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The possibility Mary could be expecting a female child motivated Danish politicians to consider the possibility of adopting [[absolute primogeniture]]. Formerly Denmark's throne followed [[agnatic primogeniture]]; this was altered by the [[Danish Act of Succession|1953 Act of Succession]], which introduced [[male-preference cognatic primogeniture]], which gave daughters a place in the succession, albeit still behind any younger brothers. This change allowed the present Queen to become heir presumptive and eventually inherit the throne, as the eldest among three sisters with no brothers. While the Crown Princess was still pregnant with Christian, the [[Folketing]] began the lengthy process (which would need in the end the approval of two parliaments and a [[referendum]]) to change the [[Constitution of Denmark|Danish constitution]] to allow absolute primogeniture. The birth of a boy removed some urgency from this drive.{{citation needed|date=November 2013}}
The possibility Mary could be expecting a female child motivated Danish politicians to consider the possibility of adopting [[absolute primogeniture]]. Formerly Denmark's throne followed [[agnatic primogeniture]]; this was altered by the [[Danish Act of Succession|1953 Act of Succession]], which introduced [[male-preference cognatic primogeniture]], which gave daughters a place in the succession, albeit still behind any younger brothers. This change allowed the present Queen to become heir presumptive and eventually inherit the throne, as the eldest among three sisters with no brothers. While the Crown Princess was still pregnant with Christian, the [[Folketing]] began the lengthy process (which would need in the end the approval of two parliaments and a [[referendum]]) to change the [[Constitution of Denmark|Danish constitution]] to allow absolute primogeniture. The birth of a boy removed some urgency from this drive.{{citation needed|date=November 2013}}


On 11 September 2006, [[Per Stig Møller]], Denmark's Minister for Foreign Affairs, formally wrote and signed a hand-written document confirming Prince Christian's place in the [[Line of succession to the Danish Throne|line of succession]]. The prince's full name, his dates of birth and christening, and the names of his godparents were recorded as dictated by the Royal Law of 1799.<ref>{{cite web|author1=TV2|authorlink1=TV 2 (Denmark)|title=Prince Christian is Now the Successor|url=http://nyheder.tv2.dk/article.php/id-4850134.html?forside|website=TV2|accessdate=31 May 2017|language=Danish|date=11 September 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Succession is Secure|url=http://www.bt.dk/article/20060911/ROYALT/109110040/1833|language=Danish}}</ref>{{dead link|date=May 2017}}
On 11 September 2006, [[Per Stig Møller]], Denmark's Minister for Foreign Affairs, formally wrote and signed a hand-written document confirming Prince Christian's place in the [[Line of succession to the Danish Throne|line of succession]]. The prince's full name, his dates of birth and christening, and the names of his godparents were recorded as dictated by the Royal Law of 1799.<ref>{{cite web|author1=TV2|authorlink1=TV 2 (Denmark)|title=Prince Christian is Now the Successor|url=http://nyheder.tv2.dk/article.php/id-4850134.html?forside|website=TV2|accessdate=31 May 2017|language=Danish|date=11 September 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Succession is Secure|url=http://www.bt.dk/article/20060911/ROYALT/109110040/1833|language=Danish|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927230003/http://www.bt.dk/article/20060911/ROYALT/109110040/1833|archivedate=27 September 2007|df=dmy-all}}</ref>


Should he succeed to the throne, Prince Christian will become the first monarch of [[Australian]] ancestry to hold the throne of any dominion.
Should he succeed to the throne, Prince Christian will become the first monarch of [[Australian]] ancestry to hold the throne of any dominion.

Revision as of 08:44, 17 September 2017

Prince Christian
Count of Monpezat
Prince Christian on his first day of school in August 2011
Born (2005-10-15) 15 October 2005 (age 18)
Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark
Names
Christian Valdemar Henri John
FatherFrederik, Crown Prince of Denmark
MotherMary, Crown Princess of Denmark

Prince Christian of Denmark, Count of Monpezat (Christian Valdemar Henri John; born 15 October 2005) is the elder son and eldest child of Crown Prince Frederik and Crown Princess Mary. He is a grandson of Queen Margrethe II and her husband Prince Henrik. He is second in the Danish line of succession, after his father. His sister Isabella is immediately after him in the line of succession.

Birth

Prince Christian was born at 1:57 am in Rigshospitalet, the Copenhagen University Hospital, in Copenhagen on Saturday, 15 October 2005. At noon on the day of his birth 21-gun salutes were fired from the Sixtus Battery at Holmen in Copenhagen and at Kronborg Castle to mark the birth of a royal child. At the same time, public buses and official buildings flew the Danish flag, the Dannebrog. At sunset on the same day beacon bonfires were lit all over Denmark, while Naval Home Guard vessels lit their searchlights and directed them towards the capital. Bonfires were also lit in celebration in Australia.[1]

Christian was hospitalised briefly on 21 October 2005 because he suffered from neonatal jaundice, a usually harmless illness and a fairly common one (especially in premature births). The first photographs of the then 6-day-old boy showed a yellow tinge to his face and hands. The prince was examined by doctors and underwent blood tests, then spent time in a light box under special coloured light rays to break down the bilirubin substance which causes jaundice. His parents took him home again the same day and he made a full recovery.[2]

Christian was christened on 21 January 2006 in Christiansborg Palace Chapel by Bishop Erik Norman Svendsen.[3] Christian's godparents are his paternal uncle, Prince Joachim of Denmark; his maternal aunt, Jane Stephens; the Crown Prince and Crown Princess of Norway; the Crown Princess of Sweden; the former Crown Prince of Greece; and two friends of the couple: Jeppe Handwerk and Hamish Campbell.[4] He was named Christian Valdemar Henri John, continuing the Danish royal tradition of alternating between the names Christian and Frederick in direct line.

