Sofia Hellqvist was born at
Danderyd Hospital in
Danderyd, to a Swedish mother, Marie Britt Rotman (born 1957), a marketing manager in the plastics industry,[4] and a
Danish-Swedish father, Erik Oscar Hellqvist (born 1949), an employment counsellor at the Swedish employment agency.[4] She was baptised on 26 May 1985 in Tibble Church. She moved to
Älvdalen at the age of six.[5][6] She has two sisters, Lina Hellqvist (a humanitarian project coordinator, born 1982) and Sara Hellqvist (a
criminologist,[4] born 1988).[7] She attended Älvdalen Montessori School and Älvdal School. She studied the arts programme at Vansbro Education Centre.
Career
At the age of 20, Hellqvist was published in photos in the men's magazine Slitz wearing only a
bikini bottom and a live
boa constrictor around her upper body[8] and was later voted Miss Slitz 2004 by readers.[9] When her relationship with Prince Carl Philip was revealed in 2010, Expressen republished the photos.[10] Following the Miss Slitz win, Hellqvist was cast in the Paradise Hotel reality show on
TV4[11] where she made it to the final.[10] In the show, she had a much publicised feud with
Olinda Castielle[12][13] and finally voted Castielle off the show.[14][15]
In 2005,[16] she moved to New York to study accounting, specialising in business development. She has also studied global ethics, child and youth science, children's communication and the
UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in theory, and in Swedish practice at Stockholm University.[17] She is also a certified yoga instructor and worked as such in New York.[7]
In July 2010, the Swedish Royal Court confirmed the relationship between Sofia Hellqvist and
Prince Carl Philip.[20] In April 2011, the couple moved in together in
Djurgården of Stockholm,[21] which was confirmed by the palace.[22]
On 27 June 2014, the couple's engagement was announced,[23] and in December, Hellqvist made an appearance at the
Nobel Banquet with her future husband. In May 2015, it was announced that she would receive the title of princess.[24][25][26] The couple
married at Slottskyrkan in Stockholm on 13 June 2015.[27][28][29]
On 19 April 2016, Sofia gave birth to their first child, Prince Alexander Erik Hubertus Bertil, Duke of Södermanland at Danderyd Hospital.[30][31] Their second child, Prince Gabriel Carl Walther, Duke of Dalarna, was born on 31 August 2017 at Danderyd Hospital.[32] Their third child, Prince Julian Herbert Folke, Duke of Halland, was born on 26 March 2021 at Danderyd Hospital.[33]
On 7 October 2019, Sofia's father-in-law, the king, issued a statement rescinding the
royal status of Prince Alexander and Prince Gabriel in an effort to more strictly associate Swedish royalty to the office of the
head of state; they are still to be styled as princes and dukes of their provinces, and they remain in the line of succession to the throne.[34][35][36] Sofia and Carl Philip commented that their sons now will have more freedom of choice for their future lives.[37]
Charity work
In 2010, Hellqvist was one of the co-founders of non-profit organisation Project Playground, a charity that assists underprivileged children in South Africa.[16] Princess Sofia is the honorary chair.[38]
To mark the occasion of Prince Carl Philip and Princess Sofia's marriage in 2015, the couple founded Prince Carl Philip and Princess Sofia's Foundation.[38] The foundation's purpose is to counteract bullying.[38]
In April 2020, the Princess completed a three-day emergency online training course from
Sophiahemmet University, created to help hospitals amidst the
COVID-19 pandemic. It was announced that she would work as a volunteer at the Sophiahemmet Hospital in Stockholm, where she would support "doctors and nurses through kitchen shifts, disinfecting instruments and cleaning."[39]
Titles, styles and honours
Princess Sofia's monogram
Princess Sofia's coat of arms
Sofia is styled as Her Royal Highness Princess Sofia, The Duchess of Värmland.[40]
^Juhlin, Anders; Wik, Karin (18 March 2005).
"Hämnden på Olinda". Aftonbladet (in Swedish).
Archived from the original on 19 October 2012. Retrieved 10 June 2011.