Tatoi Palace

From MedBib.com - Medicine & Nature

Tatoi, located 15 km north of Athens, was the summer palace and estate of the former Greek Royal Family, and the site of George II of the Hellenes's birth. The area is a densely wooded southeast-facing slope of Mount Parnitha, and its ancient and current official name is Decelea.

Court Rulings

The estate was confiscated in controversial circumstances some years after the declaration of the Hellenic Republic. Its confiscation, and the confiscation of other property of the deposed and exiled King, Constantine II, without any compensation, led to a court case in the European Court of Justice. The king's argument centered on the claim that the property in question was acquired by his predecessors by legal means and was therefore subject to regular personal inheritance. The Greek state argued that the property was either used by the royal family by virtue of its sovereign status or obtained by taking advantage of that status, and therefore, once the monarchy was abolished, the property should revert to public ownership automatically. The Court struck a midway course in reaching its verdict and ordered the Hellenic Republic to pay the exiled king compensation, while allowing the Greek state to retain ownership of the property. In June 2007, the Greek government says it intends to turn the former palace and grounds into a museum. It is expected to open in 2012.

Buried at Tatoi

Buried in the Tatoi Royal Cemetery are:

  1. Princess Olga of Greece and Denmark (March 26, 188021 October 1880)
  2. Princess Alexandra of Greece and Denmark, Grand Duchess of Russia (August 30, 1870September 24, 1891) - (wife of Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich of Russia)
  3. George I, King of the Hellenes (December 24, 1845March 18, 1913)
  4. Alexander I, King of the Hellenes (August 1, 1893October 25, 1920)
  5. Constantine I, King of the Hellenes (August 2, 1868February 6, 1923)
  6. Grand Duchess Olga Constantinovna of Russia, Queen of the Hellenes (September 3, 1851June 18, 1926) - (wife of George I, King of the Hellenes)
  7. Princess Sophia of Prussia, Queen of the Hellenes (June 14, 1870January 13, 1932) - (wife of Constantine I, King of the Hellenes)
  8. Prince Nicholas of Greece and Denmark (January 22, 1872February 8, 1938)
  9. Prince Christopher of Greece and Denmark (August 10, 1888January 21, 1940)
  10. Princess Maria of Greece and Denmark, Grand Duchess of Russia (March 3, 1876December 14, 1940) - (wife of Grand Duke George Mikhailovich of Russia)
  11. Prince Andrew of Greece and Denmark (January 20, 1882December 3, 1944)
  12. George II, King of the Hellenes (July 19, 1890April 1, 1947)
  13. Princess Françoise of Orléans (December 25, 1902February 25, 1953) - (wife of Prince Christopher of Greece and Denmark)
  14. Grand Duchess Elena Vladimirovna of Russia (January 17, 1882March 13, 1957) - (wife of Prince Nicholas of Greece and Denmark)
  15. Prince George of Greece and Denmark (June 24, 1869November 25, 1957)
  16. Princess Marie Bonaparte (July 2, 1882September 21, 1962) - (wife of Prince George of Greece and Denmark)
  17. Paul I, King of the Hellenes (December 14, 1901March 6, 1964)
  18. Aspasia Manos, Princess of Greece and Denmark (September 4, 1896August 7, 1972) - (wife of Alexander I, King of the Hellenes)
  19. Princess Frederica of Hanover, Queen of the Hellenes (April 18, 1917February 6, 1981) - (wife of Paul I, King of the Hellenes)
  20. Princess Alexandra of Greece and Denmark, Queen of Yugoslavia (March 25, 1921January 30, 1993) - (wife of Peter II, King of Yugoslavia)
  21. Princess Katherine of Greece and Denmark, Lady Brandram (May 4, 1913October 2, 2007)

External links

Coordinates: 38°09′45.83″N 23°47′37.28″E / 38.1627306, 23.7936889