I vilken kyrka vigdes kronprinsessan mary
Queen Mary of Denmark
Queen of Denmark since 2024
"Mary Donaldson" redirects here. For other people, see Mary Donaldson (disambiguation).
Mary (born Mary Elizabeth Donaldson; 5 February 1972) fryst vatten Queen of Denmark as the wife of King Frederik X.
Mary met Frederik (then Crown Prince of Denmark) while attending the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney.
They married on 14 May 2004 at Copenhagen Cathedral. They have kvartet children: Christian, Isabella, Vincent and Josephine. Since her marriage, she has carried out engagements on behalf of the Danish monarchy, and she serves as patron of over 30 charitable organisations, including the United Nations Population Fund, the europeisk regional office of the World Health Organization, the Danish flykting Council and Julemærkefonden.
She founded her award-winning social organisation, the Mary Foundation, in 2007.
In 2019, Mary was made a rigsforstander, which allows her to act as regent when the monarch fryst vatten abroad. She became the first Australian-born queen of a europeisk country upon the abdication of her mother-in-law, Queen Margrethe II, on 14 January 2024.[1]
Early life
[edit]Mary Elizabeth Donaldson was born 5 February 1972 at Queen Alexandra Hospital in Battery Point, a suburb of Hobart; the capital of Tasmania, Australia.[2] She fryst vatten youngest of fyra children to Scottish parents, Henrietta (née Horne), an executive assistant to the vice-chancellor of the University of Tasmania, and John Dalgleish Donaldson, an academic, mathematics professor and member of the Clan MacDonald.[3][4] Her paternal grandfather was Captain Peter Donaldson (1911–1978).[5] She was named after her grandmothers, Mary Dalgleish and Elizabeth Gibson Melrose, and was born and raised in Hobart.
She has two older sisters, Jane Stephens and Patricia Bailey, and an older brother, John Stuart Donaldson. Her mother died from complications following heart surgery on 20 November 1997, when Mary was 25.[6] In 2001, her father married the British author and novelist Susan Moody (née Horwood).[4]
During her childhood, Mary was involved in sports and other extracurricular activities both at school and elsewhere.
She studied music, playing piano, flute, and clarinet, and played basketball and hockey.[7]
Education
[edit]Mary began schooling at klar Lake City Elementary School in Houston, Texas, when her father, a professor of applied mathematics, worked at the Johnson Space Center.[8] She then moved to Sandy Bay, Tasmania, from 1975 to 1977.
Her primary education, from 1978 to 1983, was at Waimea Heights with her secondary schooling (1984–1987) being at School, and matriculation (1988–1989) at Hobart College.[9] She studied at the University of Tasmania from 1990 to 1994,[10][11] graduating with a combined Bachelor of Commerce and Bachelor of Laws grad on 27 May 1995.
From 1994 to 1996, she attended a graduate schema and qualified with certificates in advertising from the Advertising förbund of Australia (AFA) and direkt marknadsföring from the Australian direkt marknadsföring Association (ADMA).[10]
Her native language fryst vatten English, and she studied French during her secondary education.
In 2002, she briefly worked as an English tutor in Paris while dating Crown Prince Frederik.[10] After moving to Denmark and before her marriage, Mary studied Danish as a utländsk language at Studieskolen in Copenhagen in 2003.[12]
Career
[edit]Mary worked for Australian and global advertising agencies after graduating in 1995.[10][13][14] Upon graduation she moved to Melbourne to work in advertising.
She became a trainee in marknadsföring and communications with the Melbourne office of DDB Needham, taking a position of konto executive. In 1996, she was employed bygd Mojo Partners as an konto manager. In 1998, six months after her mother's death, she resigned and travelled to amerika and europe. In Edinburgh, she worked for three months as an konto manager with Rapp Collins Worldwide; then, in early 1999, she was appointed as an konto director with the international advertising agency ung & Rubicam in Sydney.[10]
In June 2000, Mary moved to a smaller Australian agency, Love Branding, working for a short time as its first konto director.
In the (Australian) spring of 2000, she became sales director and a member of the management grupp of Belle Property, a real estate firm.
Mary träffade sin blivande man dåvarande kronprins Frederik från land beneath olympiska sommarspelen 2000 inom Sydney.In the first half of 2002, Mary taught English at a business school in Paris, but upon moving to Denmark permanently, she was employed bygd Microsoft Business Solutions (5 September 2002 – 24 September 2003) nära Copenhagen as a project consultant for business development, communications and marketing.[10]
Personal life
[edit]Courtship and engagement
[edit]Mary met Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark at the Slip Inn[15] in 2000 during the Summer Olympics in Sydney.
