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  1. Eleanor Margaret Green. Princess Viggo, Countess of Rosenborg (née Eleanor Margaret Green; November 5, 1895 – July 3, 1966) was an American who became a Princess in Denmark. By her marriage to Prince Viggo, Count of Rosenborg, Green became Princess Viggo, Countess of Rosenborg.

    • James Oliver Green
    • November 5, 1895, New York City, U.S.
  2. 3 lug 2020 · July 3, 2020 ~ Saad719. Today marks the Anniversary of the Death of Princess Viggo of Denmark, who died on this day in 1966! Born Eleanor Margaret Green in New York City in 1895, she was the daughter of Dr. James Oliver Green and Amelia Hewitt Green, coming from a long line of American industrialists, and growing up at Ringwood Manor ...

  3. Without the legally required permission of the Danish king for a dynastic marriage, Viggo married Eleanor Margaret Green (New York City, 5 November 1895 – Copenhagen, 3 July 1966), in New York City on 10 June 1924.

  4. 5 gen 1970 · The prince married Eleanor Margaret Green during a visit to the United States in 1924. She died in 1966. There were no children. The marriage of the young Danish prince, cousin of the then...

  5. Principe Valdemaro di Danimarca. Madre. Maria d'Orléans. Consorte. Eleanor Margaret Green. Viggo di Rosenborg ( Copenaghen, 25 dicembre 1893 – Ebeltoft, 4 gennaio 1970) è stato un principe danese . Era il figlio più giovane del principe Valdemaro di Danimarca e della principessa Maria di Orléans .

  6. ELEANOR MARGARET GREEN. Princess Viggo of Denmark. (1895 - 1966) A Royal Wedding. In 1923, Eleanor had visited her cousin, Baroness von Schilling in Copenhagen, Denmark. It was there that she met a Danish prince, Viggo Christian Adolf Georg. He was the son of Prince Valdemar and Princess Marie, and a cousin of King Christian of Denmark.

  7. 2 mag 2018 · In last month’s Short Story, we attended the weddings of Hewitt sister Amy Hewitt Green and that of her daughter Eleanor Margaret Green, who became Princess Viggo of Denmark. This month, researcher Josephine Rodgers discusses the introduction of American drawing into Cooper Hewitt’s collection through the work of Robert Frederick Blum.