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      • Thyra gave birth to a daughter in Greece (some claim Glücksburg Castle) on November 8, 1871. It is believed that Thyra convinced her family to let the baby be adopted by a Danish couple, rather than a Greek one.
      www.unofficialroyalty.com › september-29-1853-birth-of-thyra-of-denmark-crown-princess-of-hanover
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  2. She was the sixth child and third daughter of King Frederik VIII and Queen Louise of Denmark, and was also the younger sister of King Christian X of Denmark and King Haakon VII of Norway. Princess Thyra remained unmarried and had no children.

  3. Feb 26, 2013 · Thyra had six children within nine years, and got the family she longed for. However her harrowing experience as a young girl would come back to haunt her. She suffered bouts of depression and a couple of break downs.

  4. Sep 28, 2013 · Thyra was the youngest of the three daughters and fifth child of the six children of King Christian IX of Denmark and Louise of Hesse-Kassel. She was born on September 29, 1853, at the Yellow Palace in Copenhagen, Denmark where the family was living at the time in relatively humble circumstances.

  5. They had six children of whom the two eldest sons died at a young age. The eldest, Prince George died aged 31 in a car accident on his way to Frederik VIII’s funeral in Denmark, and the second-oldest son, Prince Christian, died at sixteen from appendicitis.

  6. SHOW ALL QUESTIONS. Princess Thyra of Denmark (Thyra Amalie Caroline Charlotte Anna; 29 September 1853 – 26 February 1933) was the youngest daughter and fifth child of Christian IX of Denmark and Louise of Hesse-Kassel. In 1878, she married Ernest Augustus, the exiled heir to the Kingdom of Hanover.

  7. Tyra of Denmark (Tyri Haraldsdatter, Thyri and Thyra) was a 10th-century Danish princess. She was the spouse of both King Olav I of Norway and of Styrbjörn Starke, prince of Sweden. Tyra was daughter of the Danish king Harald Bluetooth and thus a sister to King Sweyn Forkbeard.

  8. Oct 11, 2023 · Thyra may not have been unusual in Norse societies, says Imer. “Elite women probably had much power,” she says. “A large burial mound in Oseberg in Norway contained the bodies of two women ...

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