Eduard, Prince of Anhalt


Julius Eduard Ernst August Erdmann, Prince von Anhalt, usually referred to as Prince Eduard, is the head of the House of Ascania, the family which ruled the Duchy of Anhalt until 1918.

Life and family

Eduard was born at Schloss Ballenstedt in Ballenstedt, in what is now the German state of Saxony-Anhalt, the youngest of the five children of the last reigning Duke of Anhalt, Joachim Ernst, and of his second wife Editha Marwitz, natural daughter of Wilhelm Horn by Irmgard Marwitz. She allegedly paid 10,000 marks to Bertha von Stephani to improve her social standing by adult adoption.
On 9 October 1963, Eduard's older brother Friedrich died childless in a car crash, and Eduard succeeded him as head of the house of Ascania. He uses the title Prince of Anhalt, but is referred to by others as Duke of Anhalt. The succession of Eduard and his brother was disputed by their uncle Prince Eugen who also claimed the headship of house after the death of Duke Joachim Ernst. The death without male issue in 1980 of Prince Eugen left Prince Eduard as the sole claimant to the headship of the house.
Eduard lived in the United States for several years, working in a number of retail sales positions, before returning to Germany in 1967. He has been a journalist and columnist for numerous German magazines. He has also hosted a television programme Adel verpflichet for RTL Television. Subsequently, Anhalt became a frequent German television commentator for royal events.
In 1978, Eduard wrote a book about his family's traditions, Askanische Sagen Über die Entstehung der Deutschen. A revised and expanded edition of the book with the title Sagenhaftes Askanien: Geschichten und Legenden was published in 2004.
Due to his father's incarceration in a concentration camp from 1938 to 1944, Eduard's paternity has occasionally been questioned. In 1990 his eldest sister Princess Marie Antoinette termed him her 'half brother' to the press, and alleged that his father was Heinrich Himmler. Eduard responded by suggesting the matter was simply a dispute between siblings, and that she wished to besmirch his name.
In April 1990, Eduard asserted ownership of the family seat Schloss Ballenstedt, which had been confiscated by the Communist authorities in East Germany after World War II. He was unsuccessful, and there were lengthy administrative disputes, although relations with the town administration of Ballenstedt subsequently improved.
After a further long legal fight with the town administration, which had insisted on first right of refusal, in May 2000 Eduard managed to purchase for 400,000 D-Marks another property of the family which had been requisitioned. This was the small but historic domed neoclassical hunting lodge, Röhrkopf, built in 1770, which lies within the former park of Schloss Ballenstedt. It has now become the family seat, and three holiday apartments for general rental have been constructed within its garden. Fear of lingering animosity towards the family, including over issues of restitution, inhibited his children from resettling in Anhalt, although after her divorce his wife bought a home in Dessau, and worked to promote the region.
A difficulty for Eduard has been the adult adoptees of his aunt Princess Marie-Auguste of Anhalt. Adopted for what has been presumed to be mercenary reasons, and laying claim to be Princes of Anhalt, they are estimated to number 35 persons. Outside of Germany the most notable of the adoptees is the last husband of Zsa Zsa Gabor, Frederic von Anhalt formerly, Hans Georg Robert Lichtenberg. In 2010, Eduard released a statement restating that such individuals would never be officially recognised by the family as members of House of Anhalt-Ascania.
Eduard gained international attention in August 2010 when he claimed to have advanced knowledge of the engagement of his distant cousin Prince William of Wales to Kate Middleton. Although a spokesperson for the British Royal family denied Eduard's claim, the engagement was indeed announced a few months later.

Marriage and children

On 21 July 1980, in Munich, Eduard married Corinne Krönlein in a civil ceremony. The couple renewed their vows in a religious ceremony on 7 June 1986 in S-charl, near Scuol, Switzerland, but later divorced in 2014. Eduard and Corinne have three children:
Eduard is the last male of what is considered the "House of Ascania". If Eduard died without male issue, the House would have been considered extinct. The male line of Ascanians survives, however, in the counts von Westarp, descendants of Prince Franz of Anhalt-Bernburg-Schaumburg-Hoym and his morganatic wife Karoline Westarp and the counts von Waldersee who descend from Count Franz Johann von Waldersee, illegitimate son of Leopold III, Duke of Anhalt-Dessau and his mistress Eleonore Hofmeyer.
In 2010 Eduard modified the House of Anhalt-Ascania Laws, abolishing the Salic or Semi-Salic laws; recognising his first born daughter as his heir; and ruling that gender would in future be irrelevant in determining the line of descent.
As a Protestant Christian directly descended from George II of Great Britain through his great-great-grandmother Princess Marie Frederica of Hesse-Kassel, Eduard is distantly in the line of succession to the British throne.

Titles, styles and honours

Eduard has served as deputy chairman of the Société des Amis of the Almanach de Gotha reboot.

Ancestry

Patrilineal descent

  1. Esico of Ballenstedt, 10??-c. 1060
  2. Adalbert II, Count of Ballenstedt, c. 1030-1076/1083
  3. Otto, Count of Ballenstedt, c. 1070–1233
  4. Albert the Bear, 1100-1170
  5. Bernhard, Count of Anhalt, c. 1134-1212
  6. Henry I, Count of Anhalt, c.1170-1252
  7. Siegfried I, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst, c.1230-c.1314/1316
  8. Albert I, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst,...-1316
  9. Albert II, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst,...-1362
  10. John II, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst,...–1382
  11. Sigismund I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau,...-1405
  12. George I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, c.1390-1474
  13. Ernest I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, 1454–1516
  14. John V, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst, 1504-1551
  15. Joachim Ernest, Prince of Anhalt, 1536-1586
  16. John George I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, 1567-1618
  17. John Casimir, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, 1596–1660
  18. John George II, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, 1627–1693
  19. Leopold I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, 1676–1747
  20. Leopold II, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, 1700–1751
  21. Leopold III, Duke of Anhalt-Dessau, 1722–1751
  22. Frederick, Hereditary Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, 1769–1814
  23. Leopold IV, Duke of Anhalt, 1794–1871
  24. Frederick I, Duke of Anhalt, 1831–1904
  25. Eduard, Duke of Anhalt, 1861–1918
  26. Joachim Ernst, Duke of Anhalt, 1901-1947
  27. Eduard, Prince of Anhalt, b. 1941