Louis XVI Auguste de Bourbon, roi de France

Louis XVI Auguste de Bourbon, roi de France

Mann 1754 - 1793  (38 år)

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Generasjon: 1

  1. 1.  Louis XVI Auguste de Bourbon, roi de France ble født 23 Aug 1754 , Château de Versailles; ble døpt cirka 1754 , France - aka Louis Augustus (sønn av Louis Ferdinand de Bourbon og Maria Josepha Karolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria von Sachsen); døde 21 Jan 1793, Paris, France; ble begravet 21 Jan 1815, Basilique Saint-Denis.

    Notater:

    {geni:occupation} Roi de France (1774-1792), King of France and Navarre 1774-1791, King of the French 1791-1792, Kung i Frankrike 1774-92, Duc de Berry, , Roi de France

    {geni:about_me} '''Links:'''

    *[http://thepeerage.com/p10207.htm#i102066 The Peerage]
    *[http://www.geneall.net/F/per_page.php?id=5240 Geneall]
    '''King of the French''' Reign 1 October 1791 X 21 September 1792
    '''Predecessor'''[http://www.geni.com/people/index/5318307072010126343 Louis XV]
    '''Successor:''' Monarchy abolished
    Next reigning monarch in France was Napoleon I starting 1804.
    >'''Wikipedia:''' [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XVI_of_France English ][http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XVI_de_France Francais]
    *[http://www.fsigenetics.com/article/PIIS1872497310001602/ Louis is assumed to have belonged to Y-DNA haplogroup G2a]
    --------------------
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XVI_of_France

    ===Descendance===

    *Le 16 mai 1770, le dauphin Louis Auguste épouse lXarchiduchesse Marie-Antoinette d'Autriche2, fille cadette de François de Lorraine, grand-duc de Toscane et empereur souverain du Saint Empire romain germanique et de son épouse Marie-Thérèse, archiduchesse d'Autriche, duchesse de Milan, reine de Bohême et de Hongrie. Cette union est la concrétisation dXune alliance visant à améliorer les relations entre la Maison de Bourbon (France, Espagne, Parme, Napleset Sicile) et la Maison de Habsbourg-Lorraine (Autriche, Bohême, Hongrie, Toscane). Les époux bien qu'étant alors âgés de 14 et 15 ans ne consommeront réellement leur mariage que sept ans plus tard. De leur union, quatre enfants naissent, mais ils n'auront pas de descendance :

    ># Marie-Thérèse de France (19 décembre 1778 X 19 octobre 1851), dite « Madame Royale », qui épouse en 1799 son cousin germain le duc dXAngoulême (1775-1844) ;
    ># Louis Joseph Xavier François de France (22 octobre 1781 X 4 juin 1789), premier dauphin ;
    ># Louis Charles de France (27 mars 1785 X 8 juin 1795), duc de Normandie, second dauphin et futur Louis XVII, surnommé « l'Enfant du Temple » pendant sa captivité ;
    ># Sophie-Béatrice de France (29 juillet 1786 X 19 juin 1787).

    Louis XVI (1754-93), king of France (1774-92), who lost his throne in the
    French Revolution and was later beheaded by the revolutionary regime.

    Louis was born at Versailles on August 23, 1754, the grandson of Louis XV.
    The deaths of his two elder brothers and of his father, only son of Louis
    XV, made the young prince the Dauphin of France in 1765. In 1770 he
    married Marie Antoinette, youngest daughter of Archduchess Maria Theresa
    of Austria. On Louis's accession, France was impoverished and burdened
    with debts, and heavy taxation had resulted in widespread misery among the
    French people. Immediately after he was crowned, aided by such capable
    statesmen as Finance Minister Anne Robert Jacques Turgot, baron de
    l'Aulne, Interior Minister Chrétien Guillaume de Lamoignon de Malesherbes
    (1721-94), and Foreign Minister Charles Gravier, comte de Vergennes
    (1717-87), Louis remitted some of the most oppressive taxes and instituted
    financial and judicial reforms. Greater reforms were prevented, however,
    by the opposition of the upper classes and the court. So strong was this
    opposition that in 1776 Turgot was forced to resign and was replaced by
    financier Jacques Necker.