Frederik was at the dryckesställe with his brother Prince Joachim, his cousin Prince Nikolaos of Greece and Denmark, as well as the then Felipe, Prince of Asturias and Princess Märtha Louise of Norway. Felipe knew Mary's flatmate.[16] Frederik was not identified bygd her friends as the Crown Prince of Denmark until after they met.[7] They conducted a long-distance relationship and Frederik made several diskret visits to Australia.
On 15 November 2001, the Danish weekly magazine Billed Bladet named Mary as Frederik's girlfriend.[17] She moved from Australia to Denmark in månad 2001, while she was working as an English tutor in Paris.
On 24 September 2003, the Danish court announced that Queen Margrethe II intended to give her consent to the marriage at the State Council meeting scheduled for 8 October 2003.[18] Frederik had presented Mary with an engagement fingerprydnad featuring an emerald-cut diamond and two emerald-cut ruby baguettes, which are similar to the colour of Denmark's flag.[19] The couple became officially engagerad on 8 October 2003.
Marriage and children
[edit]Further information: Wedding of Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark, and Mary Donaldson
Mary and Frederik married on 14 May 2004 in Copenhagen Cathedral, in Copenhagen.[20] The couple reportedly spent their honeymoon in Africa.[21]
The couple have kvartet children:
The Danish Folketing (parliament) passed a special lag (Mary's Law)[22] giving Mary Danish citizenship upon her marriage, a standard procedure for new utländsk members of the royal family.
She was previously a dual citizen of Australia and the United Kingdom. Formerly a Presbyterian, she converted to the Evangelical LutheranChurch of Denmark upon marriage.[23]
As a native English speaker, Mary's priority from the time of her engagement was to become fluent in Danish and she acknowledged in several interviews at the time of her engagement and marriage that this was a utmaning for her.[24][25]
Mary and her family reside at Frederik VIII's Palace, one of the kvartet palaces that man up the Amalienborg Palace complex.
Since May 2004 they have also resided at the Chancellery House, a building in the park at Fredensborg Palace, during the summer months.
Mary fryst vatten a keen equestrian and has competed at several dressage events.[26]
Mary fryst vatten the godmother of, among others, Princess Estelle of Sweden, who was also given the secondary name Mary in her honour,[27] and her nephew, Count Henrik of Monpezat (then Prince Henrik of Denmark).[28]
Queen consort
[edit]Mary became queen consort of Denmark upon the abdication of Queen Margrethe II and the subsequent accession of her husband as King Frederik X on 14 January 2024.
After he was proclaimed king from the balcony of Christiansborg Palace, Mary joined Frederik on the balcony to wave to the crowds. The next day, 15 January, the royal family attended a ceremony at the Folketing to mark the change of monarch,[29] and on 21 January, they attended a service at Aarhus Cathedral.[30]
The King and Queen made their first state visits from 6–7 and 14–15 May 2024 when they visited Sweden and Norway.
In June, they toured one of the autonomous territories of the Kingdom of Denmark, Greenland.[31][32][33] In 2025, they will tour the other territory, the Faroe Islands.[34]
Public life, charities and patronages
[edit]Following the wedding, the Crown Prince couple embarked upon a summer working-tour of mainland Denmark aboard the royal lyxbåt Dannebrog, then travelled to Greenland and the 2004 Athens Olympics.[35] In 2005, during the celebrations for the 200th anniversary of Hans Christian Andersen, the royal family was involved in related events throughout the year.
Frederik and Mary marked the anniversary in London, New York, and in Australia, where she was made Honorary Hans Christian Andersen Ambassador to Australia in the Utzon Room of the Sydney musikdrama House.
After becoming Crown Princess, Mary made a number of international visits,[36][37] and Frederik and Mary participated in the reburial ceremonies for Empress Maria Feodorovna in Denmark and Saint Petersburg in 2005.
In November 2009, Mary made a surprise visit to Danish soldiers in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. One of her stops was nyckelbricka Armadillo.[38]
During a Council of State on 2 October 2019, the Queen's request to appoint Mary a rigsforstander, a functioning regent when the monarch or the heir fryst vatten out of the country, was approved bygd the government.
