- Maria Luisa of Spain, Duchess of Lucca
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Maria Luisa of Spain Maria Luisa and her son Charles Louis, by Goya, 1800 Queen of Etruria Consort 21 March 1801 – 27 May 1803 Duchess of Lucca Reign 9 June 1815 – 13 March 1824 Spouse Louis of Etruria Issue Charles, King of Etruria, Duke of Parma
Maria Luisa Carlota, Crown Princess of SaxonyFull name Maria Luisa Josefina Antonieta Vicenta de Borbón Father Charles IV of Spain Mother Maria Luisa of Parma Born 6 July 1782
Palace of San Ildefonso, SpainDied 13 March 1824 (aged 41)
Rome, Papal StatesMaria Luisa of Spain (Maria Luisa Josefina Antonieta Vicenta; 6 July 1782 – 13 March 1824) was an Infanta of Spain. She was a daughter of King Carlos IV of Spain (1748–1819) and his wife Maria Luisa of Parma. In 1795, age thirteen, she married her first cousin Louis, Hereditary Prince of Parma. She spent the first years of her married life at the Spanish court, where her first son, Charles II, Duke of Parma, was born.
In 1801 the Treaty of Aranjuez made her husband King of Etruria, which was created from the former Duchy of Tuscany in exchange for the renunciation of the Duchy of Parma. They arrived in Florence, the capital of the new kingdom in August 1801. During a brief visit to Spain in 1802, Maria Luisa gave birth to her second and last child. Her husband reign in Etruria was marred by his ill health and was brief. He died in 1803, at the age of 30, as a consequence of an epileptic crisis. Maria Luisa acted as regent for her son. During her government in Florence, she tried to gained the support of her subjects, but her administration of Etruria was cut short by Napoleon Bonaparte, who forced her to leave with her children in December 1807. As part of the Treaty of Fontainebleau, Napoleon incorporated Etruria to his domains. After a futile interview with Napoleon in Milan, Maria Luisa looked for refuge in exile with her family in Spain. The Spanish court was deeply divided and a month after her arrival the country was thrown into unrest when a popular uprising, known as the Mutiny of Aranjuez, forced Maria Luisa's father, King Carlos IV of Spain to abdicate in his son Ferdinand VII of Spain. Napoleon invited father and son to Bayonne, France, with the excuse of acting as a mediator, but ultimately reserved Spain for himself giving the kingdom to his brother, Joseph Bonaparte. Napoleon called the remaining members of the Spanish royal family to France and at their departure on 2 May 1808, the citizens of Madrid rose up in rebellion against the French occupation. Once in France, Maria Luisa was reunited in exile with her parents. She was the only member of the Spanish Royal family to directly opposed Napoleon and after her secret plan to escape was discovered, Maria Luisa was separated from her son and placed with her daughter as prisoner in a convent in Rome.
Maria Luisa, mostly known as the Queen of Etruria during her life time, regained her freedom in 1814 at the fall of Napoleon. In the following years she continued to live in Rome, hoping to recover her former domains in the name of her son. To put forward her case she wrote a book of memoirs, but she was disappointed when the Congress of Vienna (1814–1815) assembled to reorder the European map, compensated her no with Parma but with the smaller Duchy of Lucca, which was carved out of Tuscany. As a consolation she was allowed to retain the honors of a Queen. Initially reluctant to accept this accord, Maria Luisa did not take the government of Lucca until December 1817. As a reigning Duchess in her own right in Lucca, Maria Luisa disregarded the constitution imposed on her by the congress of Vienna and governed in an absolutist fashion, though her government was neither reactionary nor oppressive. While spending sometime in her palace in Rome, she died of cancer at age 41.
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Infanta of Spain
Born in the Royal Palace of La Granja de San Ildefonso, Maria Luisa was the third surviving daughter of King Carlos IV of Spain (1748–1819) and his wife Maria Luisa of Parma (1751–1819), a granddaughter of Louis XV. She was given the names Maria Luisa Josefina Antonieta, after an older sister, Maria Luisa Carlota, who died just four days before Maria Luisa's birth, on 2 July. Maria Luisa spent a happy childhood as the favorite daughter of her parents, being called in the family "Luisetta".
