and his first wife
Princess Anastasia Constantine I returned to the throne 18 months into the
Greco-Turkish War, launched in May 1919. In September 1921, the Greek defeat at the
battle of Sakarya marked the beginning of the Greek retreat from Anatolia. Resentment among the allies for Constantine's policy during World War I prevented Athens from receiving outside support.
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the new leader of Turkey, regained
Smyrna and
Eastern Thrace, annexed by Athens at the end of World War I. Following
a coup by disgruntled military officers, Constantine I abdicated for a second time on 27 September 1922. With several other members of his family, including Queen Olga, he went into exile in Italy and his eldest son succeeded him for a few months on the throne as George II. Within months, Constantine died in Italy. One of Olga's sons, Prince Andrew, was among those arrested by the new regime. Many defendants in the
treason trials that followed the coup were shot, including senior politicians and generals. Foreign diplomats assumed that Andrew was also in mortal danger, and
George V of the United Kingdom,
Alfonso XIII of Spain, the French president
Raymond Poincaré and
Pope Pius XI sent representatives to Athens to intercede on his behalf. Andrew, though spared, was banished for life and his family (including the infant
Prince Philip, later Duke of Edinburgh and consort of Queen
Elizabeth II) fled into exile in December 1922 aboard a British cruiser,
HMS Calypso. Unlike her children and grandchildren, Olga was given a pension by the government of the
Second Hellenic Republic, but she maintained so many of the faithful old servants who had fled Greece with her that she was usually left with no more than 20
pounds sterling per month (worth about £ in prices) to meet her own expenses. She could, however, count on the support of her family, scattered throughout Western Europe. In the United Kingdom, she shared her time between
Spencer House, London, the residence of her youngest son, Prince Christopher;
Regent's Park, where her daughter, Grand Duchess Marie, rented a mansion;
Sandringham House, the home of her sister-in-law,
Queen Alexandra; and
Windsor Castle and
Buckingham Palace, where her nephew King George V lent apartments. Olga's final years were marked by ill health. Lameness restricted her to a wheelchair, and she stayed in Paris several times to undergo treatment for her eyes. Her poor eyesight caused George V much laughter when she mistook a statue of a naked
Lady Godiva for one of
Queen Victoria. Increasingly dependent, Olga finally settled with her youngest son, Prince Christopher, shortly after the death of his first wife,
Princess Anastasia, in 1923. Olga died on 18 June 1926 either at Christopher's Villa Anastasia in
Rome, or at
Pau, France. Despite republicanism in Greece, Olga was still held in high esteem and the republican government in Athens offered to pay for her funeral and repatriate her remains to Greece. Nonetheless, her children declined the offer, preferring to bury her in Italy beside her son, Constantine I, whose body Greece had refused to accept. Her funeral was held on 22 June 1926 at the Orthodox Church in Rome and the next day she was laid to rest in the crypt of the
Russian Church in
Florence. After the
restoration of the Greek monarchy in 1935 she was re-interred at Tatoi on 17 November 1936. As much of her property had been confiscated by the
Soviet Union and the Greek republican government, most of her estate comprised jewelry reported in
The Times to be worth £100,000 (). This was shared between her children and the children of Constantine I. Traumatized by the events of the
Russian Revolution, Olga wished to sever all ties with the country in which her family had been massacred. Before dying, she made her grandson, King George II, swear to repatriate the body of her daughter
Princess Alexandra, buried in the
Peter and Paul Cathedral in Saint Petersburg. Her wish was fulfilled in 1940 after his restoration to the Greek throne. ==Ancestors==