Sophie, Countess of Wessex Biography

Summary

"The Countess of Wessex" (Sophie Helen; née Rhys-Jones, born 20 January 1965), is a member of the British Royal Family, the wife of Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex, the youngest son of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Until 2002, the Countess of Wessex worked in public relations.

Early life

The Countess was born Miss "Sophie Helen Rhys-Jones" at the Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford, the daughter of Christopher Bournes Rhys-Jones, a retired tyre salesman, and his wife, Mary Rhys-Jones (nee O'Sullivan), a secretary of Irish birth, who died on 29 August 2005 at the age of 71. (... more) . The Countess's first name was chosen by chance, because when she was pregnant, her mother overheard another mother call out 'Sophie!' to her little girl and she decided that she liked the name . Her second name, Helen, comes from her father's sister who died in a riding accident more than ten years before Sophie was born.

She has an elder brother named David Bournes. She is an eleventh cousin once removed to her husband through their common ancestors Nicholas St John and Elizabeth née Blount. Sophie has both Welsh and Irish ancestry through her father and mother respectively, Sophie also has royal ancestry as she is a descendant of King Henry II of France. Her maternal grandmother belonged, however, to the house of the Viscounts Molesworth of Swords.

Early in her life, her family moved to Kent, where she began her education at Dulwich College Preparatory School, Cranbrook. She then attended Kent College Pembury, before training as a secretary at West Kent College.

Career

Starting a career in public relations, Sophie worked for a variety of firms including Capital Radio, where she worked in the Press and Promotions Department and also PR companies The Quentin Bell Organisation and MacLaurin Communications & Media.

In 1996, she launched her own PR agency, RJH Public Relations, which she ran with her business partner Murray Harkin.

The Countess's charitable ventures are as patron of SAFC Foundation, the charitable arm of Sunderland AFC. She recently went to watch the team play in a match against Crystal Palace, as a guest of the club's chairman Niall Quinn. She is also patron of Girlguiding UK, the UK's largest all-female organisation.

Marriage

On 6 January 1999 Sophie became engaged to The Prince Edward, the youngest son of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Their marriage took place on 19 June 1999 at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle. Unlike previous weddings of the Queen's children, the wedding did not take place at either Westminster Abbey or St Paul's Cathedral, reflecting the couple's wishes to have a lower key ceremony.

On their wedding day, the Queen created her son Earl of Wessex and Viscount Severn (the latter reflecting the origins of Sophie's family in the Welsh border country). Thus Sophie took on the style "Her Royal Highness" "The Countess of Wessex". The couple live at Bagshot Park in Surrey.

Children

Together the Earl and Countess have one child, The Lady Louise Windsor, born 8 November 2003.

Louise is the first grandchild of the sovereign in the male line not to be styled Prince or Princess with the style "Royal Highness". This was in deference to the wishes of the Earl and Countess in that their children would not carry royal titles and styles. Although the first-born male of the couple could use the Earl's subdsidiary title of Viscount Severn, subsequent males and females would be styled by courtesy "The Honourable NN Windsor" or "Lady NN Windsor", respectively.

On 2 July 2007, Buckingham Palace announced that the Countess is expecting her second child, due in December 2007.

Countess of Wessex

The Countess of Wessex began to take on royal duties after her wedding, though still worked at RJH under the name Sophie Wessex. However, the Countess soon came under criticism for appearing in public with clients of RJH at press launches, accused of using her royal status to promote her business.

A few days before her wedding, a scandal occurred when the Sun newspaper published a picture of the Countess in a topless pose with Capital Radio presenter Chris Tarrant. The picture had been taken when she still worked at the station. It later turned out that the photo was sold to the media for the highest price by a former friend of the Countess.

'Fake Sheik' Affair

In 2001, a News of the World newspaper undercover reporter, Mazher Mahmood, posing as a fake sheik recorded comments made by the Countess in which she made disparaging remarks about members of the British Government, and appeared to use her royal status as a business tool to gain clients. The comments were subsequently printed in the Mail on Sunday newspaper, and later by other media sources.

In an effort to prevent the publication of the remarks, the Countess agreed to give an interview to the News of the World, where she spoke of her views on the possibility of undergoing IVF fertility treatment. However, the News of the World printed their story with the headline: 'My Edward's Not Gay'.

The public perception of the Earl and Countess may have been badly damaged by the affair, in addition to similar criticism against the Earl of Wessex, that he was using his royal status to promote his television production company. Subsequently in 2002, the Earl and Countess of Wessex announced that they were to quit their business interests and concentrate on their royal duties.

In 2007, there is no evidence that either alleged incidents have had any lasting damaging effect on either the Earl or Countess of Wessex. In fact they are widely known for carrying out an ever increasing number of royal duties.

Pregnancy scares

In December 2001, the Countess was rushed to King Edward VII Hospital in Central London, after feeling unwell. It was later discovered to be an ectopic pregnancy, a potentially life-threatening condition. In hospital, she underwent a two-and-a-half hour operation, losing a lot of blood. She did however recover, remarking sadly of the pregnancy: 'it was just not meant to be'.

In 2003, it was announced that the Countess was again pregnant. She gave birth to her first child, her daughter Louise, on 8 November 2003. The premature birth resulted from a sudden placental abruption that placed both mother and child at risk. The Countess was rushed to hospital and underwent an emergency caesarian section. The Earl of Wessex was in Mauritius at the time of the birth, but returned immediately.

In 2006, the Countess lent her support to the Born in Bradford research project, which is investigating causes of low birth weight and infant mortality.

Titles, styles, honours and arms

Titles and styles

"20 January 1965 - 19 June 1999": "Miss" Sophie Rhys-Jones

"19 June 1999 -": "Her Royal Highness" The Countess of Wessex

Sophie's full royal style is "Her Royal Highness The Princess Edward Antony Richard Louis", "Countess of Wessex", "Viscountess Severn"

Honours

"British Honours"

"DStJ:" Dame of Justice of St John, "2005"

Royal Family Order of Queen Elizabeth II, Single Class, "2004"

"Commonwealth Realms Honours"

Commemorative Medal for the Centennial of Saskatchewan, "7 June 2005"

Honorary military appointments

"British"

Colonel-in-Chief, Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps

Royal Colonel, 5th Battalion The Rifles

"Commonwealth Realms"

Colonel-in-Chief, The South Alberta Light Horse

Colonel-in-Chief, The Lincoln and Welland Regiment

Credit

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article about Sophie, Countess of Wessex.

Follow Us

Follow M&C on Pinterest

Search

Custom Search