Dubai Telegraph - Greece's ex-king Constantine, end of a dynasty

EUR -
AED 4.352647
AFN 77.038349
ALL 96.598417
AMD 452.800818
ANG 2.1216
AOA 1086.827593
ARS 1714.917302
AUD 1.702175
AWG 2.136321
AZN 2.019543
BAM 1.954932
BBD 2.405642
BDT 145.95518
BGN 1.990387
BHD 0.446796
BIF 3538.543435
BMD 1.185199
BND 1.512635
BOB 8.253369
BRL 6.237824
BSD 1.194375
BTN 109.68129
BWP 15.628125
BYN 3.401889
BYR 23229.893437
BZD 2.402143
CAD 1.613637
CDF 2684.475359
CHF 0.916295
CLF 0.026007
CLP 1026.892131
CNY 8.239205
CNH 8.249327
COP 4352.049423
CRC 591.439832
CUC 1.185199
CUP 31.407764
CVE 110.216517
CZK 24.339287
DJF 212.686442
DKK 7.467985
DOP 74.371681
DZD 153.65341
EGP 55.62837
ERN 17.77798
ETB 185.542782
FJD 2.612356
FKP 0.859186
GBP 0.866279
GEL 3.194158
GGP 0.859186
GHS 12.972047
GIP 0.859186
GMD 86.519922
GNF 10370.488562
GTQ 9.16097
GYD 249.880081
HKD 9.259833
HNL 31.360816
HRK 7.531468
HTG 156.31124
HUF 381.361827
IDR 19878.981309
ILS 3.662743
IMP 0.859186
INR 108.685921
IQD 1553.202824
IRR 49926.493096
ISK 144.954314
JEP 0.859186
JMD 187.167667
JOD 0.840353
JPY 183.432056
KES 152.891041
KGS 103.646077
KHR 4767.466048
KMF 491.857853
KPW 1066.776971
KRW 1719.800318
KWD 0.363742
KYD 0.995358
KZT 600.703223
LAK 25481.771275
LBP 101393.74447
LKR 369.367519
LRD 219.558501
LSL 19.129558
LTL 3.499584
LVL 0.716915
LYD 7.494703
MAD 10.834234
MDL 20.089163
MGA 5259.323437
MKD 61.617375
MMK 2488.971822
MNT 4228.442435
MOP 9.604775
MRU 47.301727
MUR 53.844023
MVR 18.323619
MWK 2058.690455
MXN 20.714943
MYR 4.672099
MZN 75.568713
NAD 18.964458
NGN 1643.550963
NIO 43.501202
NOK 11.415786
NPR 175.490804
NZD 1.968562
OMR 0.45572
PAB 1.19438
PEN 3.993531
PGK 5.066136
PHP 69.862765
PKR 331.640946
PLN 4.21155
PYG 8000.48068
QAR 4.315354
RON 5.096714
RSD 117.397527
RUB 90.0755
RWF 1742.633436
SAR 4.445375
SBD 9.542761
SCR 17.606171
SDG 712.901341
SEK 10.562313
SGD 1.508051
SHP 0.889206
SLE 28.830002
SLL 24853.022112
SOS 677.345366
SRD 45.097406
STD 24531.219039
STN 24.489227
SVC 10.450359
SYP 13107.793177
SZL 19.129544
THB 37.394247
TJS 11.149595
TMT 4.148195
TND 3.371935
TOP 2.853674
TRY 51.550457
TTD 8.109433
TWD 37.407284
TZS 3051.886907
UAH 51.191481
UGX 4270.121623
USD 1.185199
UYU 46.349611
UZS 14601.515362
VES 410.009291
VND 30744.052844
VUV 141.759914
WST 3.2171
XAF 655.668579
XAG 0.014256
XAU 0.000245
XCD 3.203059
XCG 2.15268
XDR 0.815441
XOF 655.668579
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.462511
ZAR 19.156188
ZMK 10668.214289
ZMW 23.439689
ZWL 381.63348
  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.05

    -0.17%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.76

    +0.21%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    60.68

    +0.76%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    85.27

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    0.9400

    51.6

    +1.82%

  • AZN

    0.1800

    92.77

    +0.19%

  • RIO

    -4.1000

    91.03

    -4.5%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    35.8

    -1.03%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    25.86

    +1.43%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16

    -2.69%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.65

    -0.41%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.08

    +1.07%

  • BCC

    0.5100

    80.81

    +0.63%

  • BP

    -0.1600

    37.88

    -0.42%

Greece's ex-king Constantine, end of a dynasty
Greece's ex-king Constantine, end of a dynasty / Photo: - - AFP

Greece's ex-king Constantine, end of a dynasty

Greece's former king Constantine II, who died on Tuesday aged 82, was the last member of a century-long dynasty in power when a brutal army dictatorship seized control of the country in 1967.

