Ingrid Detter de Frankopan

Professor
Ingrid Detter de Frankopan
Born Thyra Ingrid Hildegard Detter
(1936-11-24) 24 November 1936
Stockholm, Sweden
Other names Ingrid Detter
Ingrid Detter de Frankopan
Ingrid Detter de Lupis Frankopan
Ingrid Detter Doimi de Lupis Frankopan Šubić
Princess Thyra Ingrid Hildegard Doimi de Lupis Frankopan Šubić Zrinski
Spouse(s) Louis Doimi de Lupis, Count de Lupis
Children 5, including Paola and Peter Frankopan

(Thyra) Ingrid Hildegard Detter de Frankopan (born 24 November 1936[1]) is a Swedish-born lawyer, arbitrator, author, and academic. She is Lindhagen Professor Emeritus of international law and is a practising barrister in England and Wales.

Personal life

Detter de Frankopan is married to Louis Doimi de Lupis. They have five children:

  • Paola Frankopan (b. 1969); married Lord Nicholas Windsor and has issue.
  • Peter Frankopan (b. 1971); married Jessica Sainsbury.
  • Christina Frankopan (b. 1973)
  • Nicholas Frankopan (b. 1975); married Natasha Oppenheim; children Tekla Luciana Oppenheim (b. 2009),[2] Conrad Nicholas Oppenheim (b. 2012),[3] Bartol Ford Louis (b. 2014)[4] and Honor Valentina Oppenheim (b. 2016).[5]
  • Lawrence Frankopan (b. 1977)

Her husband was born Louis Doimi de Lupis and later controversially added the names of Šubić, Zrinski and Frankopan under British Civil law[6] and the title of Prince, having previously adopted the title of Count.[7] While the Doimi de Lupis family were granted a knighthood by Emperor Franz Joseph I in 1855 and 1865, their right to use the names of several Croatian medieval noble families and the title of Prince (a royal title never held by any of the mentioned families, who were in Latin[8][9][10], Croatian[11][12][13], Hungarian[14][15][16] and Italian[17][18][19] historical documents styled as Counts of Bribir (Šubić), Counts of Zrin (Zrinski) and Counts of Krk (Frankopan) has been highly disputed. The Croatian Nobility Association expelled the Doimi de Lupis family from their membership calling the name reverting a falsification[20] while John Kennedy, editor of directory of Europe's royalty and nobility Almanach de Gotha, stated that the use of the name Frankopan by Doimi de Lupis family is "more aspirational than inherited".[21]

In the late 1990s, trying to save the reputation of his family name, Louis's cousin Mirko Jamnicki-Dojmi di Delupis wrote an open letter where he denounced claims over Frankopan, Šubić and Zrinski names by his family and presented the family tree of Dojmi di Delupis containing 129 names from the year 1200 onwards. Miroslav Granic from the Zadar Faculty of Philosophy, considered to be Croatia's pre-eminent genealogy expert, similarly disparaged the Doimi de Lupis family's claims, considering them to be in line with past attempts at falsification to claim the Frankopan name.[22] Ivan Mirnik, of the Archaeological Museum of Zagreb, notes that this family has usurped the surnames with no genealogical justification. He also compares the act with other historical frauds.[23] The Croatian media and newspapers have also stated that there is no connection between the historical Frankopans and the modern family, calling them "False Frankopans".[24]

References

  1. List of Members, University of Oxford, 1972, pg 759
  2. http://announcements.telegraph.co.uk/births/104777/doimi-de-frankopan-subic-zrinski/
  3. http://announcements.telegraph.co.uk/births/151222/doimi-de-frankopan-subic-zrinski
  4. http://announcements.telegraph.co.uk/births/175889/doimi-de-frankopan-subic-zrinski
  5. http://announcements.telegraph.co.uk/births/205022/doimi-de-frankopan-subic-zrinski
  6. David Brown; et al. (30 September 2006). "Royal match that really is a fairytale". The Times. Missing or empty |url= (help)
  7. Daily Telegraph, April 30 1997
  8. Gesellschaft des Vaterländischen Museums in Böhmen (1827). Monatschrift der Gesellschaft des Vaterländischen Museums in Böhmen: 1827,2. Calve. p. 70.
  9. Dr. Fr. Rački (1873). Acta conjurationem Bani Petri a Zorinio et Com. Fr. Frangepani illustrantia. Typis Car. Albrecht. p. 527.
  10. Typis Regiæ Universitatis Budensis Calendarium (1801). Ecclesiasticae Et Seculares Regni Hungariae Dignitates. Typis Regiæ Universitatis Budensis. p. 41.
  11. "Bribirski". Croatian Encyclopedia by Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography (online edition). Retrieved 2017-10-28.
  12. "Zrinski". Croatian Encyclopedia by Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography (online edition). Retrieved 2017-10-28.
  13. "Frankapan (Frankopan)". Croatian Encyclopedia by Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography (online edition). Retrieved 2017-10-28.
  14. "Subich de Berberio". Arcanum Database Ltd. Retrieved 2017-10-28.
  15. "Von Zrin (Zrinski)". Arcanum Database Ltd. Retrieved 2017-10-28.
  16. "Frangepán". Arcanum Database Ltd. Retrieved 2017-10-28.
  17. "Šubić conti di Bribir". Treccani - Enciclopedia Italiana (online edition). Retrieved 2017-10-28.
  18. "Zrínyi (croato Zrinski)". Treccani - Enciclopedia Italiana (online edition). Retrieved 2017-10-28.
  19. "Frangipane (Frangipani)". Treccani - Enciclopedia Italiana (online edition). Retrieved 2017-10-28.
  20. "Lažno predstavljanje - Jeste li znali da postoje princ i princeza Frankopan Šubić Zrinski". dubrovniknet.hr. 2012-10-25.
  21. David Lowenthal (2015). The Past is a Foreign Country - Revisited. Cambridge University Press. p. 42.
  22. http://arhiva.nacional.hr/clanak/13230/hrvatska-misija-laznih-frankopana
  23. hrcak.srce.hr/file/44123
  24. http://www.nacional.hr/clanak/13230/hrvatska-misija-laznih-frankopana
  • Francois Velde. "Styles of the members of the British royal family" from the Heraldica website. First published January 2006. Retrieved 26 September 2009.
  • The family site La Casata dei Lupi, (Italian language), contains photos of Lord and Lady Nicholas, their first son Albert, and members of the Lupis family. Retrieved 26 September 2009. As of 26 September 2009, this was the only source online that had the name of the second son as Leopold Ernest Augustus Guelph Windsor.
  • Doimi de Lupis genealogy (Italian language) hosted by Società Genealogica Italiana – SGI. Retrieved 26 September 2009.
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