訃報(2018年6月9日):ザクセン=ヴァイマル=アイゼナハ大公子ゲオルク=コンスタンティン殿下が落馬で薨去(1977~2018)同系統の男系男子は消滅が確定的に

 2018年6月9日、ザクセン=ヴァイマル=アイゼナハ大公子ゲオルク=コンスタンティン殿下(His Highness Prince Georg-Constantin of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach : ゲオルク=コンスタンティン・プリンツ・フォン・ザクセン=ヴァイマル=アイゼナハGeorg-Constantin Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach)が、落馬で薨去しました。
 1977年4月13日生まれの41歳。

 ヴェッティン家およびエルネスティン系ヴェッティン家でもっとも長系のザクセン=ヴァイマル=アイゼナハ大公室当主/ザクセン=ヴァイマル=アイゼナッハ公ミヒャエル殿下(Michael : His Royal Highness The Prince of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach)には男子がおらず、ザクセン=ヴァイマル=アイゼナハ系統ではミヒャエル殿下の従兄のエルンスト殿下とその子息の(今回薨去した)ゲオルク=コンスタンティン殿下しか他の男系男子は存在しなかったのですが、薨去により(ミヒャエル殿下とエルンスト殿下が70歳を超えているので)男系男子の消滅が確定的となりました。

 

 (英語)German prince who moved to UK to marry Englishwoman is killed after falling from horse in race | Daily Mail Online

 (ドイツ語)Georg-Constantin Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach: Tod mit 41 | GALA.de
 (ドイツ語)Georg-Constantin Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach: Plötzlicher Tod mit 41! | BUNTE.de
 (ドイツ語)Georg-Constantin Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach stirbt bei tragischem Reitunfall | OTZ
 (ドイツ語)Reitunfall: Georg-Constantin Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach gestorben – FOCUS Online
 (ドイツ語)Tragisches Unglück: Georg-Constantin Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach stirbt bei Reitunfall | Express.de
 (ドイツ語)Georg-Constantin Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach ist tot! | InTouch
 (ドイツ語)Georg-Constantin Prinz von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach Tod: Tragischer Reitunfall im Alter von 41 Jahren
 (ドイツ語)Prinz Georg-Constantin von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach stirbt mit 41 Jahren
 (ドイツ語)Trauerfeier für Georg-Constantin wird in Weimar beerdigt | MDR.DE
 (ドイツ語)Trauerfeier für Prinz Georg-Constantin von Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach | MDR.DE

 

 将来的に当主になるであろうことが決定的であったゲオルク=コンスタンティン殿下の今回の薨去に伴い、当主のミヒャエル殿下は、自分の後継者に、娘のレオニー殿下を指名しています。

 (ドイツ語)Nach tragischem Unfall: Leonie führt jetzt das Haus Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach | OTZ

 葬儀を待たずに指名がおこなわれた非礼への批判もありますが……。

 ともあれ、今回の指名が、ミヒャエル殿下がトップを務めている各団体の次期トップに娘を指名しただけのものなのか、次期ザクセン=ヴァイマル=アイゼナハ大公室当主として娘を指名したのか、見解はわかれています。

 が、ミヒャエル殿下は、アルベルティン系ヴェッティン家=ザクセン王室の男系男子消滅とともに、ザクセン王室は消滅していると主張し、「あえていうならヴェッティン家全体でもっとも長系の男系男子である自分がザクセン王室当主」という主旨まで発言したことがあります。いきなり男系男子を無視して娘を指名するとは考えにくく、また指名したところで他のエルネスティン系ヴェッティン家(ザクセン=マイニンゲン公室とザクセン=コーブルク=ゴータ公室)が承認するとは思えません。
 ザクセン=マイニンゲン公室も、当主とみなされているコンラート殿下のほかには、父の一度目の結婚(貴賤結婚とみなされている)の息子であった亡兄の息子しか男系男子はいません。そしてコンラート殿下の真意はいまだ不明です。
 すでに消滅しているザクセン=アルテンブルク公室を含めて、エルネスティン系統のヴェッティン家は、ザクセン=コーブルク=ゴータ公室以外、未来が見えない状況です。

 また、後継指名されたレオニー殿下は未婚とされており、団体のトップであろうと大公室当主であろうと、後継問題はいずれ発生すると見られています。
 そのような場合、レオニー殿下が今から結婚して子供が生まれその子が継いだり、あるいは今回薨去したゲオルク=コンスタンティン殿下の姉デジレー殿下とその子孫が継ぐのであれば異論は少なそうではありますが、そうではない(ザクセン=ヴァイマル=アイゼナハの子孫ではない)人々へ権利が移るとなると、法廷で争われることがあるかもしれません。

