10 Examples of Royal Weirdness

I’m sure this isn’t the first time you’ve been told that certain members of the ruling classes are weird, but this might be the first time you’ve heard some of these exceptionally strange tales of royal weirdness.

The Cucumber King of Burma


In 931, King Theinhko of Burma ate the cucumbers of a local villager without asking first. The angry farmer murdered Theinhko and then took over the throne as King Nyanng-u Sawrahan. The queen welcomed him, in an effort to prevent political unrest. Nyanng-u was forever after known as ‘The Cucumber King.’ He reigned over Burma for 33 years until he was overthrown.

Nine Months of French Bastards


King Philip Augustus of France was married to his second wife, Ingeborg of Denmark, in 1193. Sadly, Augustus found Ingeborg to be absolutely revolting and filed for a divorce on the grounds that the marriage was not yet consummated. His wife, however, argued that they had consummated the marriage. As a result, Pope Celestine III refused to grant the king a divorce.
Philip was not easily defeated. He ignored the decision and went on to marry Agnes of Marania.

The pope ordered him to return to Ineborg and to make his point, he imposed an interdict on December 12, 1199. During this time, all churches were closed and the pope determined that as long as the king wasn’t sleeping with his wife, his subjects were not allowed to sleep with theirs. As a result, all children born in this period were deemed illegitimate. The interdict continued until September 7, 1200 –resulting in nine months of bastards born in France. Augustus eventually did return to Ineborg, but not until 1213.

A Dead Woman Crowned Queen


Ines de Castro was a loving mistress to Dom Pedro, heir of the Portuguese throne. Unfortunately, the current ruler, King Alfonso, was paranoid that the pair was plotting against him and ordered Ines to be assassinated in 1355.

When Pedro was crowned as king in 1357, his love for Ines had not yet faded. He sought revenge on the assassins and made them suffer through horrendous tortures. That wasn’t enough though, Pedro was still determined that Ines should take her seat beside him as queen. He had her body exhumed, dressed in proper royal attire and the entire candlelit coronation ceremony proceeded as usual. Ines’s body was anointed and crowned, the subjects were made to swear allegiance to her, and the nobles were required to kneel and kiss her cold, two-years-dead hand.

The Ghastly Death of Mary Queen of Scots




If you ever played Bloody Mary in the mirror as a youth, you know that it is quite a terrifying ghost story. While there are many proposed “Marys” that could be referenced in the story, Mary Queen of Scots has a terrifying ghost story thanks to her botched execution.

On February 8, 1587, Mary was led to the execution block. The executioner, likely drunk, failed to knock off her head on the first blow. Instead, he hit the back of her head, at which time, her servants reported that she muttered “Sweet Jesus.” He managed to remove her head on the second blow and he lifted her head up by the auburn hair on her head, right then, her head fell from his hands, revealing that she actually had short gray hair covered by thick wig. Also strange, her lips continued moving for the next fifteen minutes, likely caused by a nerve damaged during the first execution attempt.

As if all this wasn’t enough, Mary’s dog was discovered to be hiding under her skirts. When the pet was pulled out, it insisted on lying between the shoulders and decapitated head of her body. Eventually, Mary’s servants took the dog, but not until it was thoroughly soaked in its dead master’s blood.
Even for the people of the time, jaded from by frequent public executions, Mary’s beheading was full of exceptionally terrifying surprises.

A Strange ‘Divine Right’


Normally a king’s “divine rights” seem to include things like violating virgins and taking food and money, however, in 1627, Charles I decided to declare rights of a much different nature. He ordered all of his subjects to turn in their urine to official collectors once a day in the summer and once every other day in the winter. These collections were to help the country create saltpeter, a component of gunpowder.
Charles also claimed rights to all soil loaded with animal waste. The so-called ‘Saltpeter Men’ were permitted to dig up the floors of stables, slaughterhouses and other areas without permission of the property owners.

Louis The XIV’s Enema Obsession



Photo Via Curious Expeditions [Flickr]

Imagine trying to hold a conversation with someone receiving an enema. Now imagine that someone was King and he was holding court throughout the experience. King Louis XIV was known for performing this type of activity regularly. The enema was a quite popular medical procedure at this time, but few people seemed to love the activity nearly as much as the king who is said to have received over 2,000 enemas throughout his lifetime – many of them in public.

