Michael I of Romania

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Michael I
King of the Romanians
Image:Mihai.jpg
Reign 20 July 19278 June 1930
6 September 194030 December 1947
Born October 25, 1921 (1921-10-25) (age 86)
Flag of Romania Sinaia, Romania
Predecessor Ferdinand I
Carol II
Successor Carol II
Kingdom abolished
Consort Princess Anne of Bourbon-Parma
Issue Margarita
Elena
Irina
Sophie
Marie
Royal House Hohenzollern
Father Carol II
Mother Elena of Greece and Denmark

Michael I, King of the Romanians, Prince of Hohenzollern[1][2][3] (born October 25, 1921), reigned as King of the Romanians (Romanian: Maiestatea Sa Mihai I Regele Românilor, literally "His Majesty Michael I King of the Romanians") from July 20, 1927 to June 8, 1930, and again from September 6, 1940 until forced to abdicate by the Communists on December 30, 1947. A great-great-grandson of Queen Victoria and a third cousin of Queen Elizabeth II, he is one of the last surviving heads of state from World War II,[4][5][6][7] another one being Simeon II of Bulgaria[8].

Contents

Michael was born in the Foişor Castle, Sinaia, Romania, the son of the then-Crown Prince Carol and Princess Elena, and grandson of the then-reigning King Ferdinand I of the Romanians. When Carol eloped with his mistress Elena "Magda" Lupescu and renounced his rights to the throne in December 1925, Michael was pronounced the heir apparent. He succeeded to the throne upon Ferdinand's death in July 1927.

A regency, which included his uncle, Prince Nicolae (Nicholas), Patriarch Miron Cristea and the country's chief justice (Gheorghe Buzdugan, from October 1929 on Constantin Sărăţeanu) functioned on behalf of the 5-year-old Michael [9]. In 1930, Carol II suddenly returned to the country at the invitation of politicians dissatisfied with the regency, and was proclaimed King by the Parliament, designating Michael as crown prince with the title "Grand Voievod of Alba-Iulia". In November 1939, Michael joined the Romanian Senate, as the 1938 Constitution guaranteed him a seat there upon reaching the age of eighteen.[10] In September 1940, the pro-German régime of Prime-Minister Marshal Ion Antonescu staged a coup against Carol, whom the Marshal considered anti-German. Antonescu had the 18-year-old Michael proclaimed King by popular acclaim, without an oath on the Constitution and without a vote of the Parliament, initially suspended and reinstated only later, in 1946. Michael was instead crowned and anointed King by the Orthodox Patriarch of Romania, Nicodim Munteanu, in the Patriarchal Cathedral of Bucharest, on the very day of his second accession, September 6, 1940[11]. Michael, thus, reigned the second time as an absolute, unconstitutional king, solely by divine right. However, legally Michael could not exercise much else authority besides the prerogatives of being supreme Head of the Army and of designating a plenipotentiary Prime-Minister ("Conducător")[12].

The young King Michael
The young King Michael

Main article: King Michael Coup

In 1944, World War II was going badly for the Axis, but military dictator Ion Antonescu was still in control of Romania. On August 23, 1944, in order either to avoid fighting on Romanian territory in an increasingly unpopular war according to himself, or to preserve his own throne according to others[13], Michael joined with pro-Allied politicians including the Communists, in staging a coup d'état against Antonescu, and placed him under arrest. On the same night, the new Prime Minister, Lt. General Constantin Sănătescu, gave custody of Antonescu to the Communists, who delivered him to the Soviets on September 1.[14][15] In a radio broadcast to the nation and army, Michael proclaimed Romania's loyalty to the Allies, announced the acceptance of the armistice offered by the USSR, Great Britain, and the United States, and declared war on Germany[16]. However, this did not avert a rapid Soviet occupation, and capture of about 130,000 Romanian soldiers transported to the Soviet Union, where many perished in prison camps.[17] The coup speeded the Red Army's advance into Romania[17]. The armistice was signed three weeks later on September 12, 1944, on terms the Soviets virtually dictated.[17] The coup effectively amounted to a "capitulation"[18], an "unconditional"[19] "surrender"[17][20] to the Soviets. King Michael was spared the fate of another former German ally, Prince Kyril, Regent of Bulgaria, executed by the Soviets in 1945, and was also the last monarch behind the Iron Curtain to lose his throne. By some accounts, the coup may have shortened World War II by six months, thus saving hundreds of thousands of lives[citation needed]. At the end of the war, King Michael was awarded the highest degree (Chief Commander) of the Legion of Merit by U.S. President Harry S. Truman. He was also decorated with the Soviet Order of Victory by Joseph Stalin for his personal courage in overthrowing Antonescu, and for putting an end to Romania's war against the Allies.