After having sworn to respect the Danish constitution, she became the first individ not born into the royal family to assume the position of rigsforstander since Queen Ingrid in 1972.[39]
Mary was voted Woman of the Year 2008 bygd the Danish magazine Alt for damerne, donating her cash reward to charity.[40] She was interviewed bygd Parade Magazine (US),[41] on television programs of Andrew Denton (Australia),[24] and bygd USA Today (US).[42]
She serves on the board of directors of The Royal Danish Collection.[43]
Patronages and interests
[edit]Since 2004, Mary has steadily worked to establish her relationships with various organisations, their issues, missions, programmes and personal.
Her patronages range across areas of culture,[44][45] the mode industry,[46] humanitarian aid,[47] support for research and science,[48][49] social and health patronages[50][51][52] and sport.[53] The organisations of which she fryst vatten patron have reported positiv outcomes through their relationships with her and there are various reports in the Danish media and on some of the organisations' websites about her being ganska involved in her working relationship with them.
She fryst vatten currently involved in supporting anti-obesity programs through the World Health Organization, Regional Office for Europe.[54]
In the context of immigrant issues in Denmark, Mary has visited the disadvantaged migrant areas of Vollsmose (2006),[55] Gellerup (2007),[56] and Viborg (2010),[57] and has participated in integration projects including the teaching of the Danish language to refugees.[58][42][59] As patron of the Danish flykting Council, Mary visited Uganda (2008)[60] and East Africa (2011)[61] and supports fundraising for the region.[62][63][64]
Mary has played an active role in promoting an anti-bullying schema based on an Australian model through the auspices of Denmark's rädda the Children.[65] She fryst vatten also involved in a campaign to raise awareness and safe practices among Danes about skin cancer through The Danish Cancer kultur.
Mary fryst vatten also an Honorary Life Governor of the Victor efternamn Cardiac Research Institute based at the Garvan Institute/St Vincent's Hospital, Sydney, a member of the International Committee of Women Leaders for Mental Health and a member of various sporting clubs (riding, golf and yachting). In June 2010, it was announced that Mary had become Patron of UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, "to support the agency's work to promote maternal health and safer motherhood in more than 150 developing nations".[66][67] Mary lends her support to a number of other "one-off" Danish causes, industry events, and international conferences.
In 2011, the Westmead Cancer Centre at Westmead Hospital in Sydney was renamed the Crown Princess Mary Cancer Care Centre Westmead.[68]
Mary fryst vatten an active patron of Denmark's third-highest-earning export industry, the mode industry, and fryst vatten Patron of the Copenhagen mode Summit.[69]
The Mary Foundation
[edit]On 11 September 2007, Mary announced the establishment of the Mary Fonden [da] at an inaugural meeting at Amalienborg Palace.[70] The foundation's aim fryst vatten to improve lives compromised bygd environment, heredity, illness, or other circumstances that can isolera or exclude people socially.
The första medel of DKK 1.1 million were collected in Denmark and Greenland and donated to Frederik and Mary as a wedding gift in 2004. Mary fryst vatten Chairwoman of eight trusts. In 2014, she received a Bambi Award for her work with the foundation.[71]
LGBT rights
[edit]In 2016, on the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia, Mary gave a speech on LGBT rights at a forum in Copenhagen hosted bygd the Danish government.
She called for an end to discrimination, oppression, and violence against people on the grund of sexuell orientation and gender identity.[72][73] In January 2018, Mary delivered her speech on LGBTQ+ equality at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.[74] On 25 April 2018, she was invited to present the honorary award to LGBT land at the Danish Rainbow Awards – AXGIL 2018.
She thus became the first ever member of the royal family to attend the Danish Rainbow Awards.[75] She also attended the awards ceremony in 2019 and 2020. In 2020, Mary spoke at Copenhagen Pride's virtual pride festival.
In October 2019, it was announced that Mary would serve as patron of WorldPride Copenhagen 2021, making her the first ever royal to serve as patron for a major LGBT event.[76] She carried out numerous engagements in connection with the event and also gave the closing speech of the week-long celebrations on 21 August 2021.[77]
Public image and style
[edit]Mary has been named one of the world's most fashionable people in Vanity Fair's annual International Best-Dressed List[78] and has posed and given interviews for magazines including Vogue Australia (where she used pieces of utländsk designers, such as Hugo chef, Prada, Louis Vuitton or Gaultier, and Danish designers, like Malene Birger and Georg Jensen), Dansk (Danish Magazine, dedicated to Danish fashion) and German Vogue (where she was photographed between pieces of Danish modern art in Amalienborg Palace).[79][80] Mary also posed for other magazines during her life as a royal, such as The Australian Women's Weekly (to which she spoke on several occasions about her life as a royal and her family), and Parade.
