Danish royal family
The Danish royal family is the dynastic family of the monarch of Denmark. While some members of the Danish royal family hold the title of Prince of Denmark, descendants of Margrethe II additionally bear the title Count of Monpezat. Children of the monarch are accorded the style of His/Her Royal Highness. The King and Queen are styled Majesty.
Through his mother, Margrethe II, King Frederik X and his descendants belong to the House of Glücksburg, which is a branch of the royal House of Oldenburg. Margrethe II's children and male-line descendants also belong agnatically to the Laborde de Monpezat family, and were given the concurrent title Count/Countess of Monpezat by royal decree on 30 April 2008.
The Danish royal family receives remarkably high approval ratings in Denmark, ranging between 82% and 92%.
Main members
The Danish royal family includes:- King Frederik X and Queen Mary
- * Crown Prince Christian
- * Princess Isabella
- * Prince Vincent
- * Princess Josephine
- Queen Margrethe II
- * Prince Joachim and Princess Marie
- ** Count Nikolai
- ** Count Felix
- ** Count Henrik
- ** Countess Athena
- Princess Benedikte
- Queen Anne-Marie of the Hellenes
Family tree of members
Members of the extended royal family
Royal family of Greece
Most of the members of the deposed royal family of Greece hold the title of Prince or Princess of Greece and Denmark with the qualification of His or Her Highness, pursuant to the Royal Cabinet Order of 1774 and as agnatic descendants of George I of Greece, who, as the son of the future King Christian IX of Denmark, was a "Prince of Denmark" prior to his accession to the throne of Greece in 1863. Until 1953, his dynastic male-line descendants remained in Denmark's order succession. However, no Danish act has revoked usage of the princely title for these descendants, neither for those living in 1953, nor for those born subsequently or who have since married into the dynasty.There are three members of the Greek royal family who are not known to bear the title of Prince/ss of Denmark with the qualification of His/Her Highness.
The following, consorts of royal monarchs today, were born with the titles of Prince/Princess of Greece and Denmark, although they are not descended from King Constantine and Queen Anne-Marie:
The Norwegian royal family descends in the legitimate male line from Frederick VIII of Denmark, Queen Margrethe II's great-grandfather. Haakon VII of Norway, who was born Prince Carl of Denmark as Frederik VIII's younger son, was, like his uncle, George I of Greece, invited to reign over another nation. As with the Greek branch's descendants, members of the Norwegian line no longer have succession rights to the Danish crown, but unlike the Greek dynasties, they discontinued use of Danish royal titles upon ascending to the Norwegian throne in 1905.
Counts and countesses of Monpezat
On 30 April 2008, the Queen of Denmark granted to her two sons, Crown Prince Frederik and Prince Joachim, and their legitimate patrilineal descendants of both sexes the hereditary title "Count of Monpezat". The title is based on the French title "Comte de Laborde de Monpezat" which was used by their father Henrik, Prince Consort of Denmark.On 29 September 2022, it was announced that from 1 January 2023, the titles of Prince and Princess of Denmark, and style of Highness of the 4 children of Queen Margrethe II's younger son, Prince Joachim, would be discontinued. They will instead be titled "His/Her Excellency Count/Countess Nikolai/Felix/Henrik/Athena of Monpezat". All four grandchildren maintain their places in the order of succession to the throne.
