Maud Angelica Behn
Maud Angelica Behn | |||||
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Born | Oslo University Hospital, Rikshospitalet, Norway | 29 April 2003||||
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Father | Ari Behn | ||||
Mother | Princess Märtha Louise of Norway |
Norwegian royal family |
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HH Princess Astrid, Mrs. Ferner |
Maud Angelica Behn (born 29 April 2003) is the first child of Princess Märtha Louise of Norway and her late husband Ari Behn and the eldest grandchild of King Harald V of Norway and Queen Sonja.
She came to national attention with the speech she gave at her father’s funeral, and since then has published her first book.
Birth and baptism[]
Maud Angelica Behn was born on 29 April 2003 at Rikshospitalet University Hospital in Oslo, Norway, where her mother had also been born.[1] Her great-great grandmother was Maud of Wales, youngest daughter of King Edward VII of the United Kingdom.[2]
Maud was christened at Slottskapellet, Royal Palace, Oslo, Norway on 2 July 2003, the one-hundredth birthday of her great-grandfather, King Olav V of Norway. Her godparents are her grandfather King Harald V, her uncle Crown Prince Haakon, Princess Alexandra of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg, her aunt Anja Sabrina Bjørshol, her mother's cousin Marianne Ulrichsen, the actress Kåre Conradi and the politician Trond Giske.[3]
She has two younger sisters, Leah Isadora Behn, born on 8 April 2005, and Emma Tallulah Behn, born on 29 September 2008.[4]
The web site of the Norwegian royal family names the members of the family as King Harald and Queen Sonja, Crown Prince Haakon, Crown Princess Mette-Marit, Princess Ingrid Alexandra, Prince Sverre Magnus, Princess Märtha Louise, her three daughters, and Princess Astrid.[5][6]
Succession to the throne[]
Princess Märtha Louise is the first child of King Harald and Queen Sonja, and Maud Angelica is their eldest grandchild. In 1990, the Norwegian constitution was changed, introducing full cognatic primogeniture to the Norwegian throne, so that the eldest child, regardless of sex, comes first in the line of succession. However, this change was made without displacing Crown Prince Haakon, as it only affects those born after 1989. Women born between 1971 and 1989 (in practice, only Märtha Louise), were given succession rights, but primogeniture would not apply. This was controversial, and if it were to be reversed Maud Angelica would be likely to inherit the throne in due course. At present, she is fifth in the line of succession to the Norwegian throne.[7]
Education[]
The Behn family lived in Islington, London, then in New York, and finally in Lommedalen, a valley outside Oslo.[8]
In the autumn of 2009, Maud Angelica Behn was enrolled at the Bærum Waldorf School (Norwegian: Steinerskolen i Bærum), an independent Steiner school in Bærum, a suburb west of Oslo.[9]
Family break-up[]
On 5 August 2016, Maud Angelica’s parents began divorce proceedings,[10][11] which were finalized in 2017.[12] Ari Behn killed himself on Christmas Day, 2019, and was buried in Oslo Cathedral.[13]
Maud Angelica made a speech at her father’s funeral and later talked about his death.[14] In an article devoted to the speech, Aftenposten commented "It does not get more powerful than this".[15]
For her public thoughts on mental illness and suicide, she was awarded the Acute Psychiatry Prize for 2020. In October 2021, she published her first book, Threads of Tears,[16] her debut as a poet and illustrator, which tells the story of a girl whose life is dark but who learns to weave the threads she cries.[17] Ten thousand copies were printed,[18] and on release the book went straight to first place on the Norwegian Booksellers Association bestseller list.[19][20]
Maud regularly publishes her own drawings on Instagram.[21] In 2021, Princess Märtha Louise stated that she was planning to move to the United States with her daughters when the COVID-19 pandemic was out of the way.[22]
Ancestry[]
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References[]
- ^ "Her Highness Princess Märtha Louise" royalcourt.no, accessed 14 February 2022
- ^ L. A. Dahlmann, "The secret journey of Queen Maud's coffin", norwegianhistory.no, at archive.org, accessed 14 February 2022
- ^ Camilla Flaatten, "Nå skal hun døpes Hvem blir fadder til lille Emma Tallulah?", Nettavisen, 12.11.08, accessed 14 February 2022 (in Norwegian)
- ^ Barry Turner, ed., The Statesman's Yearbook 2012: The Politics, Cultures and Economies of the World (Springer, 2012), p. 949
- ^ Caroline Hallemann, "Get to Know the Norwegian Royal Family", Town & Country at townandcountrymag.com, 5 April 2021
- ^ "The Royal Family", royalcourt.no, accessed 13 February 2022: "The members of the Norwegian Royal House are Their Majesties King Harald and Queen Sonja and Their Royal Highnesses Crown Prince Haakon, Crown Princess Mette-Marit and Princess Ingrid Alexandra. The members of the Royal Family are in addition the Crown Prince and Crown Princess’s other children, His Highness Prince Sverre Magnus and Mr Marius Borg Høiby; Her Highness Princess Märtha Louise, Miss Maud Angelica Behn, Miss Leah Isadora Behn, Miss Emma Tallulah Behn and Her Highness Princess Astrid, Mrs Ferner."