House of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen

Carol I
Queen Consort:
    Elisabeth
Children:
   Princess Maria
Ferdinand I
Queen Consort:
    Marie
Children:
    Prince Carol
    Elisabeth, Queen of Greece
    Maria, Queen of Yugoslavia
    Prince Nicholas
    Ileana, Archduchess of Austria
    Prince Mircea
Carol II
Children:
    Prince Michael
Michael I
Queen Consort:
    Anne
Children
    Princess Margarita
    Princess Elena
    Princess Irina
    Princess Sophie
    Princess Maria

However, some claim[21] that Michael's coup afforded Stalin's troops a faster advance[22] into Romania and Europe, to the detriment of that of the Western Allies. Some others[23] even see in Michael's failure to be invited, with a few exceptions, to most of the V.E. Day celebrations in the West throughout the years, a tacit condemnation by the Western Allies of the consequences of his coup. Michael was not invited to the 60th anniversary of the V.E. Day by any Western Ally. He was invited only to the celebrations in Russia and to some Czech and Slovak commemorations on the same occasion.[24]

In March 1945, political pressures forced Michael to appoint a pro-Soviet government dominated by the Romanian Communist Party. Under the Communist régime Michael functioned as little more than a figurehead. Between August 1945 and January 1946, during what was later known as the "royal strike," Michael tried unsuccessfully to oppose the first Communist government led by Prime Minister Petru Groza, by refusing to sign its decrees. In response to Soviet, British, and American pressures[25], King Michael eventually gave up his opposition to the Communist government and stopped demanding its resignation.

He did not amnesty Ion Antonescu, later condemned as a war criminal[26][27][28]or the leaders of the opposition[citation needed], victims of Communist political trials, as, some argue, the Constitution prevented him from doing so without the counter signature of the Communist justice minister, Lucreţiu Pătrăşcanu. The memoirs of the King's aunt Princess Ileana[29] quote the high-ranking Communist Party politburo member, Soviet spy, minister of defense[30], and alleged lover of the Princess[31], Emil Bodnăraş, as saying: "Well, if the King decides not to sign the death warrant, I promise that we will uphold his point of view." Princess Ileana was skeptical that the King would have willingly signed an unconstitutional document such as a death warrant decided by unconstitutional political courts: "You know quite well (...) that the King will never of his free will sign such an unconstitutional document. If he does, it will be laid at your door, and before the whole nation your government will bear the blame. Surely you do not wish this additional handicap at this moment!" The last cellmate of the most prominent Communist victim, Iuliu Maniu (the leader of the anti-Communist opposition and president of the National Peasants' Party (PNŢ), deprived of its victory in the general elections of 1946, which were falsified by the Communist government), seemingly confessed under Communist interrogation, that Maniu "cursed Michael from behind the bars of the political prison where he died, for not having done anything in the defense of the PNŢ members, despite their many services rendered to the monarchy".[32]

In November, 1947 Michael traveled to London for the wedding of the future Queen Elizabeth II, occasion during which he met Princess Anne of Bourbon-Parma, who was to become his wife. According to Romanian royalist circles, King Michael did not want to go back, but American and British personalities present at the wedding encouraged him to do so;[33] Winston Churchill is said to have counseled Michael to return because "above all things, a king must be courageous." According to his own account,[34] King Michael rejected any offers of asylum and decided to return to Romania.

However, on December 30 of the same year, Michael abdicated Romania's throne. Later the same day, the Communists announced the abolition of the monarchy and its replacement by a people's republic, broadcasting the King's pre-recorded radio proclamation[35] of his own abdication. On January 3, 1948, Michael was forced to leave the country, followed[36] over a week later by Princesses Elisabeth and Ileana, who collaborated so closely with the Russians that they became known as the King's "Red aunts."[37]

There are several accounts as to why Michael abdicated. According to him, he did so for several reasons. One is that the Communist government threatened to shoot 1,000 arrested students if he didn't.[38] In an interview with The New York Times from 2007, Michael recalls the events: “It was blackmail. They said, ‘If you don’t sign this immediately we are obliged’ — why obliged I don’t know — to kill more than 1,000 students that they had in prison.”[7] According to Time magazine,[1] the Communist government threatened him with future rather than past arrests of thousands and then with steeping the country in blood if Michael did not abdicate. Michael's account is contradicted by the Romanian Securitate archives, which apparently show that Michael's abdication was the result of his negotiations with the Communist government and, according to the article author, not of a blackmail with any executions, since the Communist government was in complete control of the country and could have simply thrown Michael out of Romania in case of a refusal to abdicate.[39]

According to a report in Time magazine,[40] in early 1948 there had been negotiations between King Michael and the Communist government over his fortunes left behind in Romania, which prevented him from declaring his abdication illegal.

