Romanian-French prince
His wife, Ralouka, appears in a fashionable crowd in the Bois de Boulogne drawn by Guth , 1897.
Prince Grégoire Bibesco-Bassaraba de Brancovan (12 December 1827 – 15 October 1886)[ 1] was a Romanian-French prince.
Early life
Prince Grégoire was born in Craiova on 12 December 1827 and was a son of Romanian Prince Georges Bibesco (Gheorghe Bibescu ) and Princess Zoé Bassaraba de Brancovan (Brâncoveanu).[ 1]
Personal life
His daughter, Anna, Comtesse de Noailles, by Philip de László , 1913.
He married Rakoul (Rachel) Musurus (born c. 1848 ), the daughter of Pasha Constantine ('Costaki') Musurus (1807–1891) the Ottoman ambassador to Britain, and his wife Anna Vogoridès. He was a relative of Romanian ambassador Prince Antoine Bibesco , husband of Elizabeth Lucy Asquith , who was the daughter of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom H. H. Asquith . Prince Grégoire and his wife Rachel had three children:[ 2]
From left to right, standing: Prince Edmond de Polignac , Princess of Brancovan, Marcel Proust , Prince Constantin Brancovan (brother of Anna de Noailles), and Léon Delafosse . 2nd row: Madame de Montgenard, Princesse de Polignac , Countess Anna de Noailles , 1st row: Princess Hélène Caraman-Chimay (sister of Anna de Noailles), Abel Hermant
Their home, Villa Bassaraba just west of Évian at Amphion-les-Bains , was a gathering place for music and poetry lovers, including Marcel Proust , Prince Edmond de Polignac , the Princess de Polignac (formerly Winnaretta Singer , a daughter of Singer sewing machine fortune founder Isaac Singer ), Prince Antoine Bibesco , and the novelist Abel Hermant .[ 2]
Prince Gregoire died in Paris on 15 October 1886.[ 1]
Descendants
Through his daughter Hélène, he was a grandfather of Prince Marc-Adolphe de Caraman-Chimay (1903–1992).[ 4]
References
External links