In 1795, Maria Luisa's first cousin, Louis, Hereditary Prince of Parma, came to the Spanish court to finish his education. There was an understanding between the two royal families that Louis would marry one of the daughters of Carlos IV. It was anticipated that he would marry the Infanta Maria Amalia, Carlos IV's eldest unmarried daughter. She was fifteen years old at the time and of a timid and melancholy nature. Louis, who was equally shy and reserved, preferred her younger sister, Maria Luisa, who although only thirteen, was of a more cheerful disposition and somewhat better looking.[1] All four daughters of Carlos IV were short and plain, but Maria Luisa was clever, lively and amusing. She had dark curly hair, brown eyes and a Grecian nose. Although not beautiful, her face was expressive and her character lively. She was generous, kindhearted and devout. Both infantas were favorably impressed by the Prince of Parma, a tall and handsome young man, and when he ultimately chose the younger sister, the mother, Queen Maria Luisa, readily agreed to the change of bride.[2]
Marriage
Louis was created Infante of Spain and married Maria Luisa on 25 August 1795 in La Granja, San Ildefonso. In a double wedding with her sister, Maria Amalia, the original intended bride, married her much older uncle, Infante Antonio of Spain. The King and Queen of Spain were very fond of their nephew and new son-in-law, affectionately calling him "el niño".
The marriage between the two different personalities turned out to be happy, though it was clouded by Louis' ill health: He was frail, suffering chest problems, and since a childhood accident when he hit his head on a marble table, suffered epileptic fits. As the years went on his health deteriorated and he grew to be increasingly dependent on his wife. The young couple remained in Spain during the early years of their marriage, which were to be the happiest period of their lives. Because Maria Luisa was only thirteen when she married, her first child was not born for another four years. Her first son, Charles Louis, was born in Madrid on 22 December 1799.
Afterwards, the couple wanted to go to Parma, the lands they were going to inherit, but Carlos IV and his wife were reluctant to allow their departure. They were still in Spain in the spring of 1800 and staying at the Palace in Aranjuez when they were portrayed with all the royal family in Goya's masterpiece The family of Charles IV. Maria Luisa is beside her husband with her son in her arms on the right hand side of the painting.
Queen of Etruria
Maria Luisa's life was deeply marked by Napoleon Bonaparte's actions. Napoleon was interested in having Spain as an ally against England, in the summer of 1800 he sent his brother Lucien to the Spanish court with the proposal that would result in the Treaty of Aranjuez.
Napoleon, who had conquered Italy, proposed to compensate the House of Bourbon for their loss of the Duchy of Parma by creating the new Kingdom of Etruria for Louis, heir of Parma. The new Kingdom was created out of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. To make way for the Bourbons, the Habsburg Grand Duke was ousted and compensated with Salzburg.
Tuscany was greater, richer and more important than Parma, making it an enticing bargain. Maria Luisa's mother also was pleased with her daughter becoming a Queen. Maria Luisa's husband, whose bad health had made him indolent and apathetic, accepted what had been decided in spite of his own father opposition.
Maria Luisa, who had never lived away from her own family and was totally inexperienced in political affairs, opposed the plan. One of Napoleon's conditions was that the young couple had to go to Paris and there receive from him the investiture of their new sovereignty, before taking possession of Etruria. Maria Luisa was reluctant to make a trip to France, where only seven years earlier her relatives Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette had been executed. However pressed also by her family, she did as she was told.
On 21 April 1801 the couple and their son left Madrid, crossed the border in Bayonne and traveled incognito to France under the name of Counts of Livorno. Napoleon received them with great attentions, at their arrival in Paris on May 24. At first, the young couple did not make a good impression. They were dressed with unfashionable clothes in the Spanish manner. The French found Maria Luisa ugly, but clever and agreeable; her husband was described as good looking, good hearted, but a fool. The Duchess D'Abrantes wrote in her memoirs about Maria Luisa: a "mixture of shyness and haughtiness which at first gave restraint to her conversation and manners" but when she became better acquainted with the young Queen, she found her very pleasant. Napoleon was favorably impressed by the tenderness Maria Luisa showed towards her son, whom she nursed herself.
