Princess Maria Carolina
Ferdinanda Luisa of Naples and Sicily was born on November 5, 1798 at the
Palace of Caserta in Naples. She was the eldest child of Francis, Hereditary
Prince of Naples and Archduchess Maria Clementina of Austria. The young
princess was named after her paternal grandparents, King Ferdinand IV and III
of Naples and Sicily and Archduchess Maria Carolina of Austria. Her father,
Francis, was the eldest surviving son of the King of Naples and Sicily while
her mother was the tenth child of Leopold II, Holy Roman Emperor and Infanta
Maria Luisa of Spain. Francis and Maria Clementina were double first cousins
and although the couple was engaged in 1790, they weren’t married until June
26, 1797 due to the chaotic Napoleonic wars plaguing the Italian peninsula. The
cousins were both twenty years old when they wed in a rather modest ceremony at
Foggia. Despite the fact that Maria Clementina’s features were scarred by
smallpox, she was a dignified and proud woman with a kind heart and a
substantial education. The couple’s relationship was rather uncommon for the
time, as Maria Clementina was the dominant partner in the relationship. She controlled
her less intelligent and easy-going husband but Francis didn’t seem to care
about his wife’s influence over him; according to his mother, Archduchess Maria
Carolina of Austria, “[Francis] adores her in every sense of the word. He says
she loves him, and assuredly shows and demands many proofs of love.” Maria
Carolina was so shocked by just how much her son loved Maria Clementina that
she “asked heaven to calm their over-excited sense by sending them children.”
Maria Carolina's parents: Francis I of the Two Sicilies (Vicente López y Portaña, 1829) and Archduchess Maria Clementina of Austria (Joseph Hickel, 1796) |
Francis’s mother got her wish
when Maria Carolina was born a year after her parent’s wedding. Less than two
years after Maria Carolina’s birth, her mother had a second child, a little boy
named Ferdinando. Unfortunately, Ferdinando lived for only eleven months. Maria
Clementina, who had never been of robust health, survived her young son by just
four months before she died of tuberculosis on November 15, 1801 at the age of
twenty-four. She was buried beside her infant son in the Basilica of Santa
Chiara while her heartbroken husband mourned the loss of his beloved wife and
son. Maria Carolina, who celebrated her third birthday ten days before her
mother’s death, grew up without knowing her mother. Francis remarried another
first cousin less than a year after his wife’s death for political expedience,
Infanta María Isabella of Spain. Despite the age gap between the couple
(Francis was twenty-five to María Isabella’s thirteen years), they had a good relationship
and he always treated her with compassion and respect, though he did take
several mistresses during his marriage. Through her father’s second marriage,
Maria Carolina had twelve half-siblings, including Queen Maria Christina of Spain, King Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies, and Empress Teresa Cristina of Brazil. She also had various illegitimate half-siblings by her father’s various
extramarital affairs. Maria Carolina grew up in
Palermo, Sicily and Naples, which would become the united kingdom of the Two
Sicilies in December of 1816 under her grandfather, King Ferdinand I. The
Italian princess was a petite girl with blond hair and bulging blue eyes who
inherited many physical features from her family. She had the large Bourbon
nose and fleshy lower lip of her grandfather, King Ferdinand, small breasts,
and rather unappealing teeth. Although she was no beauty, Maria Carolina
attracted many with her vivacity and boundless energy, as well as her charm and
spirit. She had her mother’s kind and generous personality and was known by her
family and friends for her sincerity and modesty. As the granddaughter of the
King of Naples and Sicily and the daughter of his heir, she grew up knowing
that an impressive marriage would be arranged for her once she reached an age
of maturity. So, it was no surprise to the young princess when the French
ambassador to her grandfather’s kingdoms suggested in 1816 that Maria Carolina
marry Charles Ferdinand d'Artois, Duke of Berry, a nephew of King Louis XVIII
of France.
