Tina Onassis Niarchos

Athina Mary "Tina" Onassis Niarchos (née Livanos; Greek: Αθηνά (Τίνα) Λιβανού, pronounced [aθiˈna ˈtina livaˈnu]; 19 March 1929 – 10 October 1974) was an English-born Greek socialite and shipping heiress, the second daughter of the Greek shipping magnate Stavros Livanos and Arietta Zafiraki. She was best known as the first wife of Aristotle Onassis, but she later married her older sister Eugenia's widower, Stavros Niarchos. She was older sister to George Stavros Livanos.

Tina Niarchos
Born
Athina Mary Livanos

(1929-03-19)19 March 1929
Kensington, London, England, U.K.
Died10 October 1974(1974-10-10) (aged 45)
Paris, France
TitleMarchioness of Blandford
Spouse(s)
(m. 1946; div. 1960)

(m. 1961; div. 1971)

(m. 1971)
ChildrenAlexander Onassis
Christina Onassis
Parent(s)Stavros Livanos
Arietta Zafirakis

Marriages and family

Known as Tina, she was married three times. Her husbands were:

  1. Aristotle Onassis (28 December 1946 – 1960); with him she had two children, Alexander Onassis (1948–1973) and Christina Onassis (1950–1988). She divorced him upon her discovering that he was having an affair with the opera singer Maria Callas.[1]
  2. John Spencer-Churchill, Marquess of Blandford (23 October 1961 – March 1971)
  3. Stavros Niarchos (21 October 1971 – 1974), her sister Eugenia's widower.

After her divorce from Aristotle Onassis, she dropped her married name and resumed her maiden name, Livanos, until her marriage to Spencer-Churchill.

In October 1971 she married her third husband, Stavros Niarchos, her sister's widower.

Her son with Onassis, Alexander Onassis, died at the age of 24 in January 1973 as a result of injuries sustained during an airplane crash in Athens.[2]

Athina Niarchos died on 10 October 1974 in the Hôtel de Chanaleilles, the Parisian mansion that she shared with her husband. Her death was officially ruled by pathologists as having resulted from an acute edema of the lung, but has also been attributed to her suffering a drug overdose.[3][4] She was buried next to her sister at the Bois-de-Vaux Cemetery in Lausanne, Switzerland.[5][6]

Her daughter, Christina Onassis, sued Stavros Niarchos, her mother's widower, for her mother's estimated US$250 million (in 1974 dollars) estate claiming the marriage should be annulled under Greek law. Christina later dropped the lawsuit and Niarchos returned all of his wife's money as well as her jewelry, artwork and other personal effects to Christina.

Her only living descendant is her namesake granddaughter, Athina Onassis, Christina's daughter.

Notes

  1. Feroudi Moutsatsos, Kiki (1998). The Onassis Women. London: Putnam. ISBN 0399144439.
  2. "Mr Aristotle Onassis.", The Times, London, 17 March 1975, p. 14
  3. Anthony, Andrew (17 October 1999). "High Society". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
  4. Soames, Mary (February 2001). Winston and Clementine: The Personal Letters of the Churchills. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 0618082514.
  5. Evans 1987, p. 292.
  6. Evans 1987, p. 293.

References

  • Evans, Peter (1987). Ari: The Life, Times and Women of Aristotle Onassis. London: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-009961-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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