However, the Spanish Infanta did not enjoy her visit to Paris. Unlike her mother, she hated horse riding and was not amused with the displays prepared for her. Ill most of the time, she suffered from fever, often had to stay in bed and when she took part in the diversions she really did not want to do so. She was anxious about her husband health and he depended on her for everything. One day as Louis got out of the carriage at Château de Malmaison, where they were going to dine, he suddenly felt to the ground in an epilepsy fit. The Duchess D'Abrantes, who was present, described the scene in her memoirs "The Queen appeared much distressed and tried to conceal her husband; ... he was as pale as a death and his features completely altered ..." After staying in Paris for three weeks, Maria Luisa and her husband, on 30 June, headed south toward Parma. In Piacenza they were greeted by Louis' parents, together they went to Parma and Maria Luisa met her husband's two unmarried sisters. They found Louis already speaking Italian with a foreign accent while Maria Luisa's Italian was often mixed with Spanish words. After three weeks in Parma they entered Etruria.
In August they arrived in their new capital, Florence. The French general Murat had been sent to Florence to prepare the Pitti Palace for them. But the Kings of Etruria did not have an auspicious start in their new life. Maria Luisa was pregnant and suffered a miscarriage, her husband health, always frail, had deteriorated further, having more frequents fits of epilepsy. The Pitti Palace, the residence of the new kings of Etruria, was the former house of the Dukes of Medici. The palace had been practically abandoned after the death of the last Medici and the ousted Grand Duke Ferdinand had taken most of its values with him.
Maria Luisa and Louis were both full of good intentions but they were received with hostility by the population and the nobility that missed the popular Grand Duke and saw them as just mere tools in the hands of the French. Etruria finances were in deplorable state; the country was ruined by war, bad harvest and the cost to have to maintain the unpopular French troops stationed in Etruria, that only much later where replaced by Spanish troops sent by Charles IV.
In the summer of 1802, Maria Luisa and her husband were invited to Spain to attend the double wedding of her brother Ferdinand with Maria Antonia of Naples, and of her youngest sister Maria Isabel with Francis I of Naples. With Etruria's financial and economic difficulties, Louis' health failing and Maria Luisa in an early state of pregnancy, going abroad was clearly not expedient and therefore Maria Luisa was reluctant to go, but under the pressure of her father and the French, they started the journey to her native country.
Louis felt very ill before boarding the ship, waiting for his full recovery delayed their plans for weeks. Once at sea, it was Maria Luisa who fell ill. On 2 October 1802, before arriving at Barcelona, still in open waters, Maria Luisa under difficulties gave birth to her daughter Maria Luisa Carlota (named after Maria Luisa's older deceased sister). At first, doctors thought that both mother and daughter would not survive. The couple also found out that they arrived too late for the wedding. Maria Luisa, still very ill, waited three days on the ship to recover before she went ashore in Barcelona, where her parents were waiting for her.
One week after they arrival they got news that Louis's father, Ferdinand had died. Ill and unhappy, Louis wanted to return as soon as possible to his Italian states, but Charles IV and Maria Luisa insisted to take them to the court in Madrid. It was not until December when they were allowed to start the trip leaving Spain by sea in Cartagena.
Back in Etruria, the illness of her husband was carefully concealed from the population, as Maria Luisa alone was seen in public functions and entertaining at court. For this she was accused of overpowering her husband and being merry in his absence. Louis died on 27 May 1803 at the age of 30, as a consequence of an epileptic crisis.
Regent of Etruria
Grief stricken by her husband's death, Maria Luisa started to suffer from a nervous illness. She had to act as a regent for her son Charles Louis, the new King of Etruria.
Only twenty years old when she became a widow, plans for a new wedding were considered: France and Spain wanted to marry her to her first cousin Pedro of Bourbon, the 19-year-old son of Gabriel infante of Spain, a younger brother of Charles IV, but the marriage never materialized.
During her regency, Maria Luisa founded a School for the teaching of upper level sciences, the Museum of Physics and Natural History of Florence. To ingratiate herself with the Florentine people, she entertained lavishly at the Pitti Palace, holding splendid receptions for artists and writers, as well as government officials. She gave a celebrated party in the loggia del Lonzi for 200 small boys and girls from working class families. They were allowed to take home the plates, glasses, spoons and napkins, after the banquet, as the regent watched from a platform erected at the Palazzo de la signorina.
Exile
Though Maria Luisa by now had become fond of Florence, Napoleon had other plans for Italy and Spain: "I am afraid the Queen is too young and her minister too old to govern the Kingdom of Etruria" he said. Maria Luisa was accused of not enforcing the English blockade in Etruria. The French minister waited upon her one day at the villa in which she was staying and ordered her to leave Florence on the spot. Her father answered her pleas with discouragement: She had to yield to Napoleon's decision and haste to leave the kingdom, returning to her family in Spain. Maria Luisa and her children left Florence on 10 December 1807, their future being uncertain. Napoleon annexed the territory to France and granted the title of "Grand Duchess of Tuscany" to his sister Elisa.
