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Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi
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Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi
Edoardo Alessandro Mapelli Mozzi (born 19 November 1983) is a British property developer descended from Italian nobility. He is the founder and chief executive of Banda Property, a property development and interior design company. He became a member of the British royal family in 2020 when he married Princess Beatrice, a niece of King Charles III. He has two daughters with Beatrice and a son from a previous relationship with architect Dara Huang.
Edoardo Alessandro Mapelli Mozzi was born at the Portland Hospital in the West End of London. He is the son of Alessandro "Alex" Mapelli Mozzi, a British Olympian and member of a formerly titled Italian noble family whose ancestral seat is Villa Mapelli Mozzi in the Bergamo province of Italy.
The BBC states that Mapelli Mozzi is a count; although titles of nobility are not officially recognized in the Italian Republic, they can still be used out of courtesy. The hereditary title of count in the Kingdom of Italy was awarded to Mapelli Mozzi's family in 1913 by King Victor Emmanuel III, in particular to all legitimate male-line descendants bearing the surname of the noble family of Mozzi, which was previously incorporated into the noble family of Mapelli.
Mapelli Mozzi's mother is Nicola "Nikki" Diana Williams-Ellis, paternal granddaughter of businessman and Liberal party politician Sir Robert Abraham Burrows. Nicola was later married to businessman and Conservative politician Christopher Shale. In 2017, she married for the third time, this time to a sculptor David Williams-Ellis. Mapelli Mozzi has an older sister, Natalia Alice Yeomans (born 1981), and a younger half-brother, Albemarle "Alby" Shale (born 1991).
Mapelli Mozzi attended the Dragon School in Oxford, then Radley College in Oxfordshire, before obtaining an M.A. in Politics at the University of Edinburgh.
At the age of 23, with the support of his family, he started Banda, a property development and interior design company, which claims to develop homes in "undervalued" parts of London. This has been challenged by property experts on Twitter and Forbes, who argue that "there is nothing undervalued in Notting Hill", where Mapelli Mozzi's latest project is located, and describe the district as "a super prime residential destination".
Mapelli Mozzi holds directorships in a number of companies, some of them with his mother, Nikki Williams-Ellis, and his brother-in-law, Tod Yeomans. Ahead of the 2016 London mayoral election, Mapelli Mozzi wrote an article for Property Week, urging the future mayor to insist on redevelopment projects in central London. He has also criticised politicians Andrea Leadsom and Jeremy Corbyn.
Mapelli Mozzi is a co-founder of the British-Rwandan charity "Cricket Builds Hope", which aims to use cricket as "a tool for positive social change" in Rwanda, East Africa. Previously known as the Rwanda Cricket Stadium Foundation (RCSF), the charity was founded in 2011 to build Rwanda's first grass wicket cricket ground, now known as Gahanga International Cricket Stadium. Mapelli Mozzi's stepfather Christopher Shale (1954–2001), British businessman and a Conservative politician came up with the idea for the charity but died before he could get it off the ground. Shale's family and friends set up the foundation after his death; Mapelli Mozzi's maternal half-brother, Albemarle "Alby" Shale (born 1991), is on the board of trustees. There are six charity's patrons. They are: Jonathan Agnew, Brian Lara, Heather Knight, Ebony Rainford-Brent, Sam Billings and Makhaya Ntini. In 2012, Mapelli Mozzi cycled 100 kilometres (62 mi) overnight in London in the Nightrider Challenge to raise funds for the Cricket Builds Hope foundation.
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Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi
Edoardo Alessandro Mapelli Mozzi (born 19 November 1983) is a British property developer descended from Italian nobility. He is the founder and chief executive of Banda Property, a property development and interior design company. He became a member of the British royal family in 2020 when he married Princess Beatrice, a niece of King Charles III. He has two daughters with Beatrice and a son from a previous relationship with architect Dara Huang.
Edoardo Alessandro Mapelli Mozzi was born at the Portland Hospital in the West End of London. He is the son of Alessandro "Alex" Mapelli Mozzi, a British Olympian and member of a formerly titled Italian noble family whose ancestral seat is Villa Mapelli Mozzi in the Bergamo province of Italy.
The BBC states that Mapelli Mozzi is a count; although titles of nobility are not officially recognized in the Italian Republic, they can still be used out of courtesy. The hereditary title of count in the Kingdom of Italy was awarded to Mapelli Mozzi's family in 1913 by King Victor Emmanuel III, in particular to all legitimate male-line descendants bearing the surname of the noble family of Mozzi, which was previously incorporated into the noble family of Mapelli.
Mapelli Mozzi's mother is Nicola "Nikki" Diana Williams-Ellis, paternal granddaughter of businessman and Liberal party politician Sir Robert Abraham Burrows. Nicola was later married to businessman and Conservative politician Christopher Shale. In 2017, she married for the third time, this time to a sculptor David Williams-Ellis. Mapelli Mozzi has an older sister, Natalia Alice Yeomans (born 1981), and a younger half-brother, Albemarle "Alby" Shale (born 1991).
Mapelli Mozzi attended the Dragon School in Oxford, then Radley College in Oxfordshire, before obtaining an M.A. in Politics at the University of Edinburgh.
At the age of 23, with the support of his family, he started Banda, a property development and interior design company, which claims to develop homes in "undervalued" parts of London. This has been challenged by property experts on Twitter and Forbes, who argue that "there is nothing undervalued in Notting Hill", where Mapelli Mozzi's latest project is located, and describe the district as "a super prime residential destination".
Mapelli Mozzi holds directorships in a number of companies, some of them with his mother, Nikki Williams-Ellis, and his brother-in-law, Tod Yeomans. Ahead of the 2016 London mayoral election, Mapelli Mozzi wrote an article for Property Week, urging the future mayor to insist on redevelopment projects in central London. He has also criticised politicians Andrea Leadsom and Jeremy Corbyn.
Mapelli Mozzi is a co-founder of the British-Rwandan charity "Cricket Builds Hope", which aims to use cricket as "a tool for positive social change" in Rwanda, East Africa. Previously known as the Rwanda Cricket Stadium Foundation (RCSF), the charity was founded in 2011 to build Rwanda's first grass wicket cricket ground, now known as Gahanga International Cricket Stadium. Mapelli Mozzi's stepfather Christopher Shale (1954–2001), British businessman and a Conservative politician came up with the idea for the charity but died before he could get it off the ground. Shale's family and friends set up the foundation after his death; Mapelli Mozzi's maternal half-brother, Albemarle "Alby" Shale (born 1991), is on the board of trustees. There are six charity's patrons. They are: Jonathan Agnew, Brian Lara, Heather Knight, Ebony Rainford-Brent, Sam Billings and Makhaya Ntini. In 2012, Mapelli Mozzi cycled 100 kilometres (62 mi) overnight in London in the Nightrider Challenge to raise funds for the Cricket Builds Hope foundation.