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CHRISTIAN IX

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 279 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHRISTIAN IX  . (1818–1906), king of Denmark, was a younger son of William, duke of Schleswig-Holstein-
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Sonderburg-
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Glucksburg (d . 1831), a
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direct descendant of the Danish king Christian III. by his wife Louise, a daughter of Charles, prince of Hesse-Cassel (d . '836), and
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grand-daughter of King Frederick V . Born at Gottorp on the 8th of
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April 1818, Christian entered the army, and alone among the members of his
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family served with the Danish troops in Schleswig during the insurrection of '848; but he was a personage of little importance until about 1852, ten years after his
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marriage with Louise (18'7–'898), daughter of William, prince of Hesse-Cassel (d . '867), and cousin of King Frederick VII . At this time it became imperative that satisfactory provision should be made for the succession to the Danish
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throne . The reigning king, Frederick VII., was childless, and the representatives of the
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great powers met in
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London and settled the
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crown on Prince Christian and his wife (May 1852), an arrangement which became
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part of the law of Denmark in 1853 . The " protocol king," as Christian was sometimes called, ascended the throne on Frederick's
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death in November '863, and was at once faced by formidable difficulties . Reluctantly he assented to the policy which led to war with the combined power of Austria and Prussia, and to the separation of the duchies of Schleswig, Holstein and
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Lauenburg from Denmark (see SCHLESWIG-HOLSTEIN QUESTION) . Within the narrowed limits of his
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kingdom Christian's difficulties were more protracted and hardly less serious . During almost the whole of his reign the Danes were engaged in a
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political struggle between the " Right " and the "
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Left," the party of order and the party of progress, the former being supported in general by the Landsting, and the latter by the Folketing .

The king's sympathies

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lay with the more conservative section of his subjects, and for many years he was successful in preventing the Radicals from coming into office . The march of events, however, was too strong for him, and in 1901 he assented in a dignified manner to the formation of a "
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cabinet of the Left " (see DENMARK:
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History) . In spite of these political disturbances Christian's popularity with his
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people grew steadily, and was enhanced by the patriarchal and unique position which in his later years he occupied in
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Europe . With his wife, often called " the aunt of all Europe," he' was related to nearly all the
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European sovereigns . His eldest son Frederick had married a daughter of Charles XV. of Sweden; his second son George had been king of the Hellenes since '863; and his youngest son Waldemar (b . '858) was married to
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Marie d'Orleans, daughter of Robert, duc de
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Chartres . Of his three daughters, Alexandra married
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Edward VII. of Great Britain; Dagmar (Marie), the
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tsar Alexander III.; and Thyra, Ernest Augustus, duke of Cumberland . One of his grandsons, Charles, became king of Norway as Haakon VII. in 1905, and another,
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Constantine, crown prince of
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Greece, married a
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sister of the German emperor William II . Christian was also the ruler of Iceland, where he was received with great
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enthusiasm when he visited the island in 1874 . He died at Copenhagen on the 29th of
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January 1906, and was buried at Roskilde . See Barfod,
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Kong Kristian IX.'s Regerings-Dagbog (Copenhagen, 1876) ; and Hans Majestet Kong Kristian IX . (Copenhagen, 1888) .

End of Article: CHRISTIAN IX
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