The exiled Queen went to Milan where she had an interview with Napoleon. He promised her, as compensation for the loss of Etruria, the throne of a Kingdom of Northern Lusitania (in the North of Portugal), he intended to create after the Franco-Spanish conquest of Portugal. This was part of the Treaty of Fontainebleau between France and Spain (October 1807) that also had incorporated Etruria to Napoleons' domains. Napoleon had already ordered the invasion of Portugal but his secret aim was ultimately to depose the Spanish Royal family and have access to the money coming from the Spanish colonies in America. As part of the agreement, Maria Luisa was going to marry Lucien Bonaparte, who would have to divorce his wife, but both refused: Lucien was attached to his wife and Maria Luisa considered those nuptials a misalliance, and she would not allow herself to be put in Portugal in the place of her eldest sister Carlota Joaquina, Crown Princess of Portugal. Napoleon wanted Maria Luisa to settle in Nice or Turin, but her intentions were to join her parents in Spain.
Maria Luisa arrived at a court deeply divided and a country in unrest: her brother, Ferdinand, Prince of Asturias, had plotted against his father, King Charles IV and his unpopular prime minister Godoy. Ferdinand had been pardoned but with the family's prestige shaken, Napoleon took this opportunity to invade Spain. With the excuse of sending reinforcements to Lisbon, French troops had entered Spain in December. Not completely blind to Napoleon's real intentions, the Royal family had secretly planned their escape to Mexico, but their plans were cut short. At this point Maria Luisa arrived in Aranjuez on 19 February 1808.
Supporters of Ferdinand spread the story that prime minister Godoy had betrayed Spain to Napoleon. On 18 March a popular uprising known as the Mutiny of Aranjuez took place. Members of popular classes, soldiers and peasants assaulted Godoy's residence, captured him, and made King Charles depose the prime minister. Two days later, the court forced Charles IV to abdicate and yield the throne to his son, now Ferdinand VII. The abdication of Charles IV in favor of Ferdinand, was enthusiastically acclaimed by the people.[3]
Maria Luisa, who at the time had been in Spain for barely a month, had taken her father's side against the party of her brother, acted as intermediate between the deposed Charles IV and the French general Murat, who on 23 March entered Madrid.
Napoleon, capitalizing on the rivalry between father and son, invited both to Bayonne, France, ostensibly to act as a mediator. Both kings, afraid of the French power, thought it appropriate to accept the invitation and separately left for France. Maria Luisa was just recovering from scarlet fever at the time of the Mutiny of Aranjuez, and was not fit to travel. Her son was also sick and she stayed behind with her children, her uncle Antonio and her little brother Francisco de Paula. However, Napoleon insisted on all relatives of the King to leave Spain and called them to France. At their departure on 2 May 1808, citizens of Madrid rose up in rebellion against the French occupation, but the revolt was crushed by Murat.
At that time, Maria Luisa had become unpopular. The intervention in Etruria had been very costly to Spain and Maria Luisa secret dealing with Murat had been seen as against the interest of her native country, she was considered a foreign Princess aiming at gaining a throne for her son.
Arriving at Bayonne, Maria Luisa was greeted by her father with the words "My daughter, our family has forever ceased to reign". Napoleon had forced both Charles IV and Ferdinand VII to renounce the throne of Spain. In exchange for their renunciation of all claims, the two were promised a large pension and residence in Compiegne and Chambord. Maria Luisa, who in vain tried to convince Napoleon to restore her to Tuscany or Parma, was offered a large income. He assured her that she would be much happier without the troubles of government, but Maria Luisa openly protested against the confiscation of her son's dominions.
