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Maria Antonia of Austria

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Maria Antonia of Austria
Electress of Bavaria
Reign15 July 1685 – 24 December 1692
Born18 January 1669
Hofburg Palace, Vienna
Died24 December 1692(1692-12-24) (aged 23)
Hofburg Palace, Vienna
Burial25 December 1692
SpouseMaximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria
IssueJoseph Ferdinand, Prince of Asturias
FatherLeopold I, Holy Roman Emperor
MotherMargaret Theresa of Spain

Maria Antonia of Austria (Maria Antonia Theresia Josefa; 18 January 1669 – 24 December 1692) was the eldest daughter and only surviving child of Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I and his wife Margaret Theresa of Spain. She became Electress of Bavaria when she married in 1685, but died prematurely in 1692.

Childhood

Her birth was the result of the inbreeding chronic in the Habsburg family during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Her father Leopold was her mother's maternal uncle and paternal first cousin once removed. Also, her maternal grandparents, King Philip IV of Spain and Queen Mariana, were uncle and niece. Since her childhood, Maria Antonia was an intelligent and cultivated girl, sharing her parents' passion for music.

The last Habsburg king of Spain, Charles II, never fathered any children. According to the laws of succession in Spain, Maria Antonia would have had the right to inherit the crown had she lived long enough, because she was the only surviving child of Empress Margaret Theresa, Charles II's sister. During her childhood, it was decided that she would marry her maternal uncle, Charles II, but this plan came to nothing due to political circumstances.

As an alternative, she became a candidate for marriage to Victor Amadeus II of Sardinia, the Duke of Savoy, but nothing came of these plans either.

Marriage

Maria Antonia finally did marry Maximilian II, the Elector of Bavaria, on 15 July 1685 in Vienna. Their marriage was very unhappy, but they did have three children, all of whom died in childhood. One of them, Joseph Ferdinand of Bavaria, Prince of Asturias (1692–1699), was of central importance to European politics at the end of the seventeenth century, in spite of his youth, as a claimant to the throne of Spain in anticipation of the extinction of the House of Habsburg in that country. Joseph Ferdinand's death before that of Charles II, the last Habsburg king of Spain, helped to trigger the War of the Spanish Succession. If he had survived Charles, the European powers likely would have permitted him to accede to the throne of Spain.

Issue

  1. Leopold Ferdinand of Bavaria (22 May 1689) died at birth.
  2. Anton of Bavaria (19 November 1690) died at birth.
  3. Joseph Ferdinand of Bavaria (28 October 1692 – 6 February 1699), Prince of Asturias.

Ancestors

Family of Maria Antonia of Austria
16. Charles II, Archduke of Inner Austria (=22, 28)
8. Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor
17. Maria Anna of Bavaria (=23, 29)
(1551–1608)
4. Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor (=14)
18. William V, Duke of Bavaria
9. Maria Anna of Bavaria
(1574–1616)
19. Princess Renata of Lorraine
2. Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor
20. Philip II of Spain (=24)
10. Philip III of Spain (=12, 30)
21. Anna of Austria (=25)
5. Maria Anna of Austria (=15)
22. Charles II, Archduke of Inner Austria (=16, 28)
11. Margaret of Austria (=13, 31)
23. Maria Anna of Bavaria (=17, 29)
(1551–1608)
1. Maria Antonia of Austria
24. Philip II of Spain (=20)
12. Philip III of Spain (=10, 30)
25. Anna of Austria (=21)
6. Philip IV of Spain
26. Charles II, Archduke of Inner Austria (=16, 22)
13. Margaret of Austria (=11, 31)
27. Maria Anna of Bavaria (=17, 23)
(1551–1608)
3. Margarita Teresa of Austria
28. Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor (=8)
14. Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor (=4)
29. Maria Anna of Bavaria (=9)
(1574–1616)
7. Mariana of Austria
30. Philip III of Spain (=10)
15. Maria Anna of Austria (=5)
31. Margaret of Austria (=11)

Bibliography

  • Friedrich Weissensteiner: Liebeshimmel und Ehehöllen - Heyne Taschenbuchverlag 1999 - ISBN 3-453-17853-X

See also