There are reports[41][42][43][44] that Romanian Communist authorities, obedient to Stalin, allowed King Michael to part with 42 valuable Crown-owned paintings shortly before the King's abdication so that he would leave Romania faster[45]. Some of these paintings[46] were reportedly sold through the famed art dealer Daniel Wildenstein. One of the paintings belonging to the Romanian Crown which was supposedly taken out of the country by King Michael in November 1947, returned to the national patrimony in 2004 as a donation [47][48][49] made by John Kreuger, the former husband of King Michael's daughter Princess Irina. In 2005 Romanian Prime Minister Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu[50] denied these accusations about Michael, stating that the Romanian government has no proof of any such action by King Michael and that, prior to 1949, the government had no official records of any artwork taken over from the former royal residences. However, according to some historians, such records exist as early as April of 1948, having been, in fact, officially published in June 1948 [51].

King Michael was awarded the Order of Victory (the highest Soviet order) for his personal courage in overthrowing Ion Antonescu in the August 23 coup and for putting an end to Romania's war against the Allies. As of 2007 he is the only recipient alive
King Michael was awarded the Order of Victory (the highest Soviet order) for his personal courage in overthrowing Ion Antonescu in the August 23 coup and for putting an end to Romania's war against the Allies. As of 2007 he is the only recipient alive

According to Ivor Porter's authorized biography,[52] "Michael of Romania: The King and The Country" (2005), which quotes Queen-Mother Helen's daily diary, the Romanian royals took out paintings belonging to the Romanian Royal Crown on their November 1947 trip to London to the wedding of the future Queen Elizabeth II; two of these paintings, signed by El Greco, were sold in 1976. However, many other journalists deny any such Communist gift to the King, and call such accusations anti-monarchist Communist propaganda.[citation needed]

According to recently declassified Foreign Office documents, when he left Romania, Michael's only assets amounted to 500,000 Swiss francs.[53] Recently declassified Soviet transcripts of talks between Joseph Stalin and the Romanian Prime-Minister Petru Groza[54][55] show that shortly before his abdication, King Michael received from the Communist government financial assets amounting to 500,000 Swiss francs. King Michael, however, repeatedly denied[56] that the Communist government had allowed him to take into exile any financial assets or valuable goods besides four personal automobiles loaded on two train cars. However, during a visit to New York City in March 1948, the 26-year-old Michael shopped on what has been described as the most expensive boulevard in the world, Fifth Avenue, and enjoyed so much the plane in which he had just flown over the Statue of Liberty, that he thought he might buy it.[57]

In March 1948, he denounced his abdication as forced and illegal. Time magazine alleged that it took Michael over two months to denounce his abdication because before then he had been negotiating with the Communists for the salvage of some of his Romanian properties.[40]

In January 1948[1], Michael started styling himself as "Prince of Hohenzollern"[2] instead of using the title of "King of Romania," using a new title he had never used before and which the Romanian royals had lost during World War I, when the German Hohenzollerns withdrew them the right to bear it. Only after denouncing his abdication as forced and illegal in March 1948, Michael started using again the title "King of Romania."

Some Romanian monarchists[58], who consider Michael king solely by divine, not constitutional right, as he neither swore on the Constitution, nor was voted in office by the Parliament in his second reign, regard his 1947 abdication as null and void, arguing that it was a purely constitutional, not ecclesiastical act, which cannot depose him from a position in which he was appointed by God. The same argue that, as an absolute, unconstitutional king of divine right, Michael incarnates alone the Romanian State in its entirety and that as such he has every right to dispose as he pleases of the State's properties, including the Crown paintings, which are his own and of whose "theft" he has been accused.

