British Royal Sorry For ‘Racist’ Brooch
Princess Michael of Kent has apologised for wearing a brooch that critics have called “racist”.
The royal, who married the Queen’s first cousin, attended a Christmas banquet at Buckingham Palace on Wednesday wearing a blackamoor brooch.
Prince Harry’s fiancée, Meghan Markle, who is mixed-race, was also a guest at the lunch.
A spokesman said the princess “is very sorry and distressed that it has caused offence”.
Blackamoor figures and sculptures are exotic figures which usually depict African men and were prominent in the 17th and 18th centuries.
The brooch, coupled with the fact that Princess Michael will have met Ms Markle at the lunch, has sparked controversy on social media websites.
ah, the Princess who wears *racist jewelry* to lunch with Meghan Markle. RACIST. JEWELRY. https://t.co/pUEqDarkqN
— Anne Helen Petersen (@annehelen) December 21, 2017
Meghan Markle has class. Princess Michael of Kent has crass. https://t.co/fgqafqaCGj pic.twitter.com/tCWi4AT5CI
— Brian Mahoney (@_BrianMahoney) December 21, 2017
Spokesman Simon Astaire added: “The brooch was a gift and has been worn many times before.”
It is understood the princess will not wear the brooch in future.
Who is Princess Michael of Kent?
Princess Michael of Kent was born Baroness Marie Christine von Reibnitz in 1945, in the German-populated Sudetenland – now sitting in the Czech Republic.
She was born shortly before the end of the World War Two, in which her father served as a major in the Nazi SS.
After her first marriage to English banker Thomas Troubridge ended, she married Prince Michael of Kent – the first cousin of the Queen – in a civil ceremony in Vienna, Austria, in 1978,
She was then given the title Her Royal Highness Princess Michael of Kent as, because she was not of royal birth, she could not become Princess Marie Christine.
The couple have two children – Lord Frederick Windsor and Lady Gabriella Windsor.
She worked as an interior designer, before becoming an author, specialising in books on European royalty.
Source: BBC
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