Princess Delphine is the daughter of Baroness Sybille de Selys Longchamps, whose first husband was a Belgian nobleman and industrialist Jonkheer Jacques Boël.[5] They divorced in 1978.[6] Her biological father is Albert II, former King of the Belgians.[7][8]
Delphine attended boarding school in England and Switzerland, and studied at the Chelsea School of Art and Design in London, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts in fine arts (with honours) in 1990.[9] She has been a guest lecturer at the Higher Institute for Fine Arts (HISK), Antwerp, and the Maastricht Art School.[10]
She is the founding patron of the Princess Delphine of Saxe-Coburg Fund based at Ghent University Hospital, promoting the use of art in health care.[11] The Belgian brewery Struise produced a "Cuvée Delphine" beer for which she designed the artwork for the bottle label. Her sculpture Ageless Love is in the Gerdapark, Sint-Niklaas. In 2021, she designed the decoration of the Lamborghini Art Car.
James "Jim" O'Hare, an American businessman of Irish descent,[12] is Delphine's husband.[1][13][14][15] The couple have two children:
Her Royal Highness Princess Joséphine O'Hare, Princess of Belgium (born 17 October 2003).[16][1] Princess Joséphine attended the Notre-Dame des Champs School, a French language school in Uccle, Brussels.[17] In 2022, she enrolled in the Liberal Arts and Sciences course in an unnamed university in the Netherlands.[17] She speaks French and English.[17]
On 19 October 1999, an 18-year-old Flemish schoolboy,[19]Mario Danneels, published his unauthorized biography of Queen Paola, Paola, van 'la dolce vita' tot koningin (Paola, from 'la dolce vita' to Queen). The book contained a statement referring to the existence of a daughter born out of wedlock to King Albert. The Belgian press investigated, and traced Delphine.[20] At first, both Boël and her mother refused to comment on the matter, and the palace dismissed Danneels' book as gossip and rumor.
The Belgian press interpreted a short passage in the king's 1999 Christmas speech as acknowledgement that Delphine Boël was, in fact, his natural daughter:[citation needed]
Christmas is a time for each of us to think of our family, of the happy periods but also the difficult times. The Queen and I remember very happy times, but also the crisis that we experienced more than 30 years ago. Together we could, over a long time, overcome those difficulties and recover a deep understanding and love for each other. This period was recalled to us recently. We don't wish to dwell on that subject which belongs to our private lives. But, if those who encounter similar difficulties today could get some encouragement from our own experiences, we would be very happy.
Boël gave an interview on 15 May 2005, to the France 3 presenter Marc-Olivier Fogiel in the broadcast "On ne peut pas plaire à tout le monde" (You Can't Please Everyone) in which she alleged for the first time that she was King Albert's daughter.[23] She claimed that when she and her mother moved to England, when she was 9, Albert (not yet king) wished to divorce his wife and join them. Her mother apparently opposed this because of the political consequences for Albert.[24] She said her mother told her the truth about her parentage when she became 17. In her upcoming interviews, Boël said she made a telephone call to Albert when she was 33 years old asking for help.[24] According to her statement, he replied "Never call me again. You are not my daughter," which she said was hurtful.[24] Boël added that her efforts to contact her father via telephone and sending letters or through friends and politicians failed.[24]
In June 2013, when King Albert lost his immunity to prosecution, Boël summoned him and his children Prince Philippe and Princess Astrid to appear in court.[22] She hoped to use DNA tests to prove that she was the king's daughter. As king, Albert was immune under the law, and Delphine decided to summon her half-siblings too.[25][26] When the king abdicated on 21 July 2013 his immunity ceased, and Boël relaunched proceedings against him. In March 2017, the court ruled that her claim was unfounded, and her lawyers said she would take the claim to appeal.[27]
On 5 November 2018, a court ruling was published which instructed Albert to submit to a DNA test to determine whether he was Boël's biological father. DNA testing is not obligatory in Belgium, but not submitting to it is considered evidence of paternity.[28] In January 2019, Albert appealed in cassation against the verdict, but on 16 May of the same year, the Brussels's Court of Appeals ordered the former king to pay a fine of 5,000 euros a day to Boël for every day he refused to take a DNA-test.[29][30][31]
On 27 January 2020, the DNA tests showed that King Albert II was the father of Delphine Boël.[32][33] In October 2020, she and her children were granted princely titles by the Belgian court of appeals. As she was born out of wedlock, Princess Delphine and her descendants are not in the line of succession to the Belgian throne.[34] Although court costs totalling €3.4m were awarded to her on a substantial indemnity basis, she was not granted a royal endowment.[35]
She and her half-brother, King Philippe of Belgium, met on 9 October 2020 at the Palace of Laeken.[36][37]
The next day, King Albert II reacted in a press release, rejoicing over the meeting and stating "My wife and I are very happy by the initiative of the King, presage of happier days for all and in particular for Delphine."[38][39]
On 25 October 2020, she was received at Belvédère Castle by her father and his wife, Queen Paola.[40] At the occasion of the Belgian National Day on 21 July 2021, she and her partner joined the royal family at the military parade for the first time.[41]
Delphine and her children have been granted the titles of prince and princess of Belgium with the style of Royal Highness following a court decision of 1 October 2020.[42] Earlier, she had been styled as Jonkvrouw Delphine Boël.[43]
As a Princess of Belgium and a descendant of King Leopold I, the Princess is entitled to use a coat of arms. Coats of arms used by the Belgian royal family are stipulated in the Royal Decree of King Philippe in 2019.[44]
^ abcdeCendrowicz, Leo (25 September 2022). "The artist currently known as Princess". The Brussels Times. Archived from the original on 4 April 2023. Retrieved 4 April 2023. However, her children kept Jim's family name, O'Hare, with the addition of the prefix HRH, followed by the title Prince and Princess of Belgium. The prefix and title are the same as those for Albert's other grandchildren.
^"Belgium - In Royal Circles". CBS News. 21 April 2008. Archived from the original on 4 April 2023. Retrieved 12 August 2020. The allegedly out-of-wedlock daughter of Belgium's King Albert II, Delphine Boel, left, poses with her new book along with her American husband, James O'Hare of Texas, in Brussels, April 9, 2008.
^ ab"Koninklijk besluit betreffende de verlening van de titel van Prins of Prinses van België" [Royal Decree conferring the title of Prince or Princess of Belgium] (in Dutch). Moniteur Belge. 12 November 2015. Archived from the original on 31 May 2023. ... de titel van Prins of Prinses van België volgend op hun voornaam en voor zover ze die voeren, hun familienaam en hun dynastieke titel, en voor de andere titels die hun rechtens hun ascendentie toekomen. Hun voornaam wordt voorafgegaan door het predicaat Zijne of Hare Koninklijke Hoogheid. [... the title of Prince or Princess of Belgium following their first name and, insofar as they use it, their family name and their dynastic title, and for the other titles to which they are entitled by right of ascendancy. Their first name is preceded by the predicate His or Her Royal Highness.]