Romanian Royal Family
Styles of
King Michael I of Romania
Reference style His Majesty
Spoken style Your Majesty
Alternative style Sir

In January 1948[1], Michael started styling himself as "Prince of Hohenzollern"[2] instead of using the title of "King of Romania," using a new title he had never used before and which the Romanian royals had lost during World War I, when the German Hohenzollerns withdrew them the right to bear it. Only after denouncing his abdication as forced and illegal in March 1948, Michael started using again the title "King of Romania."

In June 1948 he married Princess Anne of Bourbon-Parma in Athens, Greece. They lived first in Britain and later settled in Switzerland. The Communist Romanian authorities stripped him of his Romanian citizenship in 1948. He became a commercial pilot and worked for an aircraft equipment company. He and his wife have five daughters.

In 1992, three years after the revolution which overthrew the Communist dictatorship, the Romanian government allowed Michael to return to his country for Easter celebrations, where he drew large crowds. In Bucharest over a million people turned out to see him.[citation needed] Michael's popularity alarmed the government of President Ion Iliescu so Michael was forbidden to visit Romania again for five years.[citation needed] In 1997, after Iliescu's defeat by Emil Constantinescu, the Romanian Government restored Michael's citizenship and again allowed him to visit the country.[citation needed] He now lives mostly in Switzerland at Aubonne and partly in Romania, either at his Săvârşin castle in Arad county or in an official residence in Bucharest - the Elisabeta Palace - voted by the Romanian Parliament by a law concerning arrangements for former heads of state.

Michael has the following children:

Both Elena and Irina have sons as well as daughters. Sophia, whose marriage was not accepted by her father, has a daughter.

For further details, see the genealogical listing[59].

Because of the Romanian succession law incorporated in the kingdom's last democratic Constitution of 1923, upon the death of King Michael (assuming he dies without any male children, as it is likely now), in absence of its necessary change along with the Constitution, which would first require the restoration of the monarchy, the succession will devolve back into the main Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen family, with its head Frederick William, Prince of Hohenzollern, currently first in line.

Michael has not encouraged monarchist agitation in Romania and royalist parties have made little impact in post-Communist Romanian politics. He takes the view that the restoration of the monarchy in Romania can only result from a decision by the Romanian people. "If the people want me to come back, of course, I will come back," he said in 1990. He said that "Romanians have had enough suffering imposed on them to have a right to be consulted on their future." In spite of this, King Michael has not given up the hope for himself or his family of returning back on the throne: "We are trying to make people understand what Romanian monarchy was and what it can still do[60]."

Michael has undertaken some quasi-diplomatic roles on behalf of post-Communist Romania. In 1997 and 2002 he toured Western Europe, lobbying for Romania's admission into NATO and the European Union, and was received by heads of state and government officials.

In December 2003, Michael awarded the "Man of The Year 2003"[61] prize to the then-prime minister Adrian Năstase, leader of the PSD party, on behalf of a minor tabloid. Some monarchists regarded[62] Michael's gesture as a break with the traditional political neutrality of the monarchy and a financially motivated compromise with his former Communist enemies.

Michael has had a reputation for taciturnity. He once said to his grandmother, "I have learned not to say what I feel, and to smile at those I most hate."

Michael is passionate about cars,[63] especially military jeeps[64][65]. He is also interested in airplanes,[66] having worked as a commercial flight pilot[67] during his exile. In 1998 Michael gave his honorary patronage,[68] together with that of King Juan Carlos of Spain, to the publication of a new version of the renowned Almanach de Gotha.

On May 10, 2007, King Michael received the Prague Society for International Cooperation and Global Panel's 6th Annual Hanno R. Ellenbogen Citizenship Award, previously awarded to Vladimir Ashkenazy, Madeleine Albright, Václav Havel, Lord Robertson and Miloš Forman.[69]

Michael's ancestors in three generations
Michael I of Romania Father:
Carol II of Romania
Paternal Grandfather:
Ferdinand I of Romania
Paternal Great-grandfather:
Leopold, Prince of Hohenzollern
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Infanta Antónia of Portugal
Paternal Grandmother:
Marie of Edinburgh
Paternal Great-grandfather:
Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Maria Alexandrovna of Russia
Mother:
Elena of Greece and Denmark
Maternal Grandfather:
Constantine I of Greece
Maternal Great-grandfather:
George I of Greece
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Olga Konstantinovna of Russia
Maternal Grandmother:
Sophia of Prussia
Maternal Great-grandfather:
Frederick III, German Emperor
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Victoria, Princess Royal
Michael I of Romania
Cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern
Born: October 25 1921
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Ferdinand I
King of the Romanians
July 20, 1927June 8, 1930
Succeeded by
Carol II
Preceded by
Carol II
King of the Romanians
September 6, 1940December 30, 1947
Monarchy abolished
communist take-over
Vacant
Romanian monarchy not restored yet
Head of the Romanian Royal Family
September 6, 1940
Incumbent
Designated heir:
Princess Margarita of Romania
as head of Michael's private family
Incumbent
Designated heir:
Frederick William, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
as titular King of Romania
Political offices
Preceded by
Ferdinand I
as King of the Romanians
Head of State of Romania
as King of the Romanians

