Alexander Münster


Alexander Otto Hugo Wladimir Count zu Münster, Prince zu Münster in 1905, at the death of his elder brother, was a German aristocrat. He was the owner of Maresfield Park estate, Maresfield, East Sussex.

Early life

Prince Alexander Münster was born in Derneburg, Kingdom of Hanover, on 1 September 1858, the son of Georg Herbert, Prince zu Münster, German ambassador in London 1873-1885 and subsequently Paris. His mother was his father's first wife, Princess Aleksandra Mikhailovna Golitsyna.

Life in England

In 1899, Münster inherited Maresfield Park estate from his friend Hervey Charles Pechell. Münster was living in Maresfield Park while Pechell and his wife, Blanche Henrietta Johnes Shelley, resided in Bellagio in Italy. He officiated at the planting of the oak on Maresfield Recreation Ground commemorating Queen Victoria's Jubilee in 1897 which was performed by her eldest daughter the German Empress, wife of the German Emperor Frederick III. The Pechells had donated the ground to the parish in 1897 but Münster legally transferred it in 1899. In 1915, during World War I, it was seized from him by the British government under the Trading With the Enemy laws as he was a German citizen. Records relating to Maresfield Park are held by the East Sussex Record Office.

Personal life

On 3 June 1890, he married Lady Muriel Henrietta Constance Hay at St Andrews Church, Wells Street, London. As the daughter of George Hay-Drummond, 12th Earl of Kinnoull, the event was depicted on the front page of The Illustrated London News. Together, the couple had sons:
Münster died on 12 October 1922. Maresfield Park estate, now owned by the British Government, was sold in 1924 to brewer and industrialist William Henry Abbey.

Descendants

Through his second son, he was a grandfather of Peter Cyril Alexander, Count of Münster, who married Veronica Rosemary Naylor-Leyland, and Ivan, Count of Münster.