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{| class="wiktable" |- | Royal house |- | surname |House of Saxe-Gessaphe<br/>''Haus Sachsen-Gessaphe'' |- | Coat of arms | [[File:COA Wettin.svg|140px]] |- | | Wettin Coat of arms for illustrating female house of Saxe-Gessaphe | |- | parent_house |[[Royal House of Wettin and Wibber|House of Saxe]] (cognatic)<br/>[[Royal House of Assaf|House of Gessaphe]] (agnatic) |- | country | [[Saxony]] |- | founding year | Start date and age 1997 |- | founder | Princess Maria Anna of Saxony and Prince Roberto de Afif of Gessaphe |- | current_head | [[Isabel II do Reino Unido|Princessa Alexandra, Margrave of Meissen - constituída]] |- | titles | Margrave of Meissen<br>The Prince of Saxe-Gessaphe<br>Prince/Princess of Saxony<br>Duke/Duchess in Saxony<br>Prince/Princess of Saxe-Gessaphe |- | members | |- | cadet_branches | |- | footnotes | |- |} '''Saxe-Gessaphe''' is the name of a family descended in the female line from former kings of [[Saxony]] under the [[House of Wettin]], a member of which was recognized by a childless [[pretender]] to that throne as eventual heir to the deposed dynasty's rights. The claim is contested by an [[patrilineality|agnatic]] descendant of the former royal house ([[Daniel, Margrave of Meissen]]), and both claims are clouded by conflicting interpretations of the dynastic laws which governed the succession to the defunct throne of Saxony, and by familial dispute. ==Dynastic background== The family descends from Princess Anna of Saxony (13 December 1929 – 13 March 2012) and her husband Roberto Afif (1916–1978). Anna was a sister of [[Maria Emanuel, Margrave of Meissen]], the childless head of the ex-royal House of Saxony and, as such, [[Wiktionary:titular|titular]] King of Saxony. Of the five children of the late [[Friedrich Christian, Margrave of Meissen|Prince Friedrich Christian]] (1893–1968), son and heir of Saxony's last king [[Frederick Augustus III of Saxony|Friedrich August III]] (who was obliged to abdicate in 1918 coincident with Germany's surrender in [[World War I]]), Anna is the only one who has living, legitimate children.<ref>{{cite book|last= Willis|first= Daniel|title= The Descendants of Louis XIII|year= 1999|publisher= Clearfield|location= Baltimore|isbn= 0-8063-4942-5|pages= 327–328, 766|chapter= The Ducal Family of Parma}}</ref> Succession to Saxony's throne was [[Salic law#Female inheritance|semi-Salic]]: only if all male [[dynasty#Dynasts|dynasts]] were to become extinct would the female dynast nearest in kinship to the last male, or her descendants, inherit the throne. Both male and female dynasts, however, were required to "[[Royal intermarriage|marry equally]]" (to a member of a reigning, formerly reigning, or [[Mediatised houses|mediatised]] family) in order to transmit dynastic rights to their own descendants. Thus the eligibility of the Saxe-Gessaphe line for the royal Saxon legacy would depend on the dynasticity of their mother's marriage.<ref>{{cite web| last = Velde| first = François| title = Laws of the Kingdom of Saxony| work = Heraldica.org| url = http://www.heraldica.org/topics/royalty/HGSachsen-K.htm#Introduction| access-date = 2008-04-18}}</ref> ==Lebanese heritage== Afif family claimed to belong [[patrilineality|patrilineally]] to an ancient princely [[Lebanese Turkmen]] and [[Maronite Church|Maronite]] Catholic family in what is now [[Lebanon]].<ref>{{cite book|last= Willis|first= Daniel|title= The Descendants of Louis XIII|year= 1999|publisher= Clearfield|location= Baltimore|isbn= 0-8063-4942-5|pages= 327–328, 766|chapter= The Ducal Family of Parma}}</ref> Afif, [[emir]] in [[Keserwan District|Keserwan]] and grandson of the Lebanese emir [[Assaf dynasty|Mansur 'Asaf bin Hasan (1522-1580)]], is said to be the ancestor of the [[Christianity|Christian]]ised [[Sheikh#Lebanon|cheikh]]s of [[Jezzine|Bkassine]], from which Roberto Afif was assumed to descend.<ref>{{cite book|last= Cannuyer|first= Christian|author-link= Christian Cannuyer|title= Les maisons royales et souveraines d'Europe|year= 1989|publisher= Editions Brepols|location= Tournhout, Belgium|language= fr|isbn= 2-503-50017-X|chapter= Saxe|quote= Descendant en ligne directe de l’Emir Mansur ‘Asaf bin Hassan, prince du Liban (1522-1580), dont le petit-fils Afif, Emir en Kisrowan, fut l’ancêtre de la lignée des Sheikhs de Bkessin qui se convertirent au christianisme et dont l’époux de la Princesse Marie-Anne est issu.|page= 207}}</ref> According to the royal genealogical book series, ''L'Allemagne dynastique'', Princess Anna maintains that her husband's family descend from [[Suleiman]], who was granted the province of Keserwan, north of Beirut, in 1306 by the [[Mamluk]]s. She further avers that Roberto's father, Alexander Afif (1883-1971), a lifelong resident of Beirut, was a knight of the [[Order of the Holy Sepulchre (Catholic)|Order of the Holy Sepulchre]] and was Prince of "[[Assaf dynasty|Assaph]]" (or Afif-''Gessaphe'') in Lebanon.