The King of Debt


King Theodore of Corsica wasn’t much of a king. For one thing, he wasn’t nobility by birth, he was merely a soldier who asked to be king in exchange for helping aid the Corsicans in a revolt. When the revolt had proven to be ineffective and a the Genovese government put a price on his head, Theodore started to lose popularity amongst his people. He decided that he would be better off ruling overseas.

Unfortunately, once he left the country, he was never able to return to his kingdom. Eventually, he ended up in debtors prison in Amsterdam, and later, London. He was freed from Holland’s prison easy enough, but the only way he could earn release from the London jail was by giving Corsica to his creditors.

When he died in London in 1756, his epitaph read:
Theodore this moral learned ere dead:
Fate poured its lessons on his living head,
Bestowed a kingdom, and denied him bread.

After his death, an opera was made from his tale in 1784. Additionally, ‘King Theodore of Corsica’ started to be used as a nickname for gin, joining the ranks of ‘Cuckold’s Comfort’ as a slang for the drink.

Madness Doth Not A Kingdom Make


Nouvelle France was a South American territory also called the Kingdom of Araucanìa and Patagonia. The area’s first (and only) king, elected in 1860, was Orelie-Antoine de Tounens, a French lawyer. He supported the local people’s efforts to resist takeover by Chile and Argentina. The people of the area, called Mapuche, thought that Tounens may help aid their cause as he was a skilled European negotiator. He helped the locals draft a constitution and mint coins, but Chile largely ignored him. Tounens tried to convince France to come to his aid and after a short investigation, they determined him to be crazy.

He was arrested by the Chilean government within two years of becoming king. France managed to secure his release from prison by convincing his jailers that he was insane. After his release, he was deported back to France and Tounens then spent the rest of his life trying to take over his kingdom again. In 1869, he made it back to the country, but soon returned to France to gather more money. Tounens attempted to return two more times afterward, but both times he was captured by Chilean authorities and deported. He eventually died in squalor in France in 1878.

His relatives periodically continued to claim their rightful place as ruler of the country, although the most recent heir has renounced the claim. Since the establishment of Nouvelle France, no sovereign state has ever recognized the territory as a legitimate country.

The Long-Lasting Legacy of Nobility


In 1888, Charles-Marie David de Mayrena elected himself Marie the First, King of the Sedang. Marie was an eccentric French adventurer and he arranged his kingdom to rule over a number of small tribes. King Marie declared the official religion of the country to be Roman Catholic although most of its residents were Muslims and he later adopted the Islamic faith himself. He awarded titles of nobility to his supporters during his two-year rule. He attempted to trade his kingdom to the French, English and Belgium governments in exchange for a trading monopoly, but he received little interest. When he tried to return to his kingdom though, the French prevented him from entering any port in Indochina. He died in 1890, and the details of this death remain a mystery –some sources claim it was by duel, others say it was poison and yet other reports argue he was bitten by a snake.

Over 100 years later, the Assembly for the Restoration of the Sedang Nobility was established in Montreal in 1995. This group consisted of descendants of those who bestowed with titles of nobility by King Marie. The organization claims it seeks to “re-establish and promote the social institutions of monarchy and nobility and practice their principles in a world which has largely forgotten them: chivalry, honor, duty, loyalty, respect, enlightenment, tolerance.” At the same time, they are glad to renounce their claims to the territory, admitting it is undisputedly part of Vietnam. Three years later, they changed their name to the Sedang Royalist Assembly. Although genealogists helped the group find an heir of King Marie, the descendant was uninterested in claiming his title. This organization is still around and is headquartered in Montreal.

Technicalities Galore


What happens when your country’s official constitution and other historical documents fail to mention one small town? If that unmentioned village happens to be Seborga (flag shown above), you may end up with an “independent principality” smack dab in the middle of your country. The area, that should be part of Italy, declared its independence in 1967 and elected the head of the flower growing collective, Giorgio Carbone, to be the country’s head of state or “Giorgio I, Prince of Seborga.” Giorgio is officially addressed as “Your Tremendousness” by his followers.

Giorgio and other members of the village claim that Seborga was never incorporated into Italy. Although it was sold to the king of Savoy and Sardinia in 1729, the sale was not registered. On top of that, the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the 1861 Act of Unification and the constitution written in 1946 all fail to mention Seborga. Scholars have proven that regardless, the area is still part of Italy, but Seborgians defy this logic.

