I picked up out just one example on your list, and found out that the father-in-law of King Charles II of England and Scotland was already dead, by the time he married Catherine of Braganza ...
The whole reason for my making the list very specific was that I was envisioning the scenario of a traditional wedding, whereby the bride is given away by her father. If the said father was a king, then assuming that the marriage was not by proxy, then there was every reason to expect him to be the one escorting his daughter during the ceremony. The situation would have been all the more grand, if the groom in question was also an enthroned king.
In 1964 Athens, one had just that: the king of one country (Denmark) gave away his youngest daughter in marriage to the king of another country (Greece). The story has it that when as crown prince the future King Constantine II of the Hellenes asked his future father-in-law for his daughter's hand in marriage, the response was to lock him up in some closet or bathroom. Evidently, King Frederik IX of Denmark was totally thrown off by the whole question -- or if you will, put on the spot. One presumes that he would not have reacted in such a manner, had his future son-in-law been already enthroned at the time of asking ...
As it was, he eventually and reluctantly gave his consent, on the condition that Princess Anne-Marie first obtain her legal majority and finish school. This turned out to be barely the case, as the couple wed only a couple of weeks after her 18th birthday. They were supposed to wait until January, 1965, but the death of King Paul sped things up.
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