<ref>{{cite book |last= Huberty |first= Michel |author2=Alain Giraud |author3=F. and B. Magdelaine |title= L'Allemagne Dynastique Tome VI Bade/Mecklembourg |year= 1991 |location= France|chapter = Familles Nobles Alliées|language= fr |isbn= 2-901138-06-3 |pages= 475–476}}</ref> Roberto emigrated to Mexico, obtained a [[Doctor of Law|law degree]], and made his living as a businessman. The family was associated with some of the most prominent Mexican families. Although not as wealthy as they used to be, the family lives an [[upper middle class]] life in one of [[Mexico City]]'s better neighbourhoods, [[Polanco]].{{Fact|date=March 2009}} Roberto's sister, Alexandra Afif, born in Beirut in 1919, [[morganatic marriage|morganatically]] married Prince Karl Anton [[Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen|of Hohenzollern]] (born 1922), in Rome in 1951.<ref>{{cite book |last= Huberty |first= Michel |author2=Alain Giraud |author3=F. and B. Magdelaine |title= L'Allemagne Dynastique Tome V Hohenzollern-Waldeck|year= 1988 |location= France |language= fr |isbn= 2-901138-05-5 |page= 267 }}</ref> Prince Karl Anton was a nephew of Prince Friedrich Christian of Saxony, and is thus a first cousin of Margrave Maria Emanuel and Princess Anna. ==Designated heir== Prince Johannes of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1969-1987), of the [[Ernestine duchies|Ernestine branch]] of the [[House of Wettin]], was killed in a mountain climbing accident while still a youth, leaving his maternal uncle, Margrave Maria Emanuel, without a dynastic heir in the next generation of Wettins. However the eldest son of his sister Anna, [[Alexander de Afif|Alexander Afif]] (b. [[Munich]] 12 February 1954), had married Princess Gisela of Bavaria (b. 10 September 1964) in 1987. In May 1997 the Margrave, who has upheld the dynasty's marital standards, recognized Alexander Afif as his heir. By formally adopting him two years later, the Margrave conferred upon Alexander the legal surname of ''Prinz von Sachsen'' (literally "Prince of Saxony"). Thus was created the family of ''Saxe-Gessaphe'', a [[cognate|cognatic]] offshoot of the royal [[House of Wettin]], with the approval of the Margrave Maria Emanuel and his siblings, making Alexander, his sons and his brothers, dynastically entitled and henceforth known as ''Prinzen von Sachsen-Gessaphe'' (Princes of Saxe-Gessaphe).<ref>{{cite book|last= Willis|first= Daniel|title= The Descendants of Louis XIII|year= 1999|publisher= Clearfield|location= Baltimore|isbn= 0-8063-4942-5|pages= 327–328, 766|chapter= The Ducal Family of Parma}}</ref> In the spring of 1997 it was announced that the surviving male dynasts of the royal House (presumably Princes [[Albert, Margrave of Meissen (1934–2012)|Albert]], [[Prince Ernst Heinrich of Saxony#Marriages and issue|Dedo and Gero]]) had met and consented to the designation of Alexander as dynastic heir in the event that none of them leave sons by dynastically valid marriages.<ref>{{cite web| last = Velde| first = François| title = Laws of the Kingdom of Saxony| work = Heraldica.org| url = http://www.heraldica.org/topics/royalty/HGSachsen-K.htm#Introduction| access-date = 2008-04-18}}</ref><ref name="Welt">''Die Welt'', 20 May 1997</ref> ==Dispute== However the Margrave's brother, [[Albert, Margrave of Meissen (1934–2012)|Prince Albert]], subsequently stated that he did not accept that decision as binding. He preferred that [[Rüdiger Prinz von Sachsen]], the son of his first cousin the late Prince Timo of Saxony (1923-1982) succeed to the royal Saxon claim.<ref>{{cite web| last = Velde| first = François| title = Laws of the Kingdom of Saxony| work = Heraldica.org| url = http://www.heraldica.org/topics/royalty/HGSachsen-K.htm#Introduction| access-date = 2008-04-18}}</ref> Since Rüdiger's mother was a commoner, retroactive "de-morganatization" of the late Timo's marriage was required to "dynasticize" his offspring, an act the [[agnate]]s of the royal house who participated in the 1997 decision did not undertake. In some circumstances German princely law (''Fürstenrecht'') did allow a consensus of dynasts – or the last surviving male dynast – to dynasticize the issue of a [[morganatic marriage]] through unanimous and irrevocable action.<ref>{{cite web| last = Velde| first = François| title = Reading Notes on Family Law in German Ruling Families of the 19th c.| work = Heraldica.org| url = http://www.heraldica.org/topics/royalty/Zoepfl.htm#Practice| access-date = 2008-04-18}}</ref> Albert had become the last prince of the male line when he died on 6 October 2012. However, Saxony's constitution and house law explicitly required that descendants of the royal house had to be born of "equal marriage" in order to succeed to the throne. Moreover, ''Fürstenrecht'', derived from German legal customs, was considered subordinate in applicability to enacted law.<ref>{{cite web| last = Velde| first = François| title = Reading Notes on Family Law in German Ruling Families of the 19th c.| work = Heraldica.org| url = http://www.heraldica.org/topics/royalty/Zoepfl.htm#Practice| access-date = 2008-04-18}}</ref> ==See also== *[[Royal House of Assaf]] ==References== {{Reflist}} [[Category:House of Wettin]] [[Category:House of Afif-Gessaphe]] [[Category:House of Saxe-Gessaphe| ]] [[Category:Lebanese noble families]] [[Category:German noble families]]
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