    After Louis granted financial aid (1778-81) to the American colonies
    revolting against Great Britain in the New World, Necker proposed drastic
    taxes on the nobility. He was forced to resign in 1781, and statesman
    Charles Alexandre de Calonne (1734-1802), appointed finance minister in
    1783, borrowed money for the court until 1786, when the borrowing limit
    was reached. The anger of the French people against taxes and the lavish
    spending of the court resulted in 1788 in the recall of Necker, who,
    however, could not prevent the bankruptcy of the government. In 1788 Louis
    was forced to call for a meeting of the representative governmental body
    called the Estates-General, the first gathering of that assembly in 175
    years. Once in session, the Estates-General assumed the powers of
    government. On July 14, 1789, the Parisian populace razed the Bastille,
    and a short time later imprisoned the king and royal family in the palace
    of the Tuileries. In 1791 the royal family attempted to escape to Austria,
    but they were caught and brought back to Paris. Louis swore obedience to
    the new French constitution in 1791, but continued secretly to work
    against the revolution and to plot intrigues with France's enemies. In
    1792, when the National Convention, the assembly of elected French
    deputies, declared France a republic, the king was tried as a traitor and
    condemned to death. Louis XVI was guillotined on January 21, 1793, in the
    Place de la Révolution (now Place de la Concorde) in Paris.

    Historians consider Louis XVI a victim of circumstances rather than a
    despot similar to the former French kings Louis XIV and Louis XV. He was
    weak and incapable as king and not overly intelligent. He preferred to
    spend his time at hobbies, such as hunting and making locks, rather than
    at his duties of state, and he permitted his wife to influence him unduly.

    KING OF FRANCE 1774-1793 (ACCEDED 5/10/1774, CROWNED AT RHEIMS 6/11/1775);
    GUILLOTINED

    Louis XVI, grandson of King Louis XV, came to the throne of France in 1774. His eighteen year reign ended at the guillotine in 1792. His son, Louis XVII later regained the throne in 1793 to 1795.

    After the end of the French Revolution, and the reign of the Bonaparte Family of France, Louis XVIII, brother of Louis XVIII became the King of France in 1814. His reign ended in 1830. He was succeeded by his brother, Charles X.


Generasjon: 2

  1. 2.  Louis Ferdinand de Bourbon ble født 4 Sep 1729 , Château de Versailles; ble døpt , Bourbon - house of France; døde 20 Des 1765, Château de Fontainebleau; ble begravet cirka 1765, Louis was buried in the Cathedral of Saint-Étienne in Sens. His '''heart''' was buried at Basiliqu.

    Notater:

    {geni:occupation} Dauphin de France, Dauphin of France, Dauphin of Viennois, Dauphin de Viennois

    {geni:about_me} * Louis was buried in the Cathedral of Saint-Étienne in Sens. His '''heart''' was buried at Basilique Saint Denis, Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis, Île-de-France, France

    Louis-Ferdinand de France, dauphin de France (né le 4 septembre 1729 au château de Versailles X mort le 20 décembre 1765 au château de Fontainebleau) est l'aîné des fils du roi Louis XV de France et de Navarre, et de son épouse Marie LeszczyXska.


    Sommaire

    1 Une famille nombreuse...

    2 Éducation princière

    3 L'adultère royal

    4 Vie de couple et politique

    5 Le prince et son père

    6 Une mère "résignée"

    7 Une monarchie impopulaire

    8 Ses enfants

    9 Voir aussi





    Une famille nombreuse...

    Son frère cadet, Philippe de France duc d'Anjou meurt dès 1733 à l'âge de 3 ans, suivi la même année par leur sXur aînée Louise-Marie, 5 ans. Le dauphin a également six autres sXurs Louise-Elisabeth et Henriette-Anne, jumelles nées en 1727, Adélaïde, née en 1732, Victoire (1733), Sophie-Philippine (1734), Thérèse-Félicité née en 1736 morte à Fontevrault en 1744, Louise-Marie, née en 1737. Seule, l'aînée de ses sXurs se mariera, les autres resteront à la cour, auprès de leurs mère et frère.