July 20, 1927June 8, 1930
Succeeded by
Carol II
as King of the Romanians
Preceded by
Carol II
as King of the Romanians
Head of State of Romania
as King of the Romanians

September 6, 1940December 30, 1947
Succeeded by
Constantin Ion Parhon
as President of the Provisional Presidium of the Socialist Republic of Romania
Titles in pretence
Preceded by
None
— TITULAR —
King of the Romanians
December 30, 1947present
Incumbent
Designated heir:
Frederick William, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen

  1. ^ a b c d "Compression", Time, January 12, 1948
  2. ^ a b c "Milestones", Time, June 21, 1948
  3. ^ Genealogy of the Royal Family of Romania, retrieved October 2, 2006
  4. ^ World War II—"60 Years After: Former Romanian Monarch Remembers Decision To Switch Sides", RFE/RL, May 6, 2005
  5. ^ Oliver North, “Looking for Leadership”, Human Events, April 14, 2006
  6. ^ Peter Kurth, "Michael of Romania"
  7. ^ a b Craig S. Smith, "Romania’s King Without a Throne Outlives Foes and Setbacks", The New York Times, January 27, 2007
  8. ^ Simeon Saxecoburggotski, Encyclopædia Britannica
  9. ^ Rulers of Romania
  10. ^ "Ce citeau românii acum 68 de ani?", Ziua, November 29, 2007.
  11. ^ (Romanian) Rev. Fr. Dimitrie Bejan - Dialogue with a few intellectuals, "Orthodox Advices" website as of June 9, 2007
  12. ^ (Romanian) Ioan Scurtu, Theodora Stănescu-Stanciu, Georgiana Margareta Scurtu, "The History of the Romanians between 1918-1940" ("Istoria românilor între anii 1918–1940"), page 280.
  13. ^ "Historical Click" (in Romanian), Jurnalul National, August 23, 2007
  14. ^ "Marshal Ion Antonescu",WorldWar2.ro, Romanian Armed Forces in the Second World War
  15. ^ “23 august - radiografia unei lovituri de Palat”, paragraph” Predaţi comuniştilor”, Dosare Ultrasecrete, Ziua, August 19, 2006
  16. ^ (Romanian) "The Dictatorship Has Ended and along with It All Opression" - From The Proclamation to The Nation of King Michael I on The Night of August 23, 1944, Curierul Naţional, August 7, 2004
  17. ^ a b c d Country Studies: Romania, Chap. 23, Library of Congress
  18. ^ "Hitler Resorts To 'Puppets' In Romania", Washington Post, August 25, 1944
  19. ^ "King Proclaims Nation's Surrender and Wish to Help Allies", The New York Times, August 24, 1944
  20. ^ "Bulgaria - Bulgarian resistance to the Axis alliance," Encyclopædia Britannica
  21. ^ (Romanian) "Pamfil Seicaru about August 23: "More shame, fewer victims", Ziua, August 16, 2004
  22. ^ Country Studies: Romania. Chap. 23. US Library of Congress
  23. ^ (Romanian) "A Day of August in Mourning", Lumea, August 2004
  24. ^ World War II -- "60 Years After: Former Romanian Monarch Remembers Decision To Switch Sides", RFE/RL, May 6, 2005
  25. ^ (Romanian) "What was done in Romania between 1945 and 1947 it has also been done since 1989", Ziua, August 24, 2000
  26. ^ [1]
  27. ^ [2]
  28. ^ [3]
  29. ^ "I Live Again" by Ileana, Princess of Romania, Chapter 21
  30. ^ "Development of the Romanian Armed Forces after World War II", Library of Congress Country Studies
  31. ^ (Romanian)"History as a Soap Opera - The Gossips of a Secret Report (III)", Jurnalul Naţional, June 18, 2006
  32. ^ (Romanian) "The Maniu Trial", Jurnalul National, November 28, 2006
  33. ^ "Churchill Advised Mihai to Return", The Washington Post, December 31, 1947
  34. ^ Speech By His Majesty Michael I, King of Romania to the Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies, London, March 26, 1997
  35. ^ "Friends & Enemies, Presidents & Kings" by Tammy Lee McClure, Accendo Publishing, page 99. Another account comes from the Romanian anti-communist dissident Paul Goma's (Romanian) "Skipped Diary" ("Jurnal pe sarite"), page 57.