The principality mints its own currency, the luigino, currently valued at $6 - meaning if it were recognized as a legitimate legal tender, it would be the most valuable currency in the world. Regardless of the area’s claim to independence, most of the residents follow the laws of Italy, pay taxes and vote in national elections.

In 2006, a woman named Yasmine von Hohenstaufen Anjou Plantagenet, who claims to be heir to Roman Emperor Fredrick II and the rightful ruler of Seborga, tried to return the ‘country’ to Italy. The majority of villagers were notably upset and Prince Giorgio commented “The girl cannot give away something she does not own.”

Sources #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #8, #9 All Images come from listed sources unless otherwise noted.


I'm portuguese so I'm glad to see Inês de Castro's story there. The mithology of that love is something that we are very proud... It's like having a real life Romeo & Juliet with a bit of royal family drama to spice things up.

Further notes on this story... Legend has it Pedro ordered the two executers he caught to be tortured in front of him as he feasted. One had his heart ripped from the front and the other from the back. Yikes... The third guy was never caught and supposedly fled to France. Reports say he was forgiven by the king in his death bed.

Another curiosity, a very important one, they are buried in the same cemitery with their graves pointing at each other. Aparently to make them able to look at each other's eyes when judgment day arrives.
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"Kingdom of Arcuania and Pantagonia" actually is Kingdom of Araucanía and Patagonia. If you can´t even get the names straight, I wonder about the quality and thoroughness of this article....
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I'm curious about all these comments regarding grammatical errors and not about the content itself. I read through this article and don't even notice the errors, and understand the topics in the article just fine. Do you have difficulty reading if there are minor errors in the post, or are you just entirely absorbed with the errors that you can't focus on what’s being said at all?

I’m sure she just uses a spellchecker to make sure there aren’t any typos, and it we all know those can’t find everything without proofreading... but if you’re not getting paid for this type of work and it’s not being graded on, why the hell bother?
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You make a fair point, Gauldar. After I submitted my spelling comment I thought I should have also said that I enjoyed the article. I love reading about crazy folks... makes me seem a little more sane.
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Interesting list... but there are a few major errors.

Nouvelle-France is a term for France's (North?) American possessions: i.e. Acadia through Louisiana, surrouding the early British colonies. No link to the mad King.

And as Alejandro Claude mentionned the name of de Tounens kingdom was "Araucanìa and Patagonia".
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Charles I's divine right to all animal dung and urine, etc, really isn't that odd when you consider:

1. He wanted it to make gunpowder, and
2. England has been at war with someone (including itself) for pretty much the last 1000 years!
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Collecting urine has been common practice in most countries all over the world throughout history. It was used to make leather from skin, and later to make gunpowder. There is nothing special about Charles I order.

Many people cut their hair short becouse of head lice, and using wigs or hats on top. There are many cases of executioners missing with the axe. Dogs like meat and blood. Your story of Queen Marys so called Ghastly Death has nothing special.

You failed misserably on those two and since you clearly didnt check those facts, I question the the rest as well.
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Nisse, collecting urine may have been common practice, but that doesn't mean that most kingdoms were required to save theirs and turn it in daily.
As far as the queen, there are many cases where executioners messed up, but not where the victim's lips kept moving. Additionally, dogs rarely turned up from under a woman's skirts and he wasn't licking or eating. He was merely laying between his master's head and body.
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nice post. I would add that the great tradition of insane royals is still alive and well, the UK's Prince Philip (husband of Queen Elizabeth II) is known for is somewhat peculiar world view (and unfortunate lack of restraint in expressing it). Some of his better known 'gaffes' can be found here http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/1848553.stm

