August von Senarclens de Grancy


August Ludwig, Baron von Senarclens de Grancy was born Auguste Louis de Senarclens de Grancy at the château d'Etoy in the canton of Vaud, Switzerland, the firstborn son of three sons and four daughters of César Auguste, Baron von Senarclens de Grancy, and wife Élizabeth Claudine Marie-Rose de Loriol. He is reputed to have been the long-time lover of Wilhelmine of Baden, the Grand Duchess consort of Hesse, and the actual father by her of the Empress consort Maria Alexandrovna of Russia and Prince Alexander of Hesse, ancestors of modern royalty in Bulgaria, Germany, Romania, Serbia, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

Life

He became the stable master of Louis II, Grand Duke of Hesse, a major general and a knight in the Order of Malta. It is also alleged that he was the biological father of four of the children of his employer's wife and, therefore, a likely ancestor of Felipe VI of Spain and Charles, Prince of Wales, heir apparent to the throne of the United Kingdom. He may also be a direct-line ancestor of several royal pretenders: Alexander, Crown Prince of Yugoslavia, King Michael of Romania and Georg Friedrich, Prince of Prussia, heir to the throne of the German Empire which collapsed at the end of World War I.
Louis II, Grand Duke of Hesse, bought the property of Heiligenberg near Jugenheim in 1820, installing his chamberlain, Senarclens de Grancy, there. From the year of that acquisition Grand Duchess Wilhelmine no longer lived with her consort, with whom she had not had any children since 1809, and proceeded to give birth four times between 1821 and 1824. Senarclens's identity as the father of the later children of Wilhelmine was strongly suspected: correspondence asserting or repeating the allegation was recorded by several government ministers, ambassadors and sovereigns, including Tsar Nicholas I and Queen Victoria.
By Wilhelmina, Senarclens de Grancy is believed to have fathered four children during her marriage to Grand Duke Louis:
Alexander and Marie were the only two to survive childhood and remained legally the children of Wilhelmina's husband, Grand Duke Louis II, who neither denied paternity nor sought to disinherit any of the children to whom his wife gave birth, even after the death of the Grand Duchess. Alexander and Marie are ancestors of the last emperors of Russia, as well as the princely Battenbergs.
In 1836, the same year of Grand Duchess Wilhelmine's death, he married Luise Wilhelmine Camille von Otting und Fünfstetten, said to be a morganatic descendant of the Counts Palatine of Zweïbrucken and the Margraves of Baden-Durlach, by whom he had three sons and three daughters:
He died at Jugenheim.