  36. ^ "2 Princesses Exiled By Romanian Regime", The New York Times, January 13, 1948
  37. ^ W. H. Lawrence, "Aunts of Michael May Be Exiled Too", The New York Times, January 7, 1948
  38. ^ "A king and his coup", The Daily Telegraph, June 12, 2005
  39. ^ (Romanian) "The return from London and the abdication," Jurnalul National, November 17, 2005
  40. ^ a b "Anne & I", Time, March 15, 1948
  41. ^ Miscellaneous, Evenimentul Zilei, March 24, 2005
  42. ^ Miscellaneous, Evenimentul Zilei, March 14, 2005
  43. ^ "The Lia Roberts hope", Evenimentul Zilei, January 19, 2004
  44. ^ (Romanian) "Articles by Dan Cristian Turturica", Hotnews.ro site as of December 6, 2006
  45. ^ "The Lia Roberts hope", Evenimentul Zilei, January 19, 2004
  46. ^ Michel van Rijn, "Hot Art, Cold Cash", pages 177, 184, Little Brown & Co., October 1994. Also, the report "Devastating Art News", October 29, 2001, by the same UK police expert in art smuggling. For more on van Rijn's credentials, see 1 and 2.
  47. ^ (Romanian) "Raibolini's Madonna at the National Museum of Art of Romania", Ziua, November 20, 2004
  48. ^ Miscellaneous, Evenimentul Zilei, March 24, 2005
  49. ^ (Romanian) "A Prestigious Donation: Madonna with the Infant by Francesco Raibolini, named "Il Francia"", Online Gallery site as of December 8, 2006
  50. ^ (Romanian) "There Are No Proofs That King Michael Took Paintings out of Romania", Adevărul, April 19, 2005
  51. ^ (Romanian) "Testimonials of contemporary history - Peles, January-April 1948. The inventorying of the former royal art works (III)," by Radu Bogdan, Ph.D. in history, Magazin istoric, October 1998
  52. ^ (Romanian) Andrei Pippidi, "The King and The Country", "Revista 22", March 8, 2006
  53. ^ "Exiled king 'should become pilot'", BBC News, January 2, 2005
  54. ^ (Romanian) "King Michael in exile - from poultry grower to test pilot and broker", ROMPRES, April 13, 2005
  55. ^ (Romanian) "King Michael in exile - from poultry grower to test pilot and broker", Jurnalul de Botosani si Dorohoi, April 13, 2005
  56. ^ Translation of King Michael's interview to Ziua daily, undated. For the original Romanian version, please, see this article. Another similar (Romanian) interview, Adevărul, May 3, 2005
  57. ^ "People", Time, March 22, 1948
  58. ^ (Romanian) "The King and the Patriarch," Romania Libera, October 4, 2007
  59. ^ "Genealogy of the Romanian Royal Family," web site as of October 2, 2006
  60. ^ ""King Mihai I Turns 85", Ziua, October 25, 2006
  61. ^ "100 %" Talk Show on Realitatea TV, Prince Radu's website, April 12, 2004
  62. ^ "The King and The Jester," Evenimentul Zilei, December 18, 2003
  63. ^ (Romanian) Andrei Săvulescu, "King Michael - Car Driver, Mechanic, Professional Pilot", Humanitas, Bucharest, 1996
  64. ^ "King Michael of Rumania driving down steps leading out of Sinaia palace," Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images, April 1, 1946
  65. ^ "King Michael of Rumania driving down steps leading out of Sinaia palace," Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images, April 1, 1946
  66. ^ "King Mihai in an airplane", Site dedicated to HM King Mihai I of Romania, retrieved November 26, 2006
  67. ^ "Ex-King Michael, in Switzerland where he works for an American aircraft company", Time Life Pictures/Getty Images, January 1, 1957
  68. ^ (French) "The Renaissance of The Gotha", Le Figaro, May 14, 1998
  69. ^ "Hanno R. Ellenbogen Citizenship Award", at globalpanel.org
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