Counts and countesses of Rosenborg
Danish princes who marry without the consent of the Danish monarch lose their succession rights, as do their descendants. They are then usually accorded the hereditary title "Count of Rosenborg". They are entitled to the style "His/Her Excellency". They and their legitimate male-line descendants are:- 15px Christian IX of Denmark
- *15px Frederick VIII of Denmark
- **15px Christian X of Denmark
- *** Knud, Hereditary Prince of Denmark
- **** Count Ingolf of Rosenborg
- **** Count Christian of Rosenborg
- ***** Countess Josephine of Rosenborg
- ***** Countess Camilla of Rosenborg
- ***** Countess Feodora of Rosenborg
- ** Prince Harald of Denmark
- *** Count Oluf of Rosenborg
- **** Count Ulrik of Rosenborg
- ***** Count Philip of Rosenborg
- ***** Countess Katharina of Rosenborg
- **** Countess Charlotte of Rosenborg
- * Prince Valdemar of Denmark
- ** Prince Axel of Denmark
- *** Count Flemming of Rosenborg
- **** Count Axel of Rosenborg
- ***** Countess Julie of Rosenborg
- ***** Count Carl Johan of Rosenborg
- ****** Countess Dagmar of Rosenborg
- ****** Count Valdemar of Rosenborg
- ***** Countess Désirée of Rosenborg
- ***** Count Alexander of Rosenborg
- *** Count Birger of Rosenborg
- **** Countess Benedikte of Rosenborg
- *** Count Carl Johan of Rosenborg
- **** Countess Caroline of Rosenborg
- **** Countess Josefine of Rosenborg
- *** Countess Désirée of Rosenborg
- ** Prince Erik, Count of Rosenborg
- *** Count Christian of Rosenborg
- **** Count Valdemar of Rosenborg
- ***** Count Nikolai of Rosenborg
- ***** Countess Marie of Rosenborg
- **** Countess Marina of Rosenborg
Counts and countesses of Samsøe
Line of succession
The first law governing the succession to the Danish throne as a hereditary monarchy was Kongeloven, enacted on 14 November 1665, and published in 1709. It declared that the crown of Denmark descends by heredity to the legitimate descendants of King Frederick III, and that the order of succession follows semi-Salic primogeniture, according to which the crown is inherited by an heir, with preference among the monarch's children to men over women; among siblings to the elder over the younger; and among Frederick III's remoter descendants by substitution, senior branches over junior branches. Female descendants were eligible to inherit the throne in the event there were no eligible surviving male dynasts born in the male line.As for the duchies, Holstein and Lauenburg where the King ruled as duke, these lands adhered to Salic law, and by mutual agreement, were permanently conjoined. The duchies of Schleswig, Holstein and Lauenburg were joined in personal union with the Kingdom of Denmark.
This difference caused problems when Frederick VII of Denmark didn't produce any children, making a change in dynasty imminent, and causing the lines of succession for the duchies on one hand and for Denmark on the other to diverge. To ensure that future Kings of Denmark would continue also being Dukes of Schleswig, Holstein, and Lauenburg, the line of succession to the duchies was modified in the London Protocol of 1852, which designated Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg, as the new heir apparent, although he was, strictly, the heir neither to the Kingdom of Denmark nor to the Duchies of Schleswig, Holstein, or Lauenburg by primogeniture. Originally, the Danish prime minister Christian Albrecht Bluhme wanted to keep the separate hereditary principles, but in the end, the government decided on a uniform agnatic primogeniture, which was accepted by the Parliament. Even after the loss of the duchies in the Second Schleswig War of 1864, the style of the Danish monarchs included references to the duchies until the style was shortened in 1972 on the accession of Margrethe II.
Problems emerged again when Frederik IX became king in 1947. He had only daughters, and it seemed unlikely that he would have a son, leaving his brother Knud as heir presumptive. As part of the 1953 constitutional referendum, a new Act of Succession introduced male-preference primogeniture, allowing women with no brothers to inherit. In 2009, the succession law was amended after the Act of Succession referendum, this time to introduce absolute primogeniture. This had no immediate effect on the line of succession, and the first person affected by the 2009 amendment was Prince Vincent, who on his birth in 2011 would have otherwise been ahead of his older sister Princess Isabella in the succession. the line of succession is:
- King Frederik IX
- * Queen Margrethe II
- ** King Frederik X
- *** ' Crown Prince Christian
- *** ' Princess Isabella
- *** ' Prince Vincent
- *** ' Princess Josephine
- ** ' Prince Joachim
- *** ' Count Nikolai of Monpezat
- *** ' Count Felix of Monpezat
- *** ' Count Henrik of Monpezat
- *** ' Countess Athena of Monpezat
- * ' Princess Benedikte, Princess of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg