Jaime de Bourbon de Parme
Prince Jaime of Bourbon-Parma | |
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Count of Bardi | |
Born | Nijmegen, Netherlands | 13 October 1972
Spouse | |
Issue | Princess Zita Princess Gloria |
House | Bourbon-Parma |
Father | Carlos Hugo, Duke of Parma |
Mother | Princess Irene of the Netherlands |
Extended royal family Descendants of Prince Felix and also members of the Grand Ducal Family of Luxembourg (see there):
Descendants of Prince René:
Princess Marina
Descendants of Prince Louis: Princess Brigitte
Prince Rémy
Princess Chantal Prince Jean
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Dutch royal family |
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* Member of the Dutch royal house |
Prince Jaime Bernardo of Bourbon-Parma, Count of Bardi (born 13 October 1972) is the second son and third child of Princess Irene of the Netherlands and Carlos Hugo, Duke of Parma. He is a member of the House of Bourbon-Parma as well an extended member of the Dutch royal family. From 2014 to 2018 he was the Dutch ambassador to the Holy See. Until 2021 he was the Senior Advisor Private Sector Partnerships at UNHCR, the United Nations Refugee Agency. Currently he is the Climate Envoy of the Netherlands.
Early life
[edit]Jaime was born in Nijmegen, Netherlands. He has a twin sister, Princess Margarita, who was born one minute earlier. Besides his twin sister, the prince has one elder brother, Carlos, Duke of Parma, and one younger sister, Princess Carolina. Prince Jaime was born six weeks prematurely and stayed with his sister in an incubator at the hospital. Jaime was baptised by Bernardus Johannes Cardinal Alfrink, with his grandfather Prince Bernhard of Lippe-Biesterfeld and Princess Madeleine of Bourbon-Parma as his godparents.
In 1981 his parents decided to divorce. Together with his mother and his siblings he moved to the Soestdijk Palace (Baarn), then residence of his grandparents, Queen Juliana and Prince Bernhard, where he lived for several years.
Education and career
[edit]Jaime studied international relations at Brown University in the United States. He subsequently obtained a M.A. degree in International Economics and Conflict Management at Johns Hopkins University. During this studies he performed an internship at the World Wide Fund for Nature and the International Federation of the Red Cross.
He now works for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Netherlands. His first role was as the first secretary of the Netherlands Embassy in Baghdad, before becoming a political advisor to the peace mission in Pol-e Khomri in the Baghlan Province in the northern part of Afghanistan. Until the summer of 2007 the prince worked on secondment in the cabinet of the European Commissioner Neelie Kroes. He was back in The Hague at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where he had the position of Special Envoy for Natural Resources. On 7 February 2014, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced that he would be appointed as ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to the Holy See.[1] Prince Jaime was, on 15 July 2014, sworn in as ambassador by King Willem-Alexander and he served till August 2018. Thereafter he was seconded to UNHCR, the United Nations Agency for Refugees, as Senior Advisor Private Sector Partnerships to work on the energy transition in refugee settlements. In August 2021 he started as the Climate Envoy of the Netherlands.
Other activities
[edit]Jaime has also worked as an interviewer for the documentary series Africa, War is Business. In the documentary he investigated and explained how a country that is very rich in raw materials can be dominated by poverty and conflict. In the series he visited Sierra Leone and its diamond fields, Liberia to see how an export embargo on its hardwood is carried out, and the DR Congo, where he goes on a night patrol in the war-torn east of the country, an area rich in gold and cobalt. In the documentary possible solutions are displayed from the perspective of the international community.[2]
The prince performs representative tasks for the Ducal House of Bourbon-Parma. He is regularly present at royal marriages, baptismal ceremonies, and funerals.