Charles Ferdinand d'Artois, Duke of Berry (Jean-Baptiste Jacques Augustin, 1810's) |
Charles Ferdinand, who was twenty
years Maria Carolina’s senior, was the second son and youngest surviving child
of Charles Philippe, Count of Artois (the future King Charles X of France and
Navarre) and Princess Marie Thérèse of Savoy, the eleventh child of Victor
Amadeus III, King of Sardinia and Duke of Savoy, and Infanta Maria Antonia
Ferdinanda of Spain. Blonde and blue-eyed, Charles was not a handsome man. He
was short with a large, squat body, “a big head, a broad forehead, prominent
eyes, a short neck, a high complexion, and a coarse mouth”. Though he did have
a rather gallant smile, he was described as lazy, not very intelligent, ill
mannered, stubborn, and prone to fits of temper. However, like his wife, he was
a kind-hearted individual with a penchant for generosity and forgiveness. He
was known for his various affairs with different women and had many
illegitimate children, nine of whom have been identified. He had a career in
the military during and after the French Revolution but his success was
limited. In 1814, when Napoleon returned form Elba, King Louis XVIII had named
him commander-in-chief of the army in Paris but he was a poor leader and could
not inspire loyalty or dedication in his men. Months after he became
commander-in-chief, he left his position and retired to Ghent while Napoleon
staged his unsuccessful Hundred Days War.
Princess Maria Carolina, Duchess of Berry (Robert Lefèvre, 1826) |
The betrothal between the Duke of
Berry and the Princess of Naples and Sicily was quickly agreed to and arranged.
On April 24, 1816, a proxy marriage was held in the Palazzo Reale where Maria
Carolina’s uncle, Leopold, Prince of Salerno, stood in for the bridegroom. Maria
Carolina, who was seventeen years old at the time, bade goodbye to her family
and home and sailed for France on May 14, 1816. She arrived in the port of
Marseille a week after her departure from Naples. On June 15th, she came to
Fontainebleau and met her thirty-eight year old husband and his aging uncle,
the King of France. Charles Ferdinand was enchanted by his wife and soon, the
two began to fall in love with each other. On June 17th, Maria Carolina
officially wed Charles Ferdinand at Notre-Dame, thus becoming the Duchess of
Berry. The newlyweds moved to Élysée Palace in Paris, which had been given to them
by the King as a wedding gift. Here, they began their happy lives together.
Although their marriage was purely political and the two didn’t even know each
other when they wed, Maria Carolina and Charles Ferdinand shared a mutual love
and respect. They saw past their large age gap, unattractive appearances, and
foreign backgrounds to create a loving marital union. In France, Maria Carolina
was known as “Madame de Berry” and went by the French version of her name,
“Marie Caroline Ferdinande Louise”. She had four children with her husband in
the span of four years, two of whom survived infancy:
- Princess Louise Élisabeth d’Artois (1817) died a day after her birth
- Prince Louis d’Artois (1818) died the day of his birth
- Princess Louise Marie Thérèse d’Artois (1819-1864) married: Charles III, Duke of Parma and Piacenza – had issue
- Prince Henri d’Artois, Count of Chambord (1820-1883) married: Archduchess Maria Theresa of Austria-Este – no issue
The Duchess of Berry and her two children (François Gérard, 1822) |
Maria Carolina loved music,
plays, and art and she became a significant patron of the arts during her life
in France. She attend the theater habitually and became the patron of the
Théâtre du Gymnase, which, for a time, was renamed Théâtre de Madame in her
honor. She was also a regular attendee at the Odéon-Théâtre de l'Europe and
often gave money out of her own pocket to benefit performances. Like her
husband, the Duchess of Berry was a passionate art collector, especially when
it came to paintings of landscapes. She also supported the Manufacture
nationale de Sèvres, a primary porcelain manufacturer for the entirety of
Europe. However, Maria Carolina’s happiness with her first husband didn’t last
for long. Nearly four years after their wedding, a pregnant Maria Carolina and
her husband went to an opera house in Paris on February 13, 1820 where an
anti-monarchy Bonapartist stabbed Charles Ferdinand. The forty-two year old
Duke of Berry died a day later from his wounds. Maria Carolina was still
grieving her husband’s shocking death when she gave birth to her only surviving
son seven months after Charles Ferdinand was assassinated. The little Henri was
named the “miracle child” because his birth sustained the direct Bourbon line
of King Louis XIV since his paternal granduncle, grandfather, and uncle all had
no sons. Therefore, he was expected to inherit the throne one day, which raised
his mother’s status and importance in the French royal court. In 1824, Henri’s
granduncle died and his grandfather, Maria Carolina’s father-in-law, became
King Charles X. This made little Henri second in line for the throne after his
childless paternal uncle, Louis Antoine, Duke of Angoulême. A few months after
Charles X’s succession, Maria Carolina’s father became King Francis I of the
Two Sicilies.
