Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Princess Mafalda of Savoy (19 November 1902 – 28 August 1944) was the second daughter of King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and his wife Elena of Montenegro. In 1925, at the age of 22, she married the Landgrave of Hesse, Philipp. In 1943, during World War II, she was imprisoned in the Buchenwald concentration camp, where she died. [1]

    • Before The Storm
    • The War
    • The Set-Up
    • To Buchenwald
    • The Attack
    • Aftermath
    • Mafalda’s Family

    Princess Mafalda of Savoy wasborn in Rome in 1902. She had one brother and three sisters: Umberto, Yolanda, Giovanna, and Maria Francesca. Mafalda inherited a love of music and the arts from her mother, Queen Elena, who wrote poetry in her spare time. In 1925, Mafalda married a German prince, Philipp of Hesse. Between 1926 and 1940, the couple had ...

    Almost immediately, the war went south for Italy. It didn’t take Victor Emmanuel long to lose confidence in Mussolini. By mid-1943, he’d made up his mind to kick him to the curb. On the night of July 25, he met with Mussolini and issued his arrest warrant. However, they still had to avoid pissing Hitler off, so they pretended to remain staunch Axis...

    The Nazis tracked her everymove. They watched her leave Bulgaria. They watched her train stop in Budapest. They watched her catch a plane to Italy, then take a train up to Rome. When she got home, she learned that the rest of her family had already fled south to Brindisi. Her sons were indeed safe at the Vatican, where her mom had left them. When s...

    The Nazis shipped her toBerlin for questioning. Then they shipped her to Buchenwald, largely in retribution for her father’s perceived treachery. They called her Frau von Weber, although several Italian prisoners recognized her as Princess Mafalda. At Buchenwald, she lived in an isolated barracks (shack number 15) next to the ammunition factory on ...

    On August 24, 1944, Alliedbombers attacked Buchenwald’s ammunition factory. Mafalda and the other cabin inmates hid in the trench. When bombs demolished the cabin, it fell over the trench. They found her alive, crushed under a pile of rubble. One side of her face was burned and her left arm was crushed and burned. In the aftermath, she recognized t...

    After the air raid, theytossed her body on a pile of corpses. A priest recognized her, smuggled her body out, and placed it in a wooden coffin. Coffin #262 was buried in nearby Weimar, with no name and no ceremony. After liberation in 1945, Dr. Pecorari found her burial site and etched her name on the back of her marker. Years after the war, in 195...

    Before the war ended, theNazis transferred her husband, Phillip, to Dachau. American soldiers eventually arrested him when they liberated the camps. After he served his sentence, he became an interior designer and lived out his life in Rome until his death in 1980. Mafalda’s granddaughter, also named Mafalda, is a fashion designer. Later, an Italia...

  2. Sep 18, 2021 · Princess Mafalda of Savoy was a glamorous princess who met a very tragic end. I suggest you grab a box of tissues before reading more. Mafalda of Savoy was born on November 19th, 1902, in Rome. She was the second daughter of King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy, and his wife, Elena of Montenegro.

  3. Mar 15, 2024 · The imprisonment of Princess Mafalda of Savoy was a stark departure from her life of royal engagements and philanthropy. She was initially detained in Rome before being transferred to the Buchenwald concentration camp, a place synonymous with the horrors of the Holocaust.

  4. Jul 4, 2023 · Princess Mafalda of Savoy was a member of the Italian royal family who was believed to be against Adolf Hitler during Germany’s rise to fascism and in World War II. The animosity between them...

  5. Mafalda of Hessen, Princess of Savoy (1902-1944), ca. 1940. Mafalda’s husband, Prince Philipp of Hesse, supported the National Socialists. He joined the party in 1930 and, after Hitler’s rise to power, became governor of the province of Hesse-Nassau.

  6. People also ask

  7. Aug 27, 2019 · In late August 1944, the Allies bombed an ammunition factory inside Buchenwald, when she was seriously wounded, and her arm became infected before it was amputated. Princess Mafalda bled profusely during the operation and never regained consciousness, dying during the night of August 26–27.

  1. People also search for