I reckon its the sad inevitability of interbreading...
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Seborga e le sue pertinenze erano bene monastico dinastico di Guido Ventimiglia, antenato della principessa Jasmine von Hohenstaufen .Legittima erede di tali bene e' la principessa Yasmin ed in mancanza il ramo collaterale del Principe Alduino di Ventimiglia.Guido Ventimiglia puntualizzo'nella donnazione condizioni irrinunciabili disattese dai monaci di Lèrins. La Dinastia di Guido di Ventimiglia cui dinastia si e' estinta nel pronipote Guglielmo,Abbate , la cui sorella contessa Jolanda Ventimiglia ha sposato Avril de Burey Anjou de Saint Genis de Hohenstaufen ,pronipote Federico II ed Isabella d'Inghilterra .Jolanda Ventimiglia Lascaris aveva revocato la donazione ai monaci benedettini per non aver rispettato le condizioni della donazione stessa, affidandola in Fidecommisso ai detentori. La Fidecommisso non e' una cessione definitiva e pertanto in qualsiasi momento i legittimi discendenti veri proprietari, possono decidere sul destino dei beni stessi.La concessione allo Stato Italiano e' solo un atto di Fidecommissio della Principessa Yasmin, poichè Seborga ed annessi essendo beni monastici dinastici non sono soggetti ad uso capione.
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http://www.corrispondenti.net/?id=13332
Ai sensi leggi stampa chiediamo la seguente rettifica, in merito articolo su Seborga.

Seborga era pertinenza di un bene monastico dinastico del Conte Guido di Ventimiglia, la cui unica ed ultima erede fu Jolanda di Ventimiglia, da cui discende direttamente la principessa Yasmin.Fu concessa in via subordinata in fidecommisso, qualora il conte fosse tornato vivo dalla crociata, ai monaci benedettini di Lèrins, ed in donazione , qualora in crociata fosse perito, essendo lo stesso ancora giovane e privo di prole.La Donazione era condizionata dal rispetto delle clausole comprese nella stessa Fidecommisso che puntualizzava la cura della sepoltura della dinastia Ventimiglia, preci,opere di bene,messe, onoranze, commemorazioni,oltre alla custodia dei beni monastici quali inalienabili ed imprescrittibili legai alla memoria dei Ventimiglia, in perpetuum . Tali condizioni furono disattese,anzi i monaci non ebbero nemmeno la normale vigilanza del bene, assecondando usurpazioni varie,in cambio di prebende, e ai sensi della donazione e ai sensi della fidecommisso. A tal scopo , venute meno le condizioni ,la donazione fu revocata da Jolanda Ventimiglia, che in realta' non si curo' di riappropiarsene materialmete in quanto sposo' un principe curlandese Anglo svevo russo e lasciata in fidecommisso. E' per questo motivo che non cambio' mai proprieta' e all'Italia non fu possibile la trascrizione,in quanto i beni monastici dinastici,non sono usocapionabili e Seborga con tutte le sue pertinenze restano in perpetuum patrimonio dei discendenti di Guido Ventimiglia, ossia di Jolanda Ventimiglia.Cio' spiega perche' persino al Podesta' e allo stesso Mussolini non fu possibile l'attribuzione all'Italia del bene, poiche'non sono usocapionabili i beni monastici,anche se occupati.Se e' rimasta , per mero gentleemnet agreement , bene dello stato italiano e' per gentile concessione dei legittimi discendenti di Jolanda Ventimiglia.Pertanto sono prive di fondamento giuridico successive spiegazioni di ordine esoterico cavalleresco storico, in quanto non cambiano la sostanza del diritto secondo il principio del "Prior in tempore, Potior in iure", a maggior ragione trattandosi di bene monastico dinastico su cui non vige l'uso capione. Le dichiarazioni e manifestazioni di protervia da parte di una decina di autoproclamatesi reggenti e proprietari di Seborga, sono atto di arbitrio ed appropriazione indebita di proprieta' privata, che se tollerata,qualora degradi a mero insulto e protervia offensiva e' perseguibile per legge, quale atto di indimidazione e minaccia , nonchè stalking diffamatorio per abietti motivi, cosa che non esiteremo ad affrontare con drastiche soluzioni.Ad oggi sussiste la proprieta' privata di Seborga e pertinenze da parte dei legittimi eredi, anche se la Fidecommisso e' stata ratificata a favore dello Stato Italiano.Cio' e' accaduto per l'impossibilita'di un dialogo con gli autoproclamatesi reggenti di Seborga,i quali nonostante tollerati sono ricorsi all'insulto e alla diffamazione.Persone venuti dal nulla , reclamano cio'che appartiene alla legittima proprieta' che dovrebbe anche subire lezioni dai funghi spuntati in una notte? (prof Walter Weiss)
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Novembre 2009 ore 13:52

Smentita All'Avv Alberto Romano Priore di Seborga dalla
Fondazione Re Desiderio ,presieduta da SAIR Principessa Yasmin Sovrana,
legittima Sovrana di Seborga, ,ratificando ricognizione proprietà dinastica
monastica Seborga concessa nel 2006 in fidecommisso allo Stato Italiano.

