On their 10th wedding anniversary, we look back at the royal wedding of Princess Madeleine of Sweden and Chris O’Neill:
After a broken engagement a few years earlier, Princess Madeleine of Sweden finally found the love of her life after fleeing to New York City to heal her broken heart. There, through mutual friends, she met American-British financier Christopher “Chris” O’Neill.
They appeared for the first time in public together in January 2011, and the relationship might have stayed quiet for longer had a Spanish tourist not videoed their meeting at the Boathouse in Central Park on her mobile and sent it to the Swedish media. Their engagement was officially announced on 25 October 2012 after Chris had proposed earlier that month in New York after having asked her father’s permission while in Sweden.
Chris requested to remain a private citizen and keep his dual American-British citizenship and work in the financial sector. It was announced in December that their wedding was scheduled for 8 June 2013 in the Royal Chapel of Stockholm Palace. There was tremendous media interest in the nuptials, with a live broadcast in all the Nordic countries, as well as Austria, Netherlands, Belgium, China and Japan.
Ahead of the wedding, the Princess said, “I’m hoping for a beautiful day with beautiful weather, which is what probably all brides to be hope for. I would be so pleased if Stockholm can look its best.”
Madeleine wore a gown by Valentino and was escorted a little over halfway up the aisle by her father. Swedish tradition usually has the bride and groom walk in the chapel together, but Madeleine followed in her older sister, Victoria’s footsteps by having her father walk her partially down the aisle before meeting Chris to walk the rest of the way.
The bridal attendants were Chloé and Anaïs Sommerlath (maternal cousins of the bride), Lillie von Horn, Countess Chiara Abensperg und Traun (groom’s niece), Jasper d’Abo (groom’s nephew) and Count Louis Cajetan Abensperg und Traun (groom’s nephew). Chris’s best man was Cedric Notz.
The wedding reception was held in Drottningholm Palace, but unlike her siblings, it was not broadcast. Before the wedding, Madeleine explained the choice for the reception, “The wedding dinner will be held at Drottningholm Palace, which I’m very pleased about. Drottningholm Palace means so much to me — it’s where I was born and grew up.”
She later told Svenska Dagbladet that she wished the speeches at her wedding reception from her father, siblings, Chris, and his sister had been aired on television because they were so emotional and sweet. Pictures later revealed the couple’s wedding cake which was made up of 700 macarons in the shape of a pyramid.
Foreign royals in attendance included Crown Prince Frederik, Crown Princess Mary, Princess Benedikte, Princess Marie and Prince Joachim of Denmark; the Princess of Monaco; the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh (then the Earl and Countess of Wessex); Crown Prince Haakon, Crown Princess Mette-Marit and Princess Märtha Louise (and then-husband Ari Behn) of Norway; and the Hereditary Grand Duke and Grand Duchess of Luxembourg.
Chris did not receive a title or Swedish citizenship in accordance with his wishes to remain a private citizen. He, therefore, retained his dual American-British citizenship and has continued to work in the financial sector.
Three months after their wedding, it was announced that Madeleine was expecting their first child. At the time, the family was living in New York; Princess Leonore was born on 20 February 2014. Their second child, Prince Nicolas, was born a little over a year later in Stockholm on 15 June 2015. On 9 March 2018, their third child, Princess Adrienne, was born in Stockholm.
The family will relocate to Sweden from Florida this autumn.
Royal Central has published a special book about royal weddings. You can buy Royal Weddings: An Anthology via Amazon.