 

誕生(2015年7月?):ミハエル・プリンツ・フォン・ザクセン=マイニンゲン

 2015年7月に、ザクセン=マイニンゲン公室のザクセン=マイニンゲン公コンラート殿下の甥にあたるコンスタンティン・プリンツ・フォン・ザクセン=マイニンゲンConstantin Prinz von Sachsen-Meiningen)に、第一子となる男子(ミハエル・プリンツ・フォン・ザクセン=マイニンゲンMichael Prinz von Sachsen-Meiningen)が誕生したとの情報が出ています。

 コンスタンティン氏は、ザクセン=マイニンゲン公コンラート殿下の亡父ベルンハルト殿下の貴賤結婚(1回目の結婚)で権利を得ていない異母兄フリードリヒ・エルンストの子であり(従って“公子”でも“殿下”でもありませんが、そう称されていることも多く詳細は不明)、現在のルールではザクセン=マイニンゲン公位の継承者とはなれませんが(そもそも父が祖父の後を継いでいない時点でダメですが)、コンラート殿下に子供がいないことと、他に近い男系男子がいないことから、ルール変更などにより後継者となるであろうとみられています(仮にならなくても他に近親がいないので家産を継承するでしょう)。また、コンスタンティン殿下の母はザクセン=コーブルク=ゴータ公室出身(ザクセン=コーブルク=ゴータ公女ベアトリーツェ・シャルロッテ殿下)のため、やや特殊な継承に対して他のエルネスティン家2家より異論が出る可能性も低いのではないかと思います。

 しかし、今回誕生したミハエルの母ゾフィア・ルプスSophia Lupus)とコンスタンティン氏が結婚していないという情報もあり、その場合は、コンスタンティン氏自身の問題とは別に、ミハエルの継承権が存在していないという問題が発生します(もちろんのことですが、可能になるようにルール変更をおこなったという主張が将来出ることはありえます)。

 ちなみに、ザクセン=マイニンゲンの元々のルールに基づくと、継承者が存在しなくなった場合、ザクセン=コーブルク=ゴータのもっとも直系に近い男子に権利があることになるようです。
 現在のところ、ザクセン=コーブルク=ゴータ公アンドレアス殿下となりますが、(ザクセン=コーブルク=ゴータ公室を離れている)英国王室のグロスター公爵リチャード王子殿下が該当すると見る人もいます。

 

記事:
 (英語)EuropeanRoyalHistoryJournal.blogspot.com: Meiningen: A New Baby Heir
 (英語)Royal Musings: A new baby in the House of Saxe-Meingen
 
 

Line of succession to the former Saxon thrones

note:
As of July 2020.

See also:
Line of succession to the former Monarchical throne and others : From (deleted) Wikipedia’s articles.


Albertine Wettins

Royal House of Saxony

The Kingdom of Saxony was abolished in 1918 when King Frederick Augustus III of Saxony abdicated. The succession law until the abolition of the monarchy was semi-Salic primogeniture and required the successor to be born of an equal marriage, approved in advance by the head of the house.[1] Accordingly, the last undisputed male member of the family was Prince Albert of Saxony, who assumed the headship of the royal house and the title Margrave of Meissen upon the death of his brother the Margrave Maria Emanuel in July 2012. This was challenged, however, by his nephew Prince Alexander of Saxe-Gessaphe who also claimed the headship based on a 1997 agreement, and who is said to have reached an agreement with Albert just prior to the funeral of Maria Emanuel which recognised Alexander as the dynasty’s heir.[2] With the death of Albert in October 2012 the dispute continued with Prince Rüdiger of Saxony, the only agnatic great grandson of the last King of Saxony, claiming the headship.