- ^ "Order of succession". www.royalcourt.no. Norwegian Royal Court.
- ^ Telegraph Obituaries (December 27, 2019). "Ari Behn, acclaimed writer who was compared to Scott Fitzgerald and was controversially married to Princess Märtha Louise of Norway – obituary". The Telegraph. Retrieved December 29, 2019.
- ^ "Nå begynner hun på Steinerskolen" (in Norwegian). 9 August 2005. Retrieved 18 June 2014.
- ^ Berglund, Nina (August 5, 2016). "Royal Divorce 'Painful and Sad'". News in English Norway. Retrieved December 29, 2019.
- ^ "Prinsesse Märtha Louise og Ari Behn har bestemt seg for å gå fra hverandre [Princess Märtha Louise and Ari Behn decided to go apart]". The Royal Court (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 2 July 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "Her Highness Princess Märtha Louise". The Royal Court. Archived from the original on 27 April 2019. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
- ^ Boucher, Phil (3 January 2020). "Princess Martha Louise's Ex-Husband, Ari Behn, Laid to Rest in Oslo Cathedral Following Christmas Day Suicide". People. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
- ^ Oskar Aanmoen, Princess Martha Louise’s daughter talks about impact of Ari Behn’s death, royalcentral.co.uk, 18 June 2020
- ^ Tine Dommerud, "Støre om Maud Angelicas tale: – Mektigere blir det ikke", Aftenposten, 3 January 2020, accessed 14 February 2022 (in Norwegian)
- ^ Camilla Einem, Maud Angelica Behn is set to publish her first book, norwaytoday.info, 6 October 2021
- ^ Sari Nurmo, Prinsessa Märtha Louisen Maud-tytär rikkoo tabuja mielenterveysongelmien ympäriltä: ”Kirjani ei perustu omaan suruuni ja tunteisiini”, seiska.fi, 05.02.2022, accessed 14 February 2022 (in Finnish)
- ^ Camilla Norli, Maud Angelica gir ut bok - skriver om sorgen som tok overhånd, vg.no, 11 September 2021, accessed 14 February 2022 (in Norwegian)
- ^ Maud Angelica rett til topps, bok365.no, 29 October 2021, accessed 14 February 2022 (in Norwegian)
- ^ Kjetil Stoveland, Maud Angelica Behn: Topper listene, Dagbladet, 29 October 2021, accessed 14 February 2022 (in Norwegian)
- ^ Anja Wöhrer, Tochter Maud: "Ich muss einige Dinge für mich behalten", Bunte, 11.01.2021, accessed 14 February 2022 (in German)
- ^ "PRINCESS PLANS TO MOVE TO THE US: The royal said that her children will ‘of course join’" Hola!, 6 April 2021
External links[]
- 3 eyed cat, Instagram profile of Maud Angelica Behn
- 2003 births
- Living people
- Norwegian children
- Waldorf school alumni
- Norwegian people of German descent
- Norwegian people of Danish descent
- Norwegian people of English descent
- Norwegian people of Swedish descent