Imprisonment
After this, Napoleon gave Spain to his brother Joseph and forced the Royal family into exile in Fontainebleau. Maria Luisa requested a separate residence and moved with her children to a house in Passy, but was soon moved to Compiegne. She was plagued by frequent sickness and shortage of money and, not owning any horses, was forced to walk wherever she needed to go. When at last Napoleon sent 12,000 francs as the promised compensation, the expenses of her trip to France were discounted. She wrote a letter of protest, saying that prisoners were never made to pay for their removal, but she was advised not to send it out. She was promised to retire to the Palace of Colorno in Parma with a substantial allowance, but once in Lyon, under the pretext of conducting her to her destination, she was escorted to Nice, where she was kept under strict vigilance. She planned to escape to England, but her letters were intercepted and her two accomplices executed. Maria Luisa was arrested on 26 July and condemned to be imprisoned in a convent in Rome, while her nine-year-old son was to remain in the care of his grandfather Charles IV.[4] Maria Luisa's pension was reduced to 2500 francs; all her jewels and valuables were taken away and with her daughter and a maid and on 14 August 1811 she was imprisoned in the convent of Santi Domenico e Sisto, near the Quirinal. Her pleas for clemency were unanswered.[5]
During her imprisonment, Maria Luisa and her children were stripped of their rights to the Spanish crown by the Cádiz Cortes, on 18 March 1812, because she was under Napoleon's control. Her rights were not restored until 1820.
The former Queen of Etruria wrote in her Memoirs:
I was two years and a half in that monastery and one year without seeing or talking to anybody. I was not allowed to write or receive news not even from my own son. I had been in the convent for eleven months already when my parents came with my son to Rome on 16 June of 1812. I was hoping to be released immediately after their arrival, but I was wrong, instead of diminishing the rigor of my imprisonment I was put under stricter orders.
On 19 June 1812, she was allowed to see her family. In an emotional meeting, Maria Luisa threw herself into her mother's arms, kissed her son with frenzy and her father hugged them all in a general embrace. After this, Maria Luisa was allowed to see her parents and her son once a month but only for twenty minutes and under surveillance. Only the fall of Napoleon opened the gates of her prison. On 14 January 1814, after more than four years of captivity, she was freed, when the troops of Murat entered Rome.
The Congress of Vienna
Maria Luisa moved with her children and her parents to the Barberini Palace. She hoped for the restorations of her son's estates and as the Congress of Vienna (1814–1815) assembled to reorder the European map, she quickly wrote and published the Memoirs of the Queen of Etruria, originally written in Italian but translated to different languages, to put forward her case.
When Napoleon returned from his exile at Elba, Maria Luisa and her parents fled Rome, moving from one city to another in Italy. The Countess de Boigne met her in Genoa and found her untidy and vulgar. When Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo, they returned to Rome.
At the Congress of Vienna, Maria Luisa's interests were represented by the Spanish emissary Marquis of Labrador, an incompetent man, who did not successfully advance his country's or Maria Luisa's diplomatic goals. The Austrian Minister Metternich had decided not to restore Parma to the House of Bourbon, but to give it to Napoleon's wife Maria Louise of Austria. Maria Luisa pleaded her cause to her brother Ferdinand VII of Spain, the Pope and Tsar Alexander I of Russia
Ultimately, the Congress decided to compensate Maria Luisa and her son with the smaller Duchy of Lucca, which was carved out of Tuscany. She was to retain the honors of a Queen as she had before in Etruria.
However, Maria Luisa refused this compromise for more than two years, in which she lived with her children in a palace in Rome. During this time, the relationship to her family was strained: her parents and her brother Ferdinand VII wanted to marry her daughter, Maria Luisa Carlota, then fourteen years old, to the infante Francisco de Paula, Maria Luisa's youngest brother. Maria Luisa vehemently opposed this plan, considering her 22-year-old brother too reckless for her young daughter. She also resisted the plan of her son marrying Maria Cristina of Naples, a daughter of her sister Maria Isabel.
Seeking independence from her family, Maria Luisa accepted the solution offered by the Treaty of Paris in 1817: upon the death of Marie Louise of Austria, the duchy of Parma should revert to Charles Louis and the House of Bourbon.
Maria Luisa became Duchess of Lucca in her own right and was granted the rank and privileges of a Queen. Her son Charles Louis would succeed her only upon her death and meanwhile he was known as the Prince of Lucca. Lucca would be annexed to the Grand Duchy of Tuscany when the family regained possession of Parma.
Upon this, the Spanish minister in Turin, took possession of Lucca until Maria Luisa arrived on 7 December 1817.