Rettifica all'avv. Alberto Romano Gran Priore di Giorgio Carbone.
In relazione al servizio su Seborga andato in onda su TG ore 20,
intervista
all'avv Alberto Romano,formulasi richiesta rettifica in merito alle
dichiarazioni al redattore che ha presentato il servizio.Erroneamente il
redattore ha concluso che il borgo che non fu trascritto trai ibeni
del
Regno d'Italia, apparterrebbe ai cittadini di Seborga . Giova ricordare
che
trattasi di un bene dinastico monastico imprescrittibile ed inalienabile,
su
cui non vige l'uso capione.Ed in virtù del Prior in Tempore, Potior in
iure
appartiene ai legittimi eredi , come spiega il Volume Dei Regni d'Italia
epitome del 1600 a cura di Emanuele Tesauro, il territorio da Montecarlo a
Bordighera apparteneva a re Desiderio, il cui Delfino era Re Adelchi , il
primogenito , il cui figlio era Re Poto capostipite dei Puoti.Come
affermano
gli storici Re Desiderio discendeva da Costanzo, figlio di Costantino il
Grande
e dagli imperatori Valentiani,ovvero Gallia Placidia.Ramo cadetto di Re
Desiderio era Bernardo da cui ebbero origine i Ventimiglia .Poichè titolare
di
Seborga era il figlio di Re Adelchi , re Poto, figlio di Adelchi e Gisla ,
sorella di Carlo Magno, il territorio di Seborga rimase di proprietà del
Delfino di Re Adelchi , Re Poto, che aveva sposato la cugina , figlia di
Carlo
Magno Gisela Hildegard.Costretto a fuggire a Costantinopoli, l'eredità di
Castrum Monoikos, o Montecarlo, le isole Lerins ,Seborga fino a
Bordighera,
Sanremo, rimasero di pertinenza dei discendenti del ramo anscarico, ossia
i
Ventimiglia pronipoti cadetti di Re Desiderio.Il Conte Guido Ventimiglia
dono'
Seborga e le pertinenze , bene monasteriale ai monaci di Lerins,
subordinato
acondizioni che furono disattese.La donazione fu quindi revocata da
Jolanda
Venimiglia Lascaris Jagelloni, legittima discendente di Guido .Jolanda
sposo'
William discendente di Federico VI, sepolto a Saint Genis , figlio di
Federico
II ed Isabella d'Inghilterra, emigrando in Curlandia nell'Ordine Kradaino
dei
Portaspada Teutone.La fidecommisso ai monaci di Bernardo Chiaravalle
risaliva
da tempi remoti, ma non fu mai proprietà.La condizione che rende erede la
Principessa Yasmin è non solo la legittima discendenza da Guido di
Ventimiglia,
estintasi negli Avril de Stauferis De Saint Genis, Buren Anjou, ossia
Aprile
von Hohenstaufen Anjou Plantagenet Puoti ma dalla circostanza che la vera
proprietà di Seborga era del nipote primogenito di re Desiderio che solo
per
forza maggiore, emigrando a Costantinopoli , passo' al ramo dei
Ventimiglia.
Inoltre a Capo degli 11 Cavalieri di Seborga era Folco d'Anjou, antenato
di
Isabella d'Anjou Plantagenet, da cui discende la principessa Yasmin.A monte
vi
è non solo l'ascendenza diretta daCostantino, per cui i beni monastici
dinastici sono inalienabili, anche perchè fu dimostrata quale falsa la
donazione, quanto per diretta discendeza da Re Desiderio, , in quanto e'
una
principessa Puoti, in primogenitura, e discendente diretta di Folco d'Anjou,
e
di Guido Ventimiglia.Non fu trascritta all'Italia solo perchè era bene
monastico dinastico privato su cui non sussite uso capione.Quindi alcun
casato
poteva subentrare ai legittimi eredi, nè possono decidere la proprietà 360
residenti del borgo.

Fondazione Re Desiderio.
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