

Romanian and Parmese Royal
Curtea de Argeș Monastery
Queen Anne of Romania (born Anne of Bourbon-Parma on 18 September 1923 in Paris; died 1 August 2016 in Morges) was the wife of King Michael I of Romania. She was revered in Romania as Queen Anne, although Michael had already been forced to abdicate before their marriage and she never lived in the country as a reigning queen. Her life was shaped by war, exile, family loyalty and a late return to Romanian public life.
Anne was born in Paris, the daughter of Prince René of Bourbon-Parma and Princess Margrethe of Denmark. Her family belonged to the wide network of European royal houses, but her youth did not unfold as a sheltered court life. After the beginning of the Second World War, the family left Europe, first for Spain and later for the United States. These early relocations gave Anne a direct experience of insecurity, one that later matched the long exile she shared with Michael.
During the Second World War, Anne volunteered for the Free French forces. She wore uniform and was awarded the French Croix de guerre. Her wartime service shows a life of her own alongside the role of royal wife. It also points to a practical, sober side later often connected with her discretion and restrained public presence.
Anne met Michael I in 1947 in the circles around the wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten in London. Soon afterward Michael was forced to abdicate in Romania by the communist government. The marriage took place on 10 June 1948 in Athens, already in exile. The union of a Catholic princess and an Orthodox king brought church difficulties, but the couple remained together. They had five daughters: Margareta, Elena, Irina, Sophie and Maria.
Anne and Michael lived outside Romania for decades, including in Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Exile did not mean ceremonial court life, but an everyday existence of work, family, moves and political uncertainty. Anne usually stayed in the background while Michael remained, for many Romanians, a symbol of the interrupted monarchy. That restraint later made her credible to many people: she did not push herself ahead of her husband's history, but she did not disappear from it either.
After the end of communist dictatorship, the royal family's return remained politically contested. On 25 April 1992 Anne accompanied Michael on a visit that drew large crowds in Bucharest. For Anne it was the first visit to the country whose queen she had long been in public memory. In the following years she became a quiet figure of reconciliation: not as a political demand, but as the visible companion of a family that, after decades, again found a place in Romania.
Queen Anne died on 1 August 2016 at the hospital in Morges, Switzerland, after a long illness. She was 92 years old. Her funeral in Romania drew deep public attention and was regarded as one of the country's most significant royal funerals in many decades. Her dignity was quiet: shaped by service, exile, endurance and a late closeness to a country where she could arrive in person only very late.
until 2016