Albert
II
(Albert
Félix
Humbert
Théodore
Christian
Eugène
Marie)
(born
June
6,
1934),
is
the
reigning
King
of
the
Belgians.
He
is
the
younger
son
of
King
Leopold
III
(1901
-
1983)
and
his
first
wife,
Princess
Astrid
of
Sweden
(1905
-
1935).
Prince
Albert
was
sent
to
the
exclusive
Swiss
private
school,
Institute
Le
Rosey
for
his
pre-university
education.
He
succeeded
his
elder
brother
Baudouin
as
King
of
the
Belgians,
taking
the
constitutional
oath
on
August
9,
1993.
Before
his
accession
he
was
known
as
Prince
of
Liège.
Philippe
Leopold
Louis
Marie,
Duke
of
Brabant
(born
April
15,
1960).
He
married
Jonkvrouwe
Mathilde
d'Udekem
d'Acoz,
daughter
of
Jonkheer
(now
Count)
Patrick
d'Udekem
d'Acoz
and
his
wife,
Countess
Anna
Maria
Komorowska.
They
have
two
children,
Princess
Elisabeth,
who
will
inherit
the
throne
after
her
father,
thanks
to
a
1991
alteration
of
the
law
of
succession
from
eldest
surviving
child
to
eldest
surviving
son,
and
Prince
Gabriel
Baudouin
Charles
Marie.
King
Albert
also
has
an
acknowledged
illegitimate
daughter,
Delphine
Boel
(born
1968),
by
his
affair
with
a
Belgian
aristocrat,
Baroness
Sybille
de
Sélys
Longchamps
(ex-Madame
Jacques
Boel).
Boel,
a
sculptor
living
in
London,
is
reportedly
expecting
a
child
by
her
American
boyfriend.
Albert
II
was
sworn
into
office
on
August
9,
1993
nine
days
after
the
death
of
his
brother,
King
Baudouin.
In
2001,
the
Belgian
Government
threatened
legal
action
against
the
French
publishing
company
Flammarion
for
publishing
a
book
by
the
Luxembourg-based
investigative
journalist
Jean
Nicolas,
entitled
Paedophile
Dossier
-
the
Scandal
of
the
Dutroux
Case,
which
suggested
that
during
the
1970s
and
1980s
Albert
had
attended
parties
at
which
child
abuse
had
taken
place.
The
palace
condemned
what
it
saw
as
"grotesque
accusations";
the
author
said
that
he
made
no
accusations,
but
had
just
published
legal
documents.