Issue
Name | Birth | Death | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Prince Gustaf Adolf, Duke of Västerbotten | 22 April 1906 | 26 January 1947 | Father of Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden. |
Prince Sigvard, Duke of Uppland | 7 June 1907 | 4 February 2002 | Later Count Sigvard Bernadotte af Wisborg. |
Princess Ingrid | 28 March 1910 | 7 November 2000 | Later Queen-consort of Denmark; mother of the present Queen Margrethe II of Denmark and former Queen-consort Anne-Marie of Greece. |
Prince Bertil, Duke of Halland | 28 February 1912 | 5 January 1997 | Married Lilian Davies; no issue. |
Prince Carl Johan, Duke of Dalarna | 31 October 1916 | 5 May 2012 | Later Count Carl Johan Bernadotte af Wisborg, married twice, had adopted issue. He was the last living great-grandchild of Queen Victoria & Albert, Prince Consort |
Crown Princess Margaret was a grandmother of the current King of Sweden, Carl XVI Gustaf, as well as of her namesake, the current Queen of Denmark, Margrethe II, and of the former Queen-consort of Greece, Princess Anne-Marie of Denmark.
Read more about this topic: Princess Margaret Of Connaught
Famous quotes containing the word issue:
“We find it easy to set limits when the issue is safety.... But 99 percent of the time there isnt imminent danger; most of life takes place on more ambiguous ground, and children are experts at detecting ambivalence.”
—Cathy Rindner Tempelsman (20th century)
“Modern equalitarian societies ... whether democratic or authoritarian in their political forms, always base themselves on the claim that they are making life happier.... Happiness thus becomes the chief political issuein a sense, the only political issueand for that reason it can never be treated as an issue at all.”
—Robert Warshow (19171955)
“I would wish that the women of our country could embrace ... [the responsibilities] of citizenship as peculiarly their own. If they could apply their higher sense of service and responsibility, their freshness of enthusiasm, their capacity for organization to this problem, it would become, as it should become, an issue of profound patriotism. The whole plane of political life would be lifted.”
—Herbert Hoover (18741964)