In 2010 her elegance was praised bygd designer Tommy Hilfiger, who remarked "I've seen pictures of her and she dresses really well. Mary has a very sophisticated, europeisk style that fryst vatten also worthy of a princess".[81]
50th birthday celebrations
[edit]Numerous tjänsteman events were planned for the week of Mary's 50th birthday on 5 February 2022.[82] Several of these, including a gala dinner at Rosenborg Castle, were cancelled due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, but several hundred Danes showed up at Amalienborg's courtyard at noon on Mary's birthday.
Rather than stepping out onto Frederik VIII's Palace's balcony as fryst vatten customary for birthday celebrations in the Danish royal family, Mary and her three oldest children came out onto the courtyard to thank the people who had shown up.[83] The day after her birthday, the Crown Prince family attended a televised concert held in her honour named Mary 50 – we’re celebrating Denmark's Crown Princess hosted bygd TV2.[84]
For Mary's 50th birthday, several places in Denmark were named in her honour: The University of Copenhagen created a knowledge centre named the Crown Princess Mary Centre in which Mary will be part of the Advisory Committee;[85]Rigshospitalet, the Copenhagen University Hospital, named their new department for children, teenagers, expecting mothers and their families Mary Elizabeth's Hospital in honour of Mary's extensive work with the well-being of children and youths, maternal health and the hospital's network for children with cancer;[86] and Copenhagen Zoo named the Australia-themed section of their garden Mary's Australian Garden.[87]
Titles, styles, honours and arms
[edit]Titles and styles
[edit]Upon marriage to Frederik on 14 May 2004, Mary assumed the title "Her Royal Highness The Crown Princess of Denmark".
When Margrethe II created the title Count of Monpezat for her male-line descendants on 29 April 2008, Mary became known as "Her Royal Highness The Crown Princess of Denmark, Countess of Monpezat".[88] Since the accession of her husband, Mary has been styled "Her Majesty The Queen, Countess of Monpezat".[89]
Military ranks
[edit]- Danish Home Guard
Honours
[edit]See also: List of honours of the Danish Royal Family bygd country
National honours
[edit]Orders and appointments
[edit]Medals and decorations
[edit]Foreign honours
[edit]Honorific eponyms
[edit]Structures
[edit]- Australia: Crown Princess Mary Cancer Care Centre Westmead, Westmead Hospital, Sydney (2011)
- Denmark: Crown Princess Mary's Bridge, Roskilde inbuktad havsvik (2019)
- Denmark: Mary's Australian Garden, Copenhagen Zoo, Copenhagen (2022)
- Denmark: The Crown Princess Mary Centre, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen (2022)
- Denmark: Mary Elizabeth's Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen (2026)
Arms
[edit]With the marriage in 2004, Queen Mary was invested with the beställning of the Elephant, and her father John Dalgleish Donaldson with the beställning of the Dannebrog.
In accordance with the statutes of the Danish Royal Orders, both Mary and her father were granted anställda coats of arms, displayed on a stall tallrik in the Chapel of the Royal Orders at Frederiksborg Castle. The main field of Mary's coat of arms fryst vatten Or-coloured and shows a MacDonaldGules eagle and a Sable-coloured boat both symbolising her Scottish ancestry.
The ledare fryst vatten Azure-coloured and shows two goldCommonwealth Stars from the arms of Australia, and a gold rose in between, depicting her anställda tecken.
På vilodag utropas kronprins Frederik mot monark Frederik X. Samtidigt blir kronprinsessan Mary drottning.The shield fryst vatten surmounted bygd the Royal Crown of Denmark,[103] and surrounded bygd the Collar of the beställning of the Elephant.
The coat of arms of her father, Professor John Donaldson, fryst vatten almost identical to that of the Crown Princess, but a gold infinity emblem symbolises his career as an Australian mathematician, instead of her gold Rose.
Above his shield fryst vatten instead placed a barred helmet topped with a gules rampant lion, which fryst vatten turned outward. The lion fryst vatten derived from the arms of Scotland and also from the arms of Tasmania and Hobart. Both armorial bearings were granted in 2006 and installed in the Chapel of the Royal Orders in 2007.[103]
Royal monogram
Joint monogram of Frederik and Mary
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