In the Autumn of 1918 while still in exile in France, Prince Peter met a married woman,
Countess Violet Brunetta d'Usseaux (
née Violet Emily Wegner), whose husband, an
Italian nobleman,
Count Sergio Brunetta d'Usseaux was in the service of his father,
King Nicholas I of Montenegro. Having fallen in love and wishing to marry her, Prince Peter wrote to his father instructing him to arrange the marriage. When his father objected, Prince Peter tried to blackmail his father, threatening to reveal damaging secrets about the surrender of Lovćen. music hall performer
Violet Emily Wegner, wife of Count Sergio Brunetta d'Usseaux and daughter of William Theodore
Wegner (b. 1857), an Extradition Department detective of
Scotland Yard born in
Saint Petersburg,
Russia, and his English born wife, Arabella Eliza
Darby (1859-1939). Violet had married Count Sergio
Brunetta d'Usseaux in London in 1912. D'Usseaux was the son of Italian Count Eugenio Brunetta d'Usseaux who had been the Secretary General of the Olympic Committee responsible for reviving the games and administering the
1908 London Olympic Games. Eugenio died in mysterious circumstances in 1919 and his body was never received at the place of its intended burial. Eugenio had been seeking news of a son missing in Russia after the
October Revolution which may have been his son Sergio. There is no confirmed information about Sergio's death. Prince Peter's proposal of marriage to Violet was accepted which suggests Violet's previous marriage was ended, probably by the death of Sergio. Violet's mother, it is said, persuaded the couple to delay marriage as Prince Peter had a claim of compensation against the Yugoslav government, (estimated at £6million for the confiscation of the Royal Family's property in Montenegro). Violet's mother feared that if Prince Peter married her daughter, a commoner, it could jeopardise his claim. It is asserted she advised him to collect the money before he wed her daughter. After a number of years of failed attempts to secure the money, Prince Peter attempted to strike a deal with the Yugoslav government whereby he would drop his claim to £6million for a lower £2million. After going to
Belgrade and signing paperwork he was told by the government that having agreed to accept £2million, the sum would still not be remitted to him until a later date. Prince Peter nevertheless married Violet in
Paris on 29 April 1924 before having received any pay out. After the marriage Prince Peter's wife became HRH Princess
Ljubica of Montenegro. ==Death==