after her personal request.
The riots and conflict between rioters and the police forces resulted in eight deaths and at least seventy people wounded. By December the new translation had been banned and it was decided that any further attempt at translation would result in the incarceration of the participants. This was a major political defeat for Olga.
After her grandson,
Alexander I died on
25 October,
1920 of a monkey bite, the Greek government offered the throne to his brother,
Paul. Paul refused on the grounds that his father
Constantine and elder brother
George were still living. The government of
Eleftherios Venizelos was defeated in a general election and the Regent, Admiral
Pavlos Kountouriotis retired on
17 November in favour of Queen Olga. She served as
Regent until her son Constantine returned to take over the throne a second time on
19 December after a plebiscite. He had reigned before from
1913 to
1917. His new reign lasted less than two years.
After her death at
Pau,
Béarn,
France, she was first interred in
Italy (where the
Greek Royal Family lived in exile), but on the restoration of the Greek monarchy in
1936 she was re-interred at
Tatoi on
17 November that year.
[3]
References
1. John Campbell and Philip Sherrard, ''Modern Greece'' (Ernest Benn, London, 1968) p.198
2. ''The Times (London)'' Tuesday 26 November 1901 p.9 col.C
3. Edward S Forster, ''A Short History of Modern Greece 1821-1956 3rd edition'' (Methuen and Co., London, 1958) p.198
Titles
★ ''Her Imperial Highness'' Grand Duchess Olga Konstantinovna of Russia (
1851 -
1867)
★ ''Her Majesty'' The Queen of the Hellenes (
1867 -
1913)
★ ''Her Majesty'' Queen Olga of Greece (
1913 -
1926)
★ ''Her Majesty'' The Queen Regent (
1920)
Through her life in Greece (1867 - 1926) she was widely referred to as ''Her Majesty'' The Queen Olga.
External links
★
Guide to Women Leaders