Alexis Brimeyer
This article needs additional citations for verification. (August 2022) |
Alexis Brimeyer | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 27 January 1995 | (aged 48)
Parent(s) | Victor Brimeyer Beatrice Czapska |
Alex Ceslaw Maurice Jean Brimeyer (4 May 1946 – 27 January 1995)[1][2] was a pretender who claimed connection to various European thrones. He used fraudulent combined titles such as "Prince d'Anjou Durazzo Durassow Romanoff Dolgorouki de Bourbon-Condé". He authored the highly controversial book, Moi Petit-Arriere-Fils du Tsar. He also sold false titles of nobility through "orders" that he and his associates had created.
Early life
Alex Brimeyer was born on 4 May 1946[3] in Costermansville (now Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo).[4] His parents were the engineer Victor Brimeyer and his wife, Beatrice Dolgoruky, daughter of Ceclava Czapska.
Noble pretender
Brimeyer's first attempt to ennoble himself came when he named himself, Brimeyer de la Calchuyére, in the 1950s when he was about ten years old. This came to nothing. In 1955, he took a name, His Serene Highness Prince Khevenhüller-Abensberg, but the real Princess Khevenhüller threatened to sue him.[5] He backpedaled and apologized. Brimeyer also wrote to a number of aristocrats to convince them to adopt him. In 1969, he received a passport of the Principality of Sealand with the name His Highness Prince Alexis Romanov Dolgorouki.[5] When he contacted a Brussels Orthodox priest, Jean Maljinowski, to be baptized, the priest was suspicious since the supposed prince did not speak a word of Russian.
He commissioned two
Khevenhüller trial
Princess von Khevenhüller-Metsch, Princess Maria
In Greece Brimeyer presented himself in the police station, and said that his passport had been stolen. He requested temporary documents. He registered then himself as Alexis Romanov Dolgorouki and for the next ten years he used those documents to "prove" his status.
"I, Alexis, Great Grandson of the Tsar"
In 1979 Brimeyer was living in
Alexis was certain that Victor Brimeyer was not his father. He claimed that after his mother divorced Brimeyer she married Vassili d'Anjou Durassow on 15 April 1947 and that he was born in 1948. This supposed marriage was then annulled and she married Prince Igor Dolgorouki on 6 September 1948, divorcing him shortly thereafter and marrying Joseph Fabry in 1950. [citation needed]
Ties to the House of Condé
In August 1984, Alexis' mother, Beatrice, married Bruce Conde, an imposter to the Princes of Condé. After the wedding, he adopted Brimeyer.[6] This gave Alexis an excuse to add the title Bourbon-Condé.
Ties to Russia
Next, Alexis claimed that as his father was the son of Prince Dolgorouki and that Prince Dolgorouki had married the supposedly escaped
Alexis claimed that his grandfather had been elected Volodar of
Serbian throne
He sent numerous letters to King
In 1992, two Greater Serbian nationalists, including Vojislav Šešelj, visited Brimeyer in Spain. Supposedly they offered him the throne of Serbia. He told journalists that he had been in touch with Slobodan Milošević, who was supposedly in favor of restoring the Serbian monarchy. Then he used the title, "Prince Alexis II Nemanitch Romanov Dolgorouki", Grand Master of the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem. He had convinced his Serbian nationalist supporters that he was descended, in a very convoluted manner, from Hrebeljanovic Nemanitch.
Alexis claimed to have accepted the throne of Serbia. There appeared to be at least some support for him.[8] The European Monarchist Association published a communiqué, where it stated Brimeyer's real identity.[5] The scheme then appears to have collapsed.
Death
Alexis Brimeyer died of HIV/AIDS in Madrid, aged 48, on 27 January 1995.[9]
See also
References
- ^ "ALEXIS d'ANJOU de BOURBON-CONDE: Spanish Prince". The Washington Post. 1 February 1995. p. B5.
- ^ Russian Imperial Family Historical Society
- ^ Brimeyer changed his birth year to 1948 in connection with his claim to be a Prince of Anjou: Guy Stair Sainty. "The self-styled Orders of Saint John Part 2". Chivalric Orders. Archived from the original on 14 February 1998.
- ISBN 978-1-5309-0790-8.
- ^ a b c d e James J. Algrant (16 April 1996). "Some Uses and Abuses of the Titles of Duke of Anjou and Duke of Anjou- Durazzo". The Orders of Chivalry.
- ^ Rush, Alan (4 August 1992). ""Obituary: Bruce Conde"". The Independent.
- ^ "Alexis Brimeyer, Pseudo Prince D'Anjou Durazzo Durassow Romanoff Dolgorouky de Bourbon-Condé". Chivalric Orders. Archived from the original on 14 February 1998.
- ^ Brimeyer Serbian Support
- ISBN 978-1-4456-2031-2.