Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria
| Maria Amalia | |
|---|---|
| Duchess consort of Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla | |
| Maria Amalia by Martin van Meytens | |
| Tenure | 19 July 1769 – 9 October 1802 |
| Spouse | Ferdinand, Duke of Parma |
| Issue | |
| Princess Caroline of Parma Louis of Etruria Princess Maria Antonia of Parma |
|
| Full name | |
| Maria Amalia Josepha Johanna Antonia | |
| House | House of Habsburg-Lorraine |
| Father | Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor |
| Mother | Maria Theresa of Austria |
| Born | 26 February 1746 Hofburg Imperial Palace, Vienna, Austria |
| Died | 18 June 1804 (aged 58) Prague Castle, Prague, modern day Czech Republic |
Maria Amalia of Austria (26 February 1746 – 18 June 1804) was the Duchess of Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla by marriage. Maria Amalia was a daughter of Empress Maria Theresa and Emperor Francis I. She was thus younger sister to Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor and older sister to Leopold II, Holy Roman Emperor, Maria Carolina, Queen of Naples and Marie Antoinette, Queen of France.
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[edit] Archduchess of Austria
She was the eighth child of Maria Theresa of Austria and Emperor Francis Stephen. Born at the Hofburg Imperial Palace, she was raised in the Habsburg Viennese court.
One of her paintings, St. Therese and the child Jesus, still exists today in a private collection.
[edit] Marriage
Against her will, Amalia was married to Ferdinand of Parma (1751–1802). The marriage was supported by the future Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II, whose first beloved wife had been Ferdinand's sister, Princess Isabella of Parma. The Archduchess's marriage to the Duke of Parma was part of a complicated series of contracts that married off Maria Theresa's daughters to the King of Naples and Sicily and the Dauphin of France. All three sons-in-law were members of the House of Bourbon.
She left Austria on 1 July 1769, accompanied by her brother, Joseph II, and married Ferdinand on 19 July, at the Ducal Palace of Colorno. Two years after her arrival in Parma, Maria Amalia secured the dismissal of Du Tillot, her husband's minister, and replaced him with a Spanish appointee, Jose del Llano, who was highly recommended by Charles III of Spain. Duke Ferdinand also did not like Du Tillot and the two already had strained relations even before his wife reached Parma. A letter of Louis XV to his grandson dated May 1769 attests to this, wherein he counseled his grandson not to despise the minister who served his parents well; moreover, there was no one to replace him, said the French king.
Amalia would remain largely estranged from her mother, except for a brief reconciliation in 1773 when her son was born, despite the latter's repeated efforts at reconciliation. The duchess resisted her mother's efforts to control her from afar. When her sister Archduchess Marie Christine, known to the family as Marie or Mimi, visited Parma in 1775, she reported to their mother that Amalia lost much of her beauty and glamour and was also less gay and discriminating. Maria Theresa commissioned a portrait of her grandchildren in Parma by Johann Zoffany.
Maria Amalia was in touch with her sisters, Queen Marie Antoinette of France and Queen Marie Caroline of Naples and Sicily for most of their married lives. The three sisters exchanged letters, portraits and gifts. In fact, one of Marie Antoinette's last letters during her imprisonment was secretly written to her sister Maria Amalia.
When Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Italy and her husband died, Maria Amalia was appointed Head of the Regency Council in Parma by the dying Ferdinand but the regency lasted only a few days. On 22 October 1802 the French expelled her from Parma and she established her residence in Prague, particularly at Prague Castle, where she died in 1804. Her body was interred at the royal crypt of the St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague while her heart was taken to Vienna and placed inside an urn (number 33) at the family's Herzgruft (heart crypt).
[edit] Issue
She and Ferdinand had nine children:
- Princess Caroline of Parma (22 November 1770 – 1 March 1804). Married Prince Maximilian of Saxony and was the mother of King Frederick Augustus II and King Johann I of Saxony.
- King Louis I of Etruria (5 July 1773 – 27 May 1803). The first of only two kings of Etruria. Married his first cousin, Maria Louisa of Spain.
- Princess Maria Antonia of Parma (28 November 1774 – 20 February 1841), joined the religious order in 1802 and became an Ursuline abbess.
- Princess Charlotte Maria of Parma (7 September 1777 – 5 April 1813), joined the Dominican order in 1797 and became a prioress
- Prince Philip Maria of Parma (22 March 1783 – 2 July 1786).
- Princess Antonia Louise of Parma (21 October 1784), died in infancy.
- Princess Maria Luisa (Aloysia) of Parma (17 April 1787 – 22 November 1789).
- Stillborn Daughter, twin (21 May 1789)
- Stillborn Son, twin (21 May 1789)
[edit] Ancestry
[edit] Titles, styles, honours and arms
[edit] Titles and styles
- 26 February 1746 – 19 July 1769 Her Royal Highness Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria, Princess of Hungry etc.
- 19 July 1769 – 9 October 1802 Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Parma
- 9 October 1802 – 18 June 1804 Her Royal Highness the Dowager Duchess of Parma
[edit] External links
Media related to Maria Amalia of Austria at Wikimedia Commons
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Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria
Born: Feb 26 1746 Died: Jun 18 1804 |
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| Spanish royalty | ||
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| Preceded by Princess Louise Élisabeth of France |
Duchess consort of Parma 19 July 1769 – 9 October 1802 |
Succeeded by Princess Maria Teresa of Savoy |
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