King Baudouin, (also spelled Boudewijn, Balduin or Baldwin) Albert Charles Leopold Axel Marie Gustave, (7 September 1930 - 31 July 1993), reigned as King of the Belgians from 1951 to 1993. He was the
elder son of King Leopold III (1901-1983) and his first
wife, Princess Astrid of Sweden (1905-1935). Boudewijn is his Dutch
name; Balduin in German; Baudouin in French, which is also mostly used in foreign languages, though sometimes in English Baldwin
copying Baldwin I of Jerusalem.
Baudouin was born in Kasteel Stuyvenberg, Laeken in Belgium. He became king when his father abdicated on July 16, 1951. Part of Leopold III's unpopularity was the result of an unpopular second marriage in 1941 to
Mary Lilian Baels, an English-born Belgian commoner known as
Princess de Réthy. More controversial had been his decision to surrender to Nazi Germany at the start of World War II, in 1941; many Belgians still questioned his loyalties, though history
indicates that Leopold surrendered in order to spare his country bloodshed and destruction. Though reinstated in a plebiscite
after the war, it became clear that Leopold was too controversial a person to be a unifying force, hence the abdication.
On December 15, 1960, Baudouin was
married at Brussels to Doņa Fabiola Fernanda Maria de las Victorias
Antonia Adelaīda Mora y Aragon, a former nurse and a writer of children's stories. Immensely popular for her good cheer,
personal modesty, and devotion to social causes, Queen Fabiola was born at Madrid,
Spain on June 11, 1928, a daughter of Don Gonzalo Mora Fernandez Riera del Olmo, Marques de Casa Riera, Conde de Mora, and his wife,
Doņa Blanca de Aragon y Carrillo de Albornoz Barroeta-Aldamar y Elio. The Belgian royal couple had no children.
There was some concern among politicians close to the King that he might actually be in love with his stepmother, Princess
Lilian, suspicions fueled by secret recordings of surprisingly intimate-sounding telephone conversations between the two. The
post-wedding actions of the king's father and stepmother only increased speculation; they briskly moved out of the royal palace
at Laeken and reportedly broke off relations with Baudouin for some time.
During Baudouin's reign the colony of Belgian Congo was given its
independence. In 1976, on the 25th anniversary of Baudouin's accession the King Baudouin
Foundation was formed, with the aim of improving the living conditions of the Belgian people. Baudouin also made some very
controversial visits to the Spanish dictator Franco, a family friend of his wife,
Fabiola.
He was a very religious man. In 1990, when a law liberalising Belgium's abortion
laws was approved by parliament, he refused to give the Royal Assent--an
unprecedented act since the assent has always been considered a mere formality. The government had to declare him unable to reign
on April 4, 1990. The Belgian constitution
provides that, if the king is incapable of reigning, the government as a whole will fulfil the role of head of state. All members of the government signed the bill, and the government
declared that Baudouin was capable of reigning again the next day, on April 5,
1990. (It is a point of contention as to whether Baudouin abdicated for two days so as not to have to approve the law, while still allowing abortions to be legalised in
Belgium, or whether he was actually suspended for the day).
He reigned for 42 years until he died of heart failure on July 31, 1993 in the Villa Astrida in Motril, in the south of Spain. He was interred in the royal vault at the
Church of Our Lady, Laeken Cemetery, Brussels, Belgium.
Baudouin was succeeded by his younger brother, who became King Albert II.
|