Princess_Antoinette_of_Saxe-Altenburg

Princess Antoinette of Saxe-Altenburg

Princess Antoinette of Saxe-Altenburg

Duchess consort of Anhalt


Princess Antoinette of Saxe-Altenburg (17 April 1838 – 13 October 1908) was a princess of Saxe-Altenburg by birth and Duchess of Anhalt by marriage.

Biography

Antoinette was the second child of Prince Eduard of Saxe-Altenburg (1804-1852) from his first marriage with Amalie (1815-1841), daughter of Karl, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen.

She married on 22 April 1854 in Altenburg the future Friedrich I, Duke of Anhalt (1831-1904).[1] The marriage was for dynastic reasons and Antoinette married one of the richest German princes. On the occasion of the marriage was coined a commemorative medal.

After falling ill with diphtheria in the spring of 1890, during which she was cared for by Lutheran deaconesses in Halle, she campaigned for the Duke of Anhalt to donate a plot of land in Gernrode to the Halle deaconeesses in autumn 1890 for the construction of a convalescent home. Two years later, together with her daughter-in-law Princess Marie of Baden, she marked the foundation of the Anhaltische Diakonissenanstalt.[2][circular reference]

The streets Antoinettenweg in Selketal, Antoinettenstraße in Dessau and the Antoinettenlyceum school are named after the Duchess.

Issue

Antoinette and Friedrich had six children:[citation needed]

  1. Leopold, Hereditary Prince of Anhalt (1855–1886), married Princess Elisabeth of Hesse-Kassel in 1884.
  2. Friedrich II, Duke of Anhalt (1856–1918), married Princess Marie of Baden in 1889.
  3. Princess Elisabeth of Anhalt (1857–1933), married Adolf Friedrich V, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg in Strelitz in 1877.
  4. Eduard, Duke of Anhalt (1861–1918), married Princess Luise of Saxe-Altenburg in 1895.
  5. Prince Aribert of Anhalt (1866–1933), married Princess Marie Louise of Schleswig-Holstein in 1891.
  6. Princess Alexandra of Anhalt (1868–1958), married Sizzo, Prince of Schwarzburg in 1897.

Ancestry


References

  1. "Duke of Anhalt Is Dead", The New York Times, Dessau, 25 January 1904
  2. "Antoinette von Sachsen-Altenburg". German Wikipedia. Retrieved 22 April 2023.
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