Princess Maria Christina, Duchess of Berry (Jean-Baptiste Paulin Guérin, 1824) |
But the monarchy’s days were
numbered and soon, Henri’s chances of ever inheriting the throne looked bleak.
In the July Revolution of 1830, the people overthrew Charles X in favor of his
cousin, Louis Philippe, Duke of Orléans. This change in power marked a shift
from the traditional principal of hereditary right to popular sovereignty. When
Louis Philippe was named King Louis Philippe I on August 9, 1830, Maria
Carolina fled the country with her daughter and son to live in exile with
Charles X and his family. Maria Carolina and her two children lived on their
own in Bath for a period of time before moving to Edinburgh to be with Charles
X and Louis Antoine. Maria Carolina, her children, and her brother-in-law
resided in the Regent Terrace while the deposed Charles chose to live separately
from his family in Holyrood Palace. In November, Maria Carolina learned to her
sorrow that her father had died in Naples. Her half-brother, Ferdinand II, was
now the King of the Two Sicilies. Maria Carolina did not like Edinburgh and
longed to return to her old home in France. But what she longed for most of all
was for her son to be the King of France. She refused to accept her son’s
exclusion from the succession and proclaimed that Henri was the legitimate king
with herself as his regent. In 1831, she set off on a journey to gather support
for her son’s cause in the form of Legitimists, those in France who backed the
Bourbon line over Louis Philippe’s Orléanists. She travelled to her native
Naples to visit her family before moving onto the Netherlands, Prussia, and Austria
in search of funds and defense of her young son’s claim to the throne. Maria
Carolina’s plan was to stage a Legitimist rebellion to place Henri on his
rightful throne. However, she found little support wherever she went and as the
months dragged on, Henri’s chance of ever wearing the French crown grew slimmer
and slimmer.
Princess Maria Carolina, Duchess of Berry (Charles Rauch, 1827) |
One important event did occur
during Maria Carolina’s travels regarding her personal life. While in Italy,
she fell in love with an Italian nobleman named Ettore Carlo Lucchesi-Palli,
8th Duca della Grazia, who was seven years her junior. They secretly married on
December 14, 1831, as revealing their marriage to the public would have a
negative effect on not just French and Italian society but also the Legitimist
cause. The Dowager Duchess of Berry went to Marseille in April of 1832 and,
finding no Legitimist support there, moved on to Vendée and Brittany where she
managed to initiate a short-lived but fruitless revolt in June. After her
rebellion was crushed, Maria Carolina had to flee to Nantes where she stayed in
hiding for five months. Eventually, she was deceived by her advisor, who
revealed her location to Louis Philippe’s administration in November. She was
caught, arrested, and imprisoned in the Chateau of Blaye. It was during her
time as a prisoner that she gave birth to her first child with Lucchesi-Palli
on May 10, 1833, as she had been pregnant when she was caught. The truth of her
secret marriage was leaked, which caused her to lose the backing of the
Legitimists. This was because while she had been a French citizen by her
marriage to Charles Ferdinand, when she remarried Lucchesi-Palli she became an
Italian citizen once more, which barred her from being her son’s regent in the
eyes of the people. With no Legitimist support, Maria Carolina was no longer a
threat to the King, so she was released a month after she gave birth. The
defeated Dowager Duchess reunited with her husband in Italy and the two moved
to Sicily where they had four more children. Their only child to die in infancy
was their eldest, the daughter who had been born in prison:
- Anna Maria Rosalia Lucchesi-Palli (1833) died at the age of five months
- Clementina Lucchesi-Palli (1835-1925) married: Conte Camillo Zileri dal Verme – no issue
- Francesca di Paola Lucchesi-Palli (1836-1923) married: Don Carlo Alberto Massimo, Principe d’Arsoli – had issue
- Maria Isabella Lucchesi-Palli (1838-1873) died unmarried and without children at the age of thirty-five
- Adinolfo Lucchesi-Palli, 9th Duca della Grazia (1840-1911) married: Lucrezia Ruffo Bagnara – had issue
Princess Louise Marie Thérèse of Artois, Duchess of Parma (1860) |
In 1844, Maria Carolina and
Lucchesi-Palli bought a palace on the Grand Canal of Cannaregio in Venice named
Ca’ Vendramin Calergi. However, the conflict of the Italian unification
movement forced the couple to sell their home to Prince Henry, Count of Bardi,
Maria Carolina’s grandson by her daughter from her first marriage. Maria
Carolina and her husband moved to Brunnsee, Austria, where they remained until
their deaths. Lucchesi-Palli died in 1864 at the age of fifty-nine while Maria
Carolina died on April 17, 1870 when she was seventy-one years old. She was
buried in the Mureck Cemetery near her home in Austria. While three of her
children from her second marriage married, only two had children of their own.