    Éducation princière

    Son éducation fut confiée à Jean-François Boyer,évêque de Mirepoix, homme vertueux mais de caractère étroit. Il ne fut pas un élève très brillant. En revanche, s'il détestait l'activité physique, il devint, comme ses soeurs, un excellent musicien.[réf. nécessaire]

    Seul fils survivant du couple royal, adulé par sa mère et ses sXurs[réf. nécessaire], il fut un enfant orgueilleux voire tyrannique mais très pieux, désirant ressembler à son grand ancêtre, fondateur de sa dynastie, Saint Louis[réf. nécessaire]. Très affecté par la séparation officieuse de ses parents, l'adultère du roi et la résignation doloriste de sa mère, il n'eut de cesse de ne pas ressembler à son père, sombrant très tôt dans une dévotion moralisante outrée.



    L'adultère royal

    Il a 7 ans quand le roi son père produit ouvertement à la cour sa première favorite, la comtesse de Mailly. Madame de Mailly est bientôt supplantée dans le lit du roi par sa sXur, la comtesse de Vintimille laquelle meurt en couches (1741). La sXur des deux précédentes, la marquise de La Tournelle (bientôt créée duchesse de Châteauroux) lui succède.

    Il a 9 ans quand ses quatre plus jeunes sXurs quittent la cour pour l'abbaye de Fontevrault où elle doivent être éduquées à moindre frais.



    Vie de couple et politique

    À l'âge de 10 ans, alors que sa sXur aînée, qui en a douze, épouse l'infant Philippe d'Espagne, il est fiancé à l'infante Marie-Thérèse qui en a 13. Ces mariages croisés doivent réconcilier les deux branches Bourbon qui se boudent depuis la rupture des fiançailles de Louis XV de France, père du Dauphin, avec Marie-Anne-Victoire d'Espagne, sXur de Marie-Thérèse et de Philippe (1725).

    En 1744, Louis XV tombe malade à Metz. Avant de lui donner l'extrême onction, l'aumônier de la cour, François de Fitz-James, évêque de Soissons, exige le renvoi de la favorite ainsi qu'une confession publique. Entretemps, mené par son précepteur, le jeune Louis-Ferdinand, 14 ans, et donc apte à accéder au trône, est venu au chevet de son père ce que le roi, comprenant les manXuvres intrigantes du précepteur, trouve fort mauvais[réf. nécessaire]... L'humiliante confession publique que le roi se doit d'effectuer devant les Messins fait un très mauvais effet sur l'adolescent[réf. nécessaire].

    L'année suivante, à l'âge de 15 ans, Louis épouse le 23 février 1745 au château de Versailles sa cousine (tante à la mode de Bretagne) l'infante d'Espagne Marie-Thérèse-Raphaëlle de Bourbon (deuxième fille de Philippe V). Les deux époux font front commun contre la nouvelle favorite, la Marquise de Pompadour. Cependant Marie-Thérèse meurt l'année suivante en donnant le jour à une petite fille qui ne vit que deux ans. Veuf à 17 ans, Louis-Ferdinand est trèsaffecté par la mort de son épouse. Nonobstant, la raison d'État l'oblige à avoir des enfants mâles aptes à accéder au trône.

    En pleine guerre de succession d'Autriche, il se remarie le 9 février 1747 à Versailles avec la fille du roi de Pologne, Marie-Josèphe de Saxe (1731-1767), qui lui donne huit enfants, dont cinq parviendront à l'âge adulte. Ce futune lourde tâche pour l'adolescente car, toujours attaché à Marie-Thérèse, le Dauphin ne montre d'abord à la jeune princesse allemande de 16 ans que froideur voire mépris. Mais Marie-Josèphe est une femme d'un esprit supérieur : peu à peu, soutenue par ses belle-sXurs, conseillée par son oncle, le maréchal de Saxe elle apprivoise son mari, modère ses excès de dévotion et de rigueur morale tout en étant elle-même très pieuse. Leur couple sera finalement très uni.



    Le prince et son père

    Son père ne fut jamais proche de lui bien qu'il l'aimât certainement : Louis XV avait une vie privée qui ne plaisait pas au Dauphin, ce qui éloigna le père et le fils pendant longtemps. Le Dauphin connut son baptême du feu aux côtés de son père à la bataille de Fontenoy (1745). Il fit preuve de courage voire d'enthousiasme mais 1]|recevant cependant de la bouche même du roi une belle leçon d'humanité propre à édifier le futur chef d'état: « le sang de nosennemis est toujours le sang des hommes. La vraie gloire c'est de l'épargner. »}}.

