Princess Angela | |||||
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Princess of Liechtenstein; Countess Rietberg | |||||
Born |
Bocas del Toro, Panama |
3 February 1958 ||||
Spouse | Prince Maximilian of Liechtenstein (m. 2000) | ||||
Issue | Prince Alfons | ||||
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Father | Javier Francisco Brown | ||||
Mother | Silvia Maritza Burke | ||||
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Full name | |
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Angela Gisela Brown |
House of Liechtenstein |
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HSH The Prince
Extended princely family
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Styles of Princess Angela of Liechtenstein |
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Reference style | Her Serene Highness |
Spoken style | Your Serene Highness |
Alternative style | Ma'am |
HSH The Prince
HSH The Princess
Princess Angela of Liechtenstein (née Angela Gisela Brown; 3 February 1958) is the wife of Prince Maximilian of Liechtenstein. She is the first person of known African origin to marry into a reigning European dynasty, the marriage having been authorized by the monarch. Together, they have a biracial son, Prince Alfons (b. London, 18 May 2001), who is in the line of succession to the Liechtensteiner throne.
Princess Angela was born in Bocas del Toro, Panama, as Angela Gisela Brown, the daughter of Javier Francisco Brown and Silvia Maritza Burke.
After finishing high school in New York , Angela studied fashion at Parsons School of Design , where she graduated and received the Oscar de la Renta award . She was a stylist for three years and had her own brand, named "A. Brown", having set up a company with partners in Hong Kong . The princess worked for Adrienne Vittadini until September 1999.
In 1999 the Principality of Liechtenstein's Information Bureau announced the forthcoming nuptials of the second son of the reigning prince, Hans Adam II, Prince Maximilian, to Angela Brown. On 29 January 2000, at 11:00 am, she married Prince Maximilian at the Church of St. Vincent Ferrer in New York City. The marriage was groundbreaking, bringing a person of Afro-Panamanian ancestry into one of the few still reigning families in Europe by a marriage which obtained the prior consent and full support of the groom's sovereign and father, who also attended the wedding. While some members of the dynasty were said to be shocked and to consider the interracial marriage "the end of an era", others were said to have expressed support.