Duchess of Lucca
When Maria Luisa arrived in Lucca, she was already thirty-five years old. Ten years of endless struggles had taken their toll: her youth was gone and she had gained a lot of weight. Nevertheless she set her sights on a new marriage. She first addressed Ferdinand III, Grand Duke of Tuscany, who was a widower, and also her first cousin, possibly with the idea of securing her position in Lucca and gaining a foothold in Florence. After this failed, she tried Archduke Ferdinand of Austria-Este but this failed as well. After the assassination of Charles Ferdinand, Duke of Berry in 1820, there were also plans to marry her to his father Charles, Count of Artois, who would become King Charles X.
Maria Luisa's firm intention was to obliterate every trace of the government Elisa Bonaparte, who had ruled Lucca from 1805 to 1814 and who nominally succeeded Maria Luisa in Tuscany in 1808. As duchess, she promoted public works and culture in the spirit of enlightenment and during her government the sciences flourished. Between 1817 and 1820, she ordered the complete renewal of the inner decorations of the Ducal Palace, completely changing the internal decoration of the building into its present form, making the Palazzo in Lucca one of the finest in Italy. Maria Luisa, a religious woman, favored the clergy. In her small state, seventeen new convents were founded in the six years of her reign. Among the projects she accomplished were the building of a new aqueduct and the development of Viareggio, the port of the Duchy.
Politically, Maria Luisa disregarded the constitution imposed on her by the congress of Vienna and governed Lucca in an absolutist fashion, though her government was not very reactionary and oppressive. When the Spanish liberals imposed a constitution on her brother, King Ferdinand VII, she opened up to the idea of accepting a constitution, but the resurgence of Spanish absolutism in 1823 ended her intentions.
In 1820, she arranged her twenty-year-old son's wedding with Princess Maria Teresa of Savoy, one of the twin daughters of King Victor Emmanuel I of Sardinia. The relationship with her son had turned sour and later he complain that his mother had "ruined him physically, morally and financially".
Throughout these years, Maria Luisa spent the summers in Lucca and the winters in Rome. She went to Rome on 25 October 1823 to her Palace in Venetian Square, already feeling ill. On 22 February 1824 she signed her will and died of cancer on 13 March 1824 in Rome.[6] Her body was taken to Spain to be buried at the Escorial. A monument to her memory was erected in Lucca.
Upon her death, Charles Louis succeeded to the rule of Lucca.
Children
Maria Luisa was survived by her two children:
- Charles Louis Ferdinand (22 December 1799 – 16 April 1883) married Maria Teresa of Savoy Princess of Savoy, daughter of King Victor Emmanuel I of Sardinia and of Maria Theresa of Austria-Este.
- Luisa Carlota (Barcelona, 2 October 1802 – Rome, 18 March 1857) married Prince Maximilian of Saxony, widower of her aunt Carolina of Parma, as his second wife. Although the marriage was childless she was stepmother to Maximilian and Caroline's children, including the future kings Frederick Augustus II of Saxony and John I of Saxony.
Titles, styles, honours and arms
Titles and styles
- 6 July 1782 – 25 August 1795 Her Royal Highness the Infanta Dona Maria Luisa of Spain
- 25 August 1795 – 21 March 1801 Her Royal Highness the Princess of Piacenza
- 21 March 1801 – 27 May 1803 Her Majesty the Queen of Etruria
- 27 May 1803 – 9 June 1815 Her Majesty the Dowager Queen of Etruria
- 9 June 1815 – 13 March 1824 Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Lucca
Ancestors
References
- Balanso, Juan. La Familia Rival. Barcelona: Planeta, 1994.
- Balanso, Juan. Las perlas de la Corona. Barcelona: Plaza & Janés, 1999.
- Bearne Charlton, Catherine. A Royal Quartette. London: T. F. Unwin, 1908.
- Memoir of the Queen of Etruria, written by herself. London: printed for John Murray, 1814.
- Sixte, Prince of Bourbon-Parma. La Reine d'Étrurie. Paris: Calmann-Levy, 1928.
- Smerdou Altoaguirre, Luis. Carlos IV en el Exilio. Pamplona: Ediciones Universidad de Navarra, 2000.
- Villa-Urrutia, W. R Marques de. La Reina de Etruria, doña Maria Luisa de Borbón, infanta de España. Madrid: Francisco Beltrán, 1923.
Notes
- ^ " A Royal Quartette": Catherine Bearne Charlton, p.282
- ^ " A Royal Quartette": Catherine Bearne Charlton, p.275
- ^ " A Royal Quartette": Catherine Bearne Charlton, p.364
- ^ Bearne Charlton, Catherine. A Royal Quartette. p. 378..