The conflict over the headship stems from the fact that the last undisputed head of the house Maria Emanuel, Margrave of Meissen, and the other princes of his generation either had no children or, in the case of Prince Timo, had children (including Prince Rüdiger of Saxony) who were not recognised by Margrave Maria Emanuel as dynastic members of the Royal House of Saxony.[3][4] The first designated dynastic heir of Maria Emanuel was his and Albert’s nephew Prince Johannes of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, only son of their youngest sister Princess Mathilde of Saxony by her marriage to Prince Johannes Heinrich of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, dynast of a ducal branch of the House of Wettin senior patrilineally to the royal branch.[4]

In 2014 the Deutscher Adelsrechtsausschuss (basically a deciding body of the associations of the German nobility with regard to questions of historical nobility law) issued an expert opinion that the Albertine line of the House of Wettin became extinct with the death of Maria Emanuel, Margrave of Meissen in 2012. None of the remaining family members, who bear the legal surname “Prinz von Sachsen Herzog zu Sachsen”, are allowed to use the style His/Her Royal Highness. Because there is no longer a head of the royal house, no family member has the right to use the title Margrave of Meissen.[5][6]

Claim of Alexander, Margrave of Meissen

After the early death of Prince Johannes, the heirless Maria Emanuel then considered as potential heir another nephew, Alexander Afif, the eldest son of Princess Anna of Saxony and her husband Roberto Afif, despite the fact Alexander was only a female line Wettin descendant whose parents’ marriage had, at the time, been morganatic,[3] and were contrary to the house laws of the Saxon royal house and of the Saxon Kingdom’s constitution, both of which required equal marriage for descendants to inherit dynastic rights.[1][4][7]

On 14 May 1997 the Margrave of Meissen proposed his nephew Alexander Afif as heir and drew up a document that was signed by the other male and female members of the royal house (including previously non-dynastic spouses of princes) setting out that Alexander would succeed on his death. The document was signed by:

  • Anastasia, Margravine of Meissen (born 1940), the Margrave’s wife
  • Prince Albert of Saxony (1934–2012), the Margrave’s younger brother
  • Princess Elmira of Saxony (born 1930), Prince Albert’s wife
  • Prince Dedo of Saxony (1922–2009), the Margrave’s cousin. He also signed on behalf of:
    • his brother Prince Gero of Saxony (1925–2003)
    • his stepmother Princess Virginia of Saxony (1910–2002), widow of Prince Ernst Heinrich of Saxony
  • Princess Maria Josepha of Saxony (born 1928), the Margrave’s sister
  • Princess Anna of Saxony (1929–2012), the Margrave’s sister
  • Princess Mathilde of Saxony (1936-2018), the Margrave’s sister
  • Princess Erina of Saxony (1921–2010), widow of the Margrave’s cousin Prince Timo of Saxony.[8]

Two years later on 1 July 1999 the Margrave adopted his nephew Alexander Afif.[9]

Until his adoption, Alexander had used the title Alexander, Prince of Saxe-Gessaphe since 1972,[10] based on his claim to patrilineal descent from a Maronite Christian family of historical emirs and sheikhs in Lebanon, the “Afif” (or Gessaphe) dynasty.[11][12][12] Some sources now attribute princely rank to this family,[11] while others have ascribed to it a lesser status.[4] Since Alexander had fathered three sons and a daughter by his 1987 marriage to Princess Gisela of Bavaria (b. 1964),[13] his selection as heir offered the likelihood of compliance with the dynasty’s traditional marital rules for another generation.

The 1997 agreement proved to be controversial and in the summer of 2002 three of the signatories, Princes Albert, Dedo and Gero (the latter consented via proxy but had not personally signed the document)[14] retracted their support for the agreement.[2][15] The following year Prince Albert wrote that it is through Prince Ruediger and his sons that the direct line of the Albertine branch of the House of Wettin will continue, and thus avoid becoming extinct.[16] Until his death, however, the Margrave, as head of the former dynasty, continued to regard his nephew and adopted son, Prince Alexander, as the contractual heir entitled to succeed.[17]

Immediately following the death of Maria Emanuel in July 2012, Prince Albert assumed the position of head of the Royal House of Saxony.[2] According to the Eurohistory Journal prior to the Margrave’s funeral Albert met with his nephew, Alexander and recognised him as Margrave of Meissen.[2][18] However this claim is contradicted by Albert himself in his final interview, given after the funeral, where he states that he needs recognition as Margrave of Meissen.[19] Prince Alexander, citing the 1997 agreement has also assumed the headship.[2][20] Albert, Margrave of Meissen died at a hospital in Munich on 6 October 2012 at the age of 77.