Maria Carolina’s only surviving daughter from her first marriage, Princess
Louise Marie Thérèse married Ferdinando Carlo, Hereditary Prince of Lucca, who
was four years her junior, in November of 1845. While Louise Marie was said to
be a short, large blonde with blue eyes, she was also a reticent and unfriendly
woman who lacked her mother’s charm and empathy. Her husband, a thin and small
dandy, was not a handsome man. He is described as having protuberant eyes, a
big nose, a long neck, and a receding chin. Ferdinando Carlo became Charles III,
Duke of Parma and Piacenza in 1849 when his father abdicated his position.
Louise Marie had four children, two girls and two boys, with her husband before
he was assassinated by hired killers on March 27, 1854 when he was thirty-one
years old. After her husband’s death, Louise Marie became her five year-old
son’s regent until the pair was overthrown during the Franco-Austrian War of
1859. Louise Marie fled Parma and lived the rest of her life in exile until her
death on February 1, 1864 at the age of forty-four. Her eldest daughter,
Margherita, married Carlos, Duke of Madrid, the Carlist claimant to the Spanish
throne (he was the great-grandson of King Charles IV of Spain) and the
Legitimist claimant to the French throne.
Henri d'Artois, Count of Chambord (1860's) |
Louise
Marie’s eldest son, Robert, had twelve children by his first wife, his half
first cousin once removed, Maria Pia of the Two Sicilies, a daughter of King
Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies. Their eldest child was Princess Maria Luisa
of Bourbon-Parma, who became the Princess Consort of Bulgaria upon her marriage
to Ferdinand I, Prince of Bulgaria. Robert later remarried his second cousin
once removed, Infanta Maria Antónia of Portugal, the daughter of the deposed
King Miguel I of Portugal, after his first wife died in childbirth. They had
twelve children together, including Prince René, who married Princess Margaret
of Denmark (a granddaughter of King Christian IX of Denmark and Louise of Hesse-Kassel) and had four children, including Queen Anne of Romania. Louise
Marie’s third child, Princess Alice, married the widowed Ferdinand IV, Grand
Duke of Tuscany, who was fourteen years her senior, in early 1868. They had ten
children together. Louise Marie’s youngest child, Prince Henry, Count of Bardi,
married twice. His first marriage was to his half first cousin once removed,
Princess Maria Luisa of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, the youngest daughter of King
Ferdinand II of the Two Sicilies. She died three months after the wedding so
Henry married again to Infanta Adelgundes, Duchess of Guimarães, the older
sister of his sister-in-law, Infanta Maria Antonia (both were daughters of King
Miguel I of Portugal). Henry had no children by either of his wives. As for
Maria Carolina’s only surviving son from her first marriage, Prince Henri, Count
of Chambord, he maintained his claim to the French throne until his death on
August 24, 1883 at the age of sixty-two. He married Archduchess Maria Theresa
of Austria-Este, the eldest child of Francis IV, Duke of Modena and Maria
Beatrice of Savoy, in 1846. They had no children so when Henri died, he became
the last legitimate descendant in the male line of King Louis XV of France.
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ReplyDeleteThank you for this history round up of her. I enjoyed reading your extensive biography.
ReplyDelete