Sua Altezza Reale la Principessa Margherita di Baden è morta a Farnham la sera del 15 gennaio 2013. La sua morte ha posto fine a una lunga malattia che aveva seriamente minato la salute della principessa.
La principessa è cresciuta a Schloß Salem, dove la sua famiglia ha sponsorizzato un rinomato centro educativo costruito seguendo le politiche progressiste proposte da Kurt Hahn, un educatore di origine ebraica molto rispettato. Berthold e Hahn erano il cuore della Salem School, entrambi anche baluardi contro la conquista nazionalsocialista della Germania. Alla fine, Hahn fu costretto a lasciare la Germania e a cercare rifugio in Inghilterra, dove fondò Gordonstoun, la scuola frequentata dal principe Filippo e dal principe di Galles.
Dopo la nascita della figlia Margarita, Berthold e Theodora ebbero altri due figli: Maximilian (Max), nato nel 1933, e Ludwig, nato nel 1937.
I Baden subirono una pressione crescente per unirsi al nascente partito nazista, come era successo ad altri loro cugini e amici. Berthold, tuttavia, rimase fermo e declinò ogni pressione per tradire la sua coscienza.
Dopo la fine della guerra, i Baden ristabilirono i contatti con la loro famiglia inglese. Sebbene non fossero stati invitati alle nozze del principe Filippo e della principessa Elisabetta nel 1947, presero parte alla celebrazione ufficiale dell'incoronazione della regina Elisabetta nel 1953.
Wanting to study nursing, Princess Margarita relocated to London in the 1950s. It was while there that she met Prince Tomislav of Yugoslavia (1928-2000), the second son of the late King Alexander I of Yugoslavia and of his wife, the former Princess Marie of Romania. Both Tomislav and Margarita were descendants of Queen Victoria. The wedding date was announced from Salem on April 8, 1957, and the wedding date set for June 6.
The wedding festivities provided the extended Gotha with another opportunity to gather and repair links damaged by the debacle of the Second World War. Present at Schloß Baden to witness the ceremony were, among many others: the Duke of Edinburgh, Queen Marie of Yugoslavia, Queen Frederica of Greece, King Umberto II of Italy, King Simeon of Bulgaria, King Peter II of Yugoslavia, The Earl and countess Mountbatten of Burma, and even the elderly Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna Jr., who by then lived at Schloß Mainau, her son Lennart’s island paradise on Lake Konstanz.
Tomislav and Margarita settled in the UK, where he owned a fruit farm. It was there that their two children were born: Nicholas in 1958, and Katerina the following year. Margarita remained close to her English family and she was frequently a guest of The Queen and Prince Philip.
Unfortunately, the marriage that had began with such promise of mutual happiness experienced much turmoil. Tomislav’s financial situation was terribly unstable and the fruit farm a source of much worry and concern. In the end the enterprise was closed. Margarita tried as much as she could to lend a hand, but eventually the writing was on the wall. In 1982 their marriage ended in divorce and most ungraciously, Tomislav remarried his lady friend later that same year. He went on to have two sons with Ms Linda Bonney, his second wife.
Princess Margarita remained living in London, where her two children were raised under the kind support of their royal cousins. She never remarried. Margarita’s links to the English royal family were not affected by her divorce, which had not been the case with many others who had incurred in such course of action.
In 1987 Princess Katerina married a prominent lawyer of Sri Lanka extraction, Desmond de Silva, with whom he had one daughter. Five years later Prince Nicholas married a Yugoslav-born lady by the name of Ljiljana Licánin, by whom he had a daughter, Marija, in 1993. Nicholoas is estranged from his wife. Victoria de Silva and Marija of Yugoslavia are Princess Margarita’s only grandchildren. She also has a great-grandson from her granddaughter Marija.
It was common to see Margarita attend various family gatherings in Germany, from weddings, to baptisms and even some funerals. She traveled frequently from her London residence and she was always seen sporting a nice smile and a twinkle in her eye. I met Princess Margarita a few times and she always seemed to have a good time, even when confined to a wheelchair. In fact, once at Schoß Langenburg I helped carry the princess, who was seated in her wheelchair. “Your poor man, to come from so far to help carry me,” she said. “Madame,” I replied, “to me, it is a pleasure to be able to help you and not a bother whatsoever.”
I last saw Princess Margarita at Schloß Salem in 2007. It was far too busy for us to sit and chat. But she nodded and smiled when I asked if I could take some pictures. Her smile, I will never forget. It beamed and made any room shine with light. that twinkle, she never lost.
My condolences to her brothers and the entire family…May She Rest in Peace…