Text size:

A descendant of Denmark's royal Gluecksburg family, Constantine ascended the throne in 1964 at the age of 23 during one of the most turbulent periods in modern Greek history.

The country was still bitterly divided 15 years after the Greek civil war, at the height of the Cold War and with anti-communist hysteria and fears of subversion rampant.

- Coup plots -

Most Greeks believe the young king, under the influence of his German-born mother Frederica, aggravated the country's political instability.

His critics argue he enabled the rise of the army dictatorship by clashing with the democratically elected prime minister Georgios Papandreou, encouraging his resignation in 1965.

Declassified US diplomatic cables say Constantine himself may have been mulling martial law in 1967.

They suggest he wanted to head off Papandreou's return to power, alongside his maverick son Andreas, the future firebrand socialist prime minister.

A 1967 State Department wire said Constantine's head of cabinet approached the local CIA station chief three months before the coup, to ask how Washington would react if "extreme measures" were taken ahead of elections in May.

The envoy told the then CIA station chief John Maury "for the present, the loyalty of the army could be relied upon to support a temporary dictatorship".

- 'Worst day of my life' -

In later years, the former king claimed he had done his utmost to avert the political crisis that led to the dictatorship.

He insisted that the putschists had "deceived" the Greek people by claiming to carry out the coup in his name.

Eight months after the colonels had seized power, Constantine organised a military counter-coup that failed.

"It was the worst day of my life," he said in a 2015 memoir released by To Vima weekly. "That day, I saw my first white hair."

Constantine fled to Rome with the royal family, and they moved to London in 1974.

He later said he had chosen not to pursue his counter-coup "because the risk of a general civil conflict was too great".

A senior putschist saw it differently. The ex-king had "plotted clumsily", he said.

But even after the dictatorship took hold, Constantine "seems to have been willing to return to Greece at practically any cost, including co-operation with the junta", historian Mogens Pelt wrote in a 2006 study of postwar Greece.

- Suing the state -

When democracy was restored in 1974, nearly 70 percent of Greeks voted for the abolition of the monarchy in a referendum, ending a dynasty begun by Constantine's Danish-born great-grandfather George I in 1863.

A long legal battle with the Greek state followed, with Constantine -- derisively nicknamed "Kokos" by anti-royalists -- determined to secure compensation for royal property and lands.

In 1991, he was permitted to remove 10 containers of items at the former royal estate of Tatoi near Athens, during the administration of prime minister Constantine Mitsotakis, father of the present premier.

Many of these items were later sold by auction house Christie's, the London-based ex-royals saying their ongoing storage and insurance costs were "impossible to cover".

The overall compensation case was finally settled in 2002 when the European Court of Human Rights ordered the Greek state to pay nearly 14 million euros to the former royal family.

- Rejected by the people -

Constantine was less than a year old when his family fled to Egypt to escape the invading Nazis, who occupied Greece until 1944. He was six when they returned to a devastated country.

As crown prince, he was part of a three-man sailing crew that won a gold medal in the 1960 Rome Olympics, Greece's first in nearly five decades.

A cousin of British monarch King Charles III, godfather to his heir Prince William and brother of Sofia, the mother of King Felipe VI of Spain, the ex-king was an honorary member of the International Olympic Committee from 1974.

Still styling himself "king", Constantine battled poor health in recent years.

He had returned to Greece in 2013, selling the 9,500-square-foot London mansion where his family had lived for four decades.

"I want nothing more than a quiet family life," he told reporters during a 1993 visit to Greece.

In a 2016 Skai TV interview, he said he had never voted in his life, and did not intend to.

"It's too late," he said.

In 2008, an opinion poll found fewer than 12 percent of Greeks favoured a return to a constitutional monarchy. More than 43 percent blamed him for the coming of the junta.

Constantine was married to Anne-Marie -- sister to the Queen of Denmark Margrethe II -- and they had five children.

I.Uddin--DT