Prior to the requiem for Margrave Maria Emanuel, Ruediger, who had sought to be recognised by his uncle as a dynastic member of the House of Saxony but was refused, conducted a demonstration outside the cathedral with Saxon royalists in protest against the late Margrave Maria Emanuel’s decision to appoint Alexander as heir.[21] Following Albert’s death, Prince Ruediger declared himself as the head of the house.[22]

In a joint statement of 23 June 2015, the heads of the three remaining branches of the senior Ernestine line of the House of Wettin, Michael, Prince of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, Andreas, Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha and Konrad, Prince of Saxe-Meiningen, declared that, according to the house law of the House of Wettin and to traditional princely succession rules, Alexander Afif, bearing the name Prince of Saxony by adoption, were neither a member of nobility nor of the House of Wettin, nor had he succeeded Maria Emanuel as head of the Albertine branch (the Royal House of Saxony), nor were he entitled to style himself Margrave of Meissen.[23]

The line of succession within the Saxe-Gessaphe line is:

  • Margrave Alexander (born 1954)[24]
    • (1) Prince Georg Philipp (b. 1988)[24]
    • (2) Prince Mauricio (b. 1989)[24]
    • (3) Prince Paul-Clemens (b. 1993)[24]

 

 

Claim of Rüdiger, Margrave of Meissen

The other claimant to the headship of the Royal House is Prince Rüdiger of Saxony, the only direct male line great grandson of the last king of Saxony. He was born into the cadet Moritzburg branch of the Royal House of Saxony, which was named after the palace where his grandfather and the founder of the branch Prince Ernst Heinrich of Saxony lived and where Ruediger and his family returned to after German reunification. Prince Ernst Heinrich had three sons the Princes Dedo (1922-2009), Timo (1923-1982) and Gero (1925-2003), however only Prince Timo married and had issue including an only son Prince Ruediger. Like the Afif-Saxony marriage, the marriage of Ruediger’s father to his mother Margrit Lucas was also morganatic.

If equality requirements are discarded as a direct male line descendant of the kings of Saxony the head of the Royal House is Prince Ruediger. The last surviving undisputed male dynast Prince Albert wrote in 2003 that it will be through Prince Ruediger and his sons that the direct line of the Albertine branch of the House of Wettin will continue, and thus avoid becoming extinct.[25] Prince Ruediger himself never accepted the 1997 agreement and when asked for his opinion on who the eventual successor to Maria Emanuel should be he replied that it should be himself.[26]

Following the death of Maria Emanuel in July 2012, Prince Ruediger recognised Prince Albert as the new Margrave of Meissen and head of the Royal House of Saxony. According to the family website prior to his death Albert determined Ruediger to be his successor and instituted a clear succession plan.[27] On this basis following Albert’s death Prince Ruediger assumed the headship of the house.[28]

The Moritzburg branch, in order of primogeniture, is:

  • Margrave Ruediger (born 1953)[24]
    • (1) Prince Daniel (b. 1975)[24]
      • (2) Prince Gero (b. 2015)[29]
    • (3) Prince Arne (b. 1977)[24]
    • (4) Prince Nils (b. 1978)[24]
      • (5) Prince Moritz (b. 2009)[24]

 

 

Claim of Karl Friedrich, Prince of Hohenzollern

Yet another potential successor to the former monarchy’s royal crown, due to the semi-Salic succession law used in Saxony, is Karl Friedrich, Prince of Hohenzollern. He is the eldest son and heir of Friedrich Wilhelm, Prince of Hohenzollern (1924–2010), who was the son of Princess Margaret of Saxony (1900–1962), the eldest aunt of Maria Emanuel, Margrave of Meissen. The succession would fall to Prince Karl Friedrich in case the marriage of Anna, the mother of the Saxe-Gessaphe claimant and elder sister of the margrave, is deemed non-dynastic despite the actions of the margrave and agnates to de-morganatize it.

His claim would also depend upon there having been no family pact (Erbverbrüderung) which allocated the kingdom to another dynasty upon extinction of the royal Wettins’ male line, since Saxony’s constitution explicitly recognized the validity of such pacts.[1][30] After Karl Friedrich, who had also been considered in the line of succession to the defunct throne of Romania, there is also a line of succession potentially applicable to the Saxon royal claim.

