For the first time in decades, the Queen found herself preparing for a holiday without her sons by her side. Crown Prince Frederik had opted to take his family to Australia to spend Christmas with Crown Princess Mary’s relatives. Prince Joachim, still stung by the decree, had arranged a trip abroad with Princess Marie and their children.
On Christmas Eve, the Great Hall was dressed in its customary finery. The spruce tree reached toward the gilded ceiling, draped in the small Danish flags and pleated paper hearts the Queen so loved to craft. But the bustling energy of grandchildren—the chaotic racing of feet that usually echoed against the marble—was absent.
Later, Margrethe stood by the window, looking out over the snow-dusted grounds of Aarhus. She knew the public saw her as a stoic figure, the "Daisy" who never faltered. She didn't regret her decision—monarchs don't have the luxury of looking back—but as the bells of Aarhus Cathedral rang out for the evening service, she allowed herself a moment of quiet melancholy. For the first time in decades, the Queen
That autumn, she had made a decision that rippled through the House of Glücksburg like a North Sea gale. To "future-proof" the monarchy, she had stripped the princely titles from the four children of her younger son, Joachim. It was a move born of cold logic and long-term survival, but the human cost had been immediate. Tensions simmered, and the traditional family gathering at Christmas began to fray.
The halls of Marselisborg Palace felt wider than usual in December 2022. For Queen Margrethe II, a woman whose life was defined by the ironclad pillars of duty and lineage, the silence of the corridors was a new kind of sovereign burden. On Christmas Eve, the Great Hall was dressed
Dinner was a quiet affair with her sister, Princess Benedikte. They spoke of their mother, Queen Ingrid, and the Christmases of their youth—a time when the roles were simpler and the weight of the future hadn't yet landed on their shoulders.
She picked up her fountain pen and began a letter to her sons. She didn't write as a monarch issuing a decree, but as a woman marking the passing of time. The palace was quiet, yes, but she knew that for a throne to stand for a thousand years, sometimes the heart had to endure a single, silent winter. Later, Margrethe stood by the window, looking out
Margrethe sat at her desk, the smoke from a single cigarette curling into the air. She spent the afternoon as she often did: working. There were guest lists to review and sketches for a new ballet set to refine. In her solitude, she was not just a mother or a grandmother; she was the embodiment of the Crown.