He received a number of presents on the occasion of his christening, including a pony called Flikflak from the Folketing, Denmark's national parliament.[5]

Succession and the constitution

Christian is second-in-line to the Danish throne (his father, Crown Prince Frederik, being first). Since the 16th century, first-born sons of Danish monarchs have traditionally been alternately named Frederik and Christian; Queen Margrethe II, while naturally interrupting this sequence, treated herself as a "Christian" for the purposes of alternation, coming between her father, King Frederick IX, and her son, Crown Prince Frederik. Prince Christian will likewise presumably be known as "King Christian XI of Denmark" (following his great-great-grandfather Christian X in that name).[6]

The possibility Mary could be expecting a female child motivated Danish politicians to consider the possibility of adopting absolute primogeniture. Formerly Denmark's throne followed agnatic primogeniture; this was altered by the 1953 Act of Succession, which introduced male-preference cognatic primogeniture, which gave daughters a place in the succession, albeit still behind any younger brothers. This change allowed the present Queen to become heir presumptive and eventually inherit the throne, as the eldest among three sisters with no brothers. While the Crown Princess was still pregnant with Christian, the Folketing began the lengthy process (which would need in the end the approval of two parliaments and a referendum) to change the Danish constitution to allow absolute primogeniture. The birth of a boy removed some urgency from this drive.[citation needed]

On 11 September 2006, Per Stig Møller, Denmark's Minister for Foreign Affairs, formally wrote and signed a hand-written document confirming Prince Christian's place in the line of succession. The prince's full name, his dates of birth and christening, and the names of his godparents were recorded as dictated by the Royal Law of 1799.[7][8]

Should he succeed to the throne, Prince Christian will become the first monarch of Australian ancestry to hold the throne of any dominion.

Christian Valdemar Viking

In 2006 Scandinavian Airlines System was in the process of purchasing new A319 aircraft; and in Christian's honour the first of these, delivered on 8 August 2006, was named Christian Valdemar Viking.[9]

Education and activities

Christian was the first member of the Danish Royal Family to attend nursery school. At the same age, the Crown Prince had a nanny at the palace. He is also the first member of the Danish Royal Family to attend a public state school.[10]

Christian attended the opening of the new elephant house at the Copenhagen Zoo with his grandfather, Prince Henrik, who is a patron of the zoo, and who laid the foundation stone for the new elephant house in October 2006.[citation needed] Christian was the one who opened the elephant house by pressing a button on an interactive console. The elephants were a gift from the King and Queen of Thailand to the Queen and Prince Consort of Denmark on their last visit to Thailand.[11][12] The elephant house was designed by Norman Foster and Partners.[13]

On 19 June 2010, he served as a page boy at the wedding of his fourth cousin and godmother, the Crown Princess of Sweden, to Daniel Westling.[14]

Christian accompanied his parents on most of their engagements during the family's official visit to Greenland on 1–8 August 2014.

Titles and styles

Royal monogram

Christian is styled as His Royal Highness Prince Christian of Denmark, Count of Monpezat. He has been Prince of Denmark since birth and Count of Monpezat since 30 April 2008, when Queen Margrethe granted the title to her male-line descendants.[15]

References

  1. ^ [citation needed]
  2. ^ [citation needed]
  3. ^ "TRH The Crown Prince Couple: The Christening ceremony".
  4. ^ "TRH The Crown Prince Couple: Godfathers and godmothers to the little Prince".
  5. ^ "Dåbsgave: En glad pony".
  6. ^ Skipper, Jon Bloch (14 January 2011). "Can Prince Christian Choose to be Call King Valdemar?". Billed Bladet (in Danish). Aller Media A/S. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
  7. ^ TV2 (11 September 2006). "Prince Christian is Now the Successor". TV2 (in Danish). Retrieved 31 May 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ "Succession is Secure" (in Danish). Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ "SCANDINAVIAN AIRLINES TAKES OFF FROM HEATHROW TERMINAL 2". Danish-UK Chamber of Commerce. 12 September 2014. Retrieved 18 June 2017.
  10. ^ Horswill, Ian. "Crown Princess Mary's son Prince Christian turns eight years of age". Courier Mail Brisbane - 16 October 2013. Retrieved 21 February 2017. Prince Christian, the eldest of four children - Princess Isabella, aged six; and twins Prince Vincent and Princess Josephine, two - is the first member of the Danish Royal Family to attend a public state school.
  11. ^ Template:Da icon Prins Christian og farfar så elefanterne
  12. ^ Template:Da icon Prins Henrik: Flere børnebørn, tak
  13. ^ Copenhagen Elephant House, Denmark
  14. ^ "Ten young bridesmaids and page boys at the wedding at Stockholm Cathedral" (Press release). Swedish Royal Court. 16 June 2010. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
  15. ^ "His Royal Highness Prince Christian". Danish Royal Court. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
Christian, Crown Prince of Denmark
Born: 15 October 2005
Lines of succession
Preceded by Succession to the Danish throne
2nd in line
Followed by
Succession to the British throne
(descent from Arthur, son of Victoria)
Followed by