Line of Succession in November 1918

  • George, King of Saxony (1832–1904)
    • Frederick Augustus III of Saxony (born 1865)
      • (1) Georg, Crown Prince of Saxony (born 1893)
      • (2) Prince Friedrich Christian of Saxony (born 1893)
      • (3) Prince Ernst Heinrich of Saxony (born 1896)
    • (4) Prince Johann Georg of Saxony (born 1869)
    • Prince Maximilian of Saxony (born 1870), renounced succession rights

Ernestine Wettins

In the house laws of the Kingdom of Saxony, succession is restricted to the Albertinischer Linie, a term which referred exclusively to Wettin dynasts of the royal branch, male and female, eligible to inherit Saxony’s throne,[1] and may constitute exclusion of claims by Ernestine agnates of the other branch of the House of Wettin. Paragraph 6 of the Constitution of the Kingdom of Saxony, however, states: Die Krone ist erblich in dem Mannsstamme des Sächsischen Fürstenhauses nach dem Rechte der Erstgeburt und der agnatischen Linealfolge, vermöge Abstammung aus ebenbürtiger Ehe. (“The crown is hereditary in the male line of the Saxon princely house in accordance with the principle of primogeniture and agnatic lineal succession, by virtue of descent from equal marriage”). Since the “Sächsischen Fürstenhauser” included all dynastic members of the various branches of the House of Wettin which ruled the Ernestine duchies until 1918, any of these agnates fit this requirement and might, theoretically, claim the royal Saxon throne in accordance with primogeniture.[improper synthesis?] This rationale could make the titular Grand Duke of Saxony, Michael, Prince of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, the royal heir by primogeniture after extinction of the Albertine branch (which is the most junior line of the House of Wettin although it alone attained the rank of a kingdom within Germany).

One or more of the Ernestine Wettins may also have claims superior to descendants of both female and de-morganatized Albertine dynasts if an Erbverbrüderung had been signed between the Albertine and any of the Ernestine branches of the dynasty. There are a number of extant lines of the House of Wettin (Weimar, Meiningen and Coburg; and the most junior of them, Coburg, includes the sub-branches of Windsor, Coburg proper, Koháry, Bulgaria and Belgium) who ruled the various Ernestine duchies and other realms.

It should, again, be borne in mind that Saxony’s royal constitution required that any successor to the throne be born of an equal (ebenbürtig) marriage, therefore Wettins who may qualify as dynastic princes under other house laws, might not be eligible under royal Saxon law:

Grand Ducal House of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach

  • Grand Duke Wilhelm Ernst (1876–1923)
    • Hereditary Grand Duke Carl August (1912–1988), Head of the Grand Ducal House (1923-1988)
      • Prince Michael (born 1946), Head of the Grand Ducal House (since 1988)[24][31]
    • Prince Bernhard (1917–1986)
      • (1) Prince Wilhelm Ernst (b. 1946)[24][31]

 

 

Ducal House of Saxe-Meiningen

  • Duke Georg II (1826–1914)
    • Prince Ernst (1859–1941), Head of the Ducal House (1928-1941)
      • Has living male non-dynastic descendants the Barons von Saalfeld
    • Prince Friedrich (1861–1914)
      • Prince Bernhard (1901–1984), Head of the Ducal House (1946-1984)
        • Frederick, Prince of Saxe-Meiningen (1935-2004), non-dynastical member by the first morganatical marriage of his father
          • Friedrich Constantin, Prince of Saxe-Meiningen (born 1980), possible successor of the Head of the Ducal House
        • Prince Konrad (born 1952), Head of the Ducal House (since 1984)[24]

 

 

Ducal House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha

Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (later Edward VII) in 1863, and Arthur, Duke of Connaught in 1899, both deferred their rights and those of their descendants to the ducal throne of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, in favor of their nephew, Prince Charles Edward, Duke of Albany. These deferrals are not relevant to the royal Saxon succession, however British dynasts may have contracted marriages that would be considered morganatic by royal Saxon standards. If not, Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester is the senior descendant in the British male line of the Dukes of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.

Otherwise, in 1932 Hereditary Prince Johann Leopold (son of Duke Charles Edward) made a non-dynastic marriage whereupon, under the then house laws, his descendants lost any rights to the succession of the ducal throne. The present Head of the Ducal House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha is Prince Andreas, the grandson of Charles Edward, last reigning Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.

