However much 'protocol' may attempt to intervene, the truth is that eccentricity is a trait that even royals have. This is certainly the case for Elisabeth of Wied, a German princess who became Romania's first queen, wife of Romania's King Carol I.
Politics in Europe were extra complex in the latter half of the 19th century. In Russia, Tsar Alexander II had concluded his father's Crimean War in 1856, but even with the defeat of Russia in the conflict, the Ottoman Empire was in retreat. As Ottoman influence waned, former vassal states, including what would become modern Romania, were shaped by the other great powers and their own internal politics, which led to the unification of several formerly Ottoman principalities into what is now Romania.
And what does a newly independent player on the European stage need? A royal house, of course! And wouldn't you know it - the Germans had so many of those lying around that it was easy pickings to find some stuffy but qualified guy to 'elect' king. King Carol I was both a liberalizing influence on the new nation's politics, as well as personally fastidious and, according to accounts, quite humorless.
Which must have been tough on his wife, Elisabeth, a flamboyant writer with an artist's temperament who is better known by her nom de plum, Carmen Sylva. She was enough of a handful in the Romanian court that her husband once exiled her back to Germany for a couple of years, from which she sent letters to the Romanian Crown Prince's wife, Marie of Edinburgh, that she hoped Marie's forthcoming baby would turn out to be a girl!
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24. Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria and The Mayerling Incident
23. Victoria and Albert's True Romance and Unusual Victorian Pastimes
22. A Scandalous Beginning: Sir John Conroy, Lord Melbourne, and the Lady Flora Hastings Affair
21. Young Princess Victoria and the Kensington System
20. Alexander II of Russia
19. Grand Duke Nicholas Konstantinovich
18. Nicholas I of Russia
17. Queen Victoria's Trashy Hanoverian Uncles
16. Alexander I of Russia
15. Emperor Paul I of Russia
14. Catherine the Great
13. Empress Anna of Russia
12. The Time The Dutch Ate Their Prime Minister
11. Queen Camilla
10. Peter The (Not So) Great
09. Catherine of Valois
08. John of Gaunt
07. Joan of Kent
06. Isabella of France
05. The Affair of the Diamond Necklace
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