Princess Margaret of Connaught - Issue

Issue

Name Birth Death Notes
Prince Gustaf Adolf, Duke of Västerbotten 22 April 1906 26 January 1947 Father of Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden.
Prince Sigvard, Duke of Uppland 7 June 1907 4 February 2002 Later Count Sigvard Bernadotte af Wisborg.
Princess Ingrid 28 March 1910 7 November 2000 Later Queen-consort of Denmark; mother of the present Queen Margrethe II of Denmark and former Queen-consort Anne-Marie of Greece.
Prince Bertil, Duke of Halland 28 February 1912 5 January 1997 Married Lilian Davies; no issue.
Prince Carl Johan, Duke of Dalarna 31 October 1916 5 May 2012 Later Count Carl Johan Bernadotte af Wisborg, married twice, had adopted issue. He was the last living great-grandchild of Queen Victoria & Albert, Prince Consort

Crown Princess Margaret was a grandmother of the current King of Sweden, Carl XVI Gustaf, as well as of her namesake, the current Queen of Denmark, Margrethe II, and of the former Queen-consort of Greece, Princess Anne-Marie of Denmark.

Read more about this topic:  Princess Margaret Of Connaught

Famous quotes containing the word issue:

    Your child...may not call you or other people names.... Don’t be tempted to gloss over this issue. You may be able to talk to yourself into not minding being called names, but this decision may come back to haunt you in later years. If you let a preschooler speak disrespectfully to you now, you’ll have a much harder time of it when your child is a preteen and the issue resurfaces, which it is likely to do then.
    Lawrence Balter (20th century)

    Public administrators would get along better if they would restrain the impulse to butt in or be dragged into trouble. They should remain silent until an issue is reduced to its lowest terms, until it boils down into something like a moral issue.
    Calvin Coolidge (1872–1933)

    Because of these convictions, I made a personal decision in the 1964 Presidential campaign to make education a fundamental issue and to put it high on the nation’s agenda. I proposed to act on my belief that regardless of a family’s financial condition, education should be available to every child in the United States—as much education as he could absorb.
    Lyndon Baines Johnson (1908–1973)