  • Duke Franz (1750–1806)
    • Duke Ernst I (1784–1844)
      • Prince Albert (1819–1861)
        • King Edward VII of the United Kingdom (1841–1910)
          • British Royal Family
        • Prince Leopold (1853–1884)
          • Duke Carl Eduard (1884–1954)
            • Hereditary Prince Johann Leopold (1906–1972)
              • Has living male non-dynastic descendants
            • Prince Friedrich Josias (1918–1998), Head of the Ducal House (1954-1998)
              • Prince Andreas (born 1943), Head of the Ducal House (since 1998)[24][31]
                • (1) Hereditary Prince Hubertus (b. 1975)[24][31]
                  • (2) Prince Philipp (b. 2015)[24][31]
                • (3) Prince Alexander (b. 1977)[24][31]
              • Prince Adrian (1955–2011)
                • Has living male non-dynastic descendants[24][31]
    • Prince Ferdinand (1785–1851)
      • Prince August (1818–1881)
        • Prince Ludwig August (1845–1907)
          • Prince August Leopold (1867–1922)
            • Prince Philipp Josias (1901–1985)
              • Has living male non-dynastic descendants[24][31]
        • King Ferdinand I of Bulgaria (1861–1948)
          • Bulgarian Royal Family[31]
    • King Leopold I of Belgium (1790–1865)
      • Belgian Royal Family
  •  

     

    Lines of Succession in November 1918

    Grand Ducal House of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach
    • Karl August, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1757–1828)
      • Charles Frederick, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1783–1853)
        • Charles Alexander, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1818–1901)
          • Charles Augustus, Hereditary Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1844–1894)
            • William Ernest, Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (born 1876)
              • (1) Charles Augustus, Hereditary Grand Duke of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (b. 1912)
              • (2) Prince Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (b. 1917)
      • Prince Bernhard of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1792–1862)
        • Prince Hermann of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (1825–1901)
          • (3) Prince Wilhelm of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach (b. 1853)
    Ducal House of Saxe-Meiningen
    • Duke Georg II (1826–1914)
      • Bernhard III, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen (born 1851)
      • (1) Prince Ernst (b. 1859)
        • Had living male non-dynastic descendants the Barons von Saalfeld
      • Prince Friedrich (1861–1914)
        • (2) Prince Georg (b. 1892)
        • (3) Prince Bernhard (b. 1901)
    Ducal House of Saxe-Altenburg
    • Ernst II, Duke of Saxe-Altenburg (born 1871)
      • (1) Georg Moritz, Hereditary Prince of Saxe-Altenburg (b.1900)
      • (2) Prince Frederick Ernst (b. 1905)
    Ducal House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
    • Duke Franz (1750–1806)
      • Duke Ernst I (1784–1844)
        • Prince Albert (1819–1861)
          • King Edward VII of the United Kingdom (1841–1910)
            • King George V of the United Kingdom (b. 1865) (British dynasts considered to forfeit succession rights)
              • Edward, Prince of Wales (b. 1894)
              • Prince Albert of the United Kingdom (b. 1895)
              • Prince Henry of the United Kingdom (b. 1900)
              • Prince George of the United Kingdom (b. 1902)
              • Prince John of the United Kingdom (b. 1905)
          • Duke Alfred (1844–1900)
          • Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn (b. 1850)
            • Prince Arthur of Connaught (b. 1883)
              • Prince Alastair of Connaught (b. 1912)
          • Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany (1853–1884)
            • Duke Carl Eduard (born 1884)
              • (1) Hereditary Prince Johann Leopold (b. 1906)
              • (2) Prince Hubertus (b. 1909)
      • Prince Ferdinand (1785–1851)
        • King Ferdinand II of Portugal (1816–1885)
          • King Luís I of Portugal (1838–1889)
            • King Carlos I of Portugal (1863–1908)
              • (3) King Manuel II of Portugal (b. 1889)
            • (4) Infante Afonso, Duke of Porto (b. 1865)
        • Prince August (1818–1881)
          • (5) Prince Philipp (b. 1844)
          • Prince Ludwig August (1845–1907)
            • (6) Prince Pedro Augusto (b. 1866)
            • (7) Prince August Leopold (b. 1867)
              • (8) Prince Rainier (b. 1900)
              • (9) Prince Philipp Josias (b. 1901)
              • (10) Prince Ernst (b. 1907)
            • (11) Prince Ludwig Gaston (b. 1870)
              • (12) Prince Antonius (b. 1901)
          • (13) King Ferdinand I of Bulgaria (b. 1861)
            • (14) King Boris III of Bulgaria (b. 1893)
            • (15) Kiril, Prince of Preslav (b. 1895)
      • Leopold I of Belgium (1790–1865)
        • Prince Philippe, Count of Flanders (1837–1905)
          • King Albert I of Belgium (b. 1875) (Belgian dynasts considered to forfeit succession rights)
            • Prince Leopold, Duke of Brabant (b. 1901)
            • Prince Charles, Count of Flanders (b. 1903)