- ^ Bearne Charlton, Catherine. A Royal Quartette. p. 381..
- ^ Bearne Charlton, Catherine. A Royal Quartette. p. 384..
See also
The generations indicate descent form Charles I, under whom the crowns of Castile and Aragon were united, forming the Kingdom of Spain. Previously, the title Infanta had been largely use in the different realms. 1st Generation Maria, Holy Roman Empress · Joan, Princess of Portugal2nd Generation Isabella Clara Eugenia, Co-sovereign of the Habsburg Netherlands · Catherine Michelle, Duchess of Savoy · Infanta Maria3rd Generation 4th Generation Infanta María Margarita · Infanta Margarita María · Infanta Maria Eugenia · Infanta Isabel María · Infanta Mariana · Maria Theresa, Queen of France · Margarita Teresa, Holy Roman Empress · Infanta Maria Ambrosia5th Generation none6th Generation none7th Generation 8th Generation Infanta Maria Isabel · Infanta Maria Josefa · Infanta María Isabel Ana · Infanta Maria Josepha · Maria Luisa, Holy Roman Empress · Infanta Maria Teresa · Infanta Maria Ana9th Generation Carlota Joaquina, Queen of Portugal · Infanta Maria Luisa · Infanta Maria Amalia · Maria Louisa, Queen of Etruria · Maria Isabella, Queen of the Two Sicilies · Infanta Maria Teresa10th Generation Isabella II · Luisa Fernanda, Duchess of Montpensier · Maria Luisa, Crown Princess of Saxony* · Isabella, Countess Ignaz Gurowski* · Luisa, Duchess of Sessa* · Infanta Josefina, Mrs. José Guëll* · Infanta Maria Cristina* · Amelia Philippina, Princess Adalbert of Bavaria*11th Generation Isabella, Princess of Asturias · Infanta Maria Cristina · Maria de la Concepcio · Maria de Pilar · Maria de la Paz, Princess Louis Ferdinand of Bavaria · Eulalia, Duchess of Galliera · Maria Isabella, Countess of Paris* · Infanta Amalia of Orléans* · Infanta Cristina d'Orléans* · Infanta Maria de la Regla of Orléans* · Mercedes, Queen of Spain*12th Generation Mercedes, Princess of Asturias · Maria Teresa, Princess Ferdinand of Bavaria13th Generation Beatriz, Princess of Citivella-Cesi · Maria Cristina, Countess of Marone · Isabel Alfonsa, Countess Jan Kanty Zamoyski* · Mercedes, Princess Bagration of Mukhrani* · Infanta Pilar of Bavaria*14th Generation 15th Generation 16th Generation *title granted by Royal Decree 2nd Generation 3rd Generation Margherita Aldobrandini*4th Generation 5th Generation none6th Generation 7th Generation none8th Generation none9th Generation 10th Generation Infanta Maria Luisa of Spain11th Generation 12th Generation Louise Marie Thérèse d'Artois13th Generation Princess Maria Pia of Bourbon-Two Sicilies · Infanta Maria Antonia of Portugal · Princess Maria Immacolata of Bourbon-Two Sicilies · Infanta Adelgundes of Portgual14th Generation Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria · Hedwig de La Rochefoucauld · Madeleine de Bourbon* · Charlotte, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg · Princess Margaret of Denmark · Princess Maria Francesca of Savoy · Princess Margaret of Thurn and Taxis · Princess Joséphine-Charlotte of Belgium^! · Joan Douglas Dillon*^!15th Generation Princess Irene of the Netherlands · Countess Brigitte of Holstein-Ledreborg · Princess Yolande of Broglie-Revel · Princess Maria Pia of Savoy16th Generation Countess Lydia of Holstein-Ledreborg · Constance de Ravinel**did not have a royal or noble title by birth
^also princess of Luxembourg by marriage
!also princess of Nassau by marriageCategories:- 1782 births
- 1824 deaths
- People from Segovia (province)
- House of Bourbon (Spain)
- House of Bourbon-Parma
- Italian duchesses
- Italian queens consort
- Dames of the Order of Queen Maria Luisa
- Female regents
- Regents of Parma
- Italian nobility
- 19th-century female rulers
- Princesses of Bourbon-Parma
- Spanish infantas
- Burials in the Pantheon of Infantes at El Escorial
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