Personal life
[edit]On 12 August 2013, Jaime's engagement to Viktória Cservenyák was announced. Cservenyák (born 25 May 1982 in Budapest) is a Hungarian-born Dutch attorney and daughter of Tibor Cservenyák and his former wife, Dorottya Klára Bartos. On 3 October 2013, they married in a civil wedding ceremony in Wijk bij Duurstede. Their religious wedding took place on 5 October 2013, at the Church of Our Lady in Apeldoorn.[3]
They have two daughters: Zita Clara (born on Empress Zita of Austria and her maternal great-grandmother Klára Killermann.[4] On 9 November 2015, it was announced that the couple were expecting a second child; daughter Gloria Irene was born on 9 May 2016. In a 2015 interview, Princess Viktória stated that the gender of her future child did not matter ("fortunately, we can not influence nature in the terms of gender"), after being told that there were no grandsons for the late Duke of Parma[5] (in April 2016, Jaime's elder brother Carlos, Duke of Parma finally had a son, named Carlos Enrique).[6]
21 February 2014), who was named after her paternal great-great auntTitles, styles and honours
[edit]- Titles
- 13 October 1972 – 2 September 1996: His Royal Highness Prince Jaime of Bourbon-Parma
- 2 September 1996 – present: His Royal Highness Prince Jaime, Count of Bardi[7]
- Officially in the Netherlands: 15 May 1996 – present: His Royal Highness Prince Jaime de Bourbon de Parme
- Honours
- Dynastic honours
- Ducal Family of Parma:
- Bailiff Knight of the Parmese Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George
- Chancellor Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saint Louis for Civil Merit
- Foreign honours
- SMOM: Knight of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
- Grand Cross in the Order of Pope Pius IX
Notes
[edit]Already a ducal prince from birth, his father bestowed the substantive title Conte di Bardi (Count of Bardi) upon him on 2 September 1996.[7] In 1996 he was incorporated into the Dutch nobility by Queen Beatrix, with the highest noble title Prins de Bourbon de Parme (Prince of Bourbon-Parma),[8] and styled Zijne Koninklijke Hoogheid (His Royal Highness). His other titles hold no ground within the Dutch nobility. He does not belong to the House of Orange-Nassau or the limited Dutch royal house, but as a grandson of Queen Juliana and cousin of the present King Willem-Alexander, he is an official member of the more extended Dutch royal family.[9]
References
[edit]- ^ (in Dutch) Kabinet geeft vorm aan modernisering diplomatie met benoeming van 20 nieuwe ambassasdeurs Website Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 7 February 2014
- ^ "Africa: War is Business – The complete series". Fatal Transactions. 5 September 2006. Archived from the original on 30 July 2012. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
- ^ "Kerkelijk huwelijk Prins Jaime de Bourbon de Parme en Viktória Cservenyák – Het Koninklijk Huis". Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 5 October 2013.
- ^ 10 mei 2016 (22 February 1999). "Babynieuws! Dochter voor prins Jaime en prinses Viktória". Vorsten.nl. Archived from the original on 3 February 2018. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Prinses Viktória: geslacht baby maakt niet uit | Entertainment". Telegraaf.nl. Archived from the original on 20 December 2015. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
- ^ Gazzetta di Parma (25 September 2016). "In Duomo il battesimo del Principe Carlo Enrico – Gazzetta di Parma". Gazzettadiparma.it. Archived from the original on 16 October 2020. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
- ^ a b Almanach de Gotha (182nd ed.). Almanach de Gotha. 1998. p. 55. ISBN 0-9532142-0-6.
- ^ "The 14th list of nobility determined by royal decree on 9 June 2004 (Stb.307)". 8 July 2004. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2021. Website of the High Council of Nobility in the Netherlands
- ^ "Members of the Dutch Royal House and the royal family". Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Postbus 51 – Website of the Dutch Government Information Service (in Dutch)
External links
[edit]- 1972 births
- Living people
- 21st-century Dutch civil servants
- 21st-century Dutch diplomats
- Ambassadors of the Netherlands to the Holy See
- Brown University alumni
- Counts of Bardi
- Dutch conservationists
- Dutch Roman Catholics
- Dutch twins
- People from Nijmegen
- House of Bourbon-Parma
- Princes of Bourbon-Parma
- Princes of the Netherlands
- Italian nobility
- Spanish royalty
- Sustainability advocates