    À partir de 1757 (attentat de Damiens contre le roi au cours duquel Louis-Ferdinand et ses compagnons maîtrisèrent le régicide), il fut invité à participer aux séances du Conseil du Roi, où il se fit remarquer par ses positions cléricales.

    C'était en outre un homme fort pieux, chaste, sobre et fidèle à son épouse, ce qui était rare à la cour. Préférant la méditation aux exercices physiques, il ne pratiquait pas la chasse, activité pourtant réservée aux seuls nobleset fut le premier Bourbon à être obèse (héritage de son grand-père maternel). Son sérieux le faisait passer pour pédant. D'aucuns cherchèrent à le diffamer lui prêtant maîtresses ou excès d'alcool.



    Une mère "résignée"

    Très proche de sa mère, souffrant des adultères du roi, il était le centre du parti dévot, qui condamnait la politique et la vie privée du roi et ne se gênait pas pour montrer son mépris à la marquise de Pompadour, qui, elle, soutenait le parti des philosophes. Ses sXurs et lui-même avaient surnommé la favorite Maman Putain[réf. nécessaire]. Il désapprouva l'expulsion des jésuites en 1764 mais soutenait son père contre les parlements.

    En 1761, il perd son fils aîné, âgé de 10 ans, ce qui lui cause un immense chagrin mais il ne reporte pas son affection sur son fils suivant le duc de Berry, futur Louis XVI mais sur le cadet plus ouvert et spirituel[réf. nécessaire], le comte de Provence, futur Louis XVIII.



    Une monarchie impopulaire

    Louis-Ferdinand meurt de tuberculose à 36 ans peu avant Noël 1765.Sa dépouille est inhumée dans la cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Sens. Sa femme, qui l'avait veillé pendant sa maladie, contracta son mal et le suivit deux ans plus tard dans la tombe.

    François de Robespierre (père de Maximilien, futur Conventionnel) sembla sXindigner du manque de compassion de lXOrdre des avocats envers la famille royale. Le 3 décembre 1765, il écrivit cette lettre à son confrère et ami Baudelet : « Tous les cXurs, prenant leur essor vers le ciel font retentir les airs de leurs plaintifs accents; ils prient, ils conjurent, ils redemandent à grands cris le digne objet de leur amour... Les nôtres sont les seuls dont on n'entend pas les voix ! Je ne sais quoi a retenu jusqu'à présent leurs mouvements secrets... Une seule fois où il s'agit de donner au roi un gage pur, solennel et indispensable de notre attachement pour la famille royale, craindrons-nous par hasard qu'on pût dire que nous nous sommes assemblés ? Avocats, ce titre nous honore: sujets de la France, qualité mille fois plus glorieuse pour nous; ce n'est qu'en remplissant comme le plus glorieux de nos devoirs, d'une manière noble et peu commune, que nous prouverons véritablement la noblesse de notre profession et que nous maintiendrons sous l'asile du trône, la liberté et l'indépendance ». (in G. Laurent "Annales historiques de la Révolution Française" 1929, p.72)



    Le tombeau du couple delphinal fut profané en mars 1794 par les révolutionnaires, qui jetèrent le cadavre dans une fosse commune de la ville.

    À la Restauration, sur ordre du roi Louis XVIII, fils du dauphin, et grâce à des témoins, on retrouva le corps et on le replaça dans la cathédrale le 8 décembre 1814.

    Ses enfants

    Marie-Thérèse, dite Madame (1746-1748) sans postérité

    Marie Zéphirine, dite Madame(1750-1755) sans postérité

    Louis, duc de Bourgogne (1751-1761) sans postérité

    Louis-Xavier, duc d'Aquitaine (1753-1754) sans postérité

    Louis-Auguste, duc de Berry (1754-1793), Dauphin en 1765, (futur Louis XVI de France) épouse en 1770 Marie-Antoinette d'Autriche (postérité éteinte à la première génération).

    Louis-Stanislas, comte de Provence (1755-1824) (futur Louis XVIII de France) épouse en 1771 Marie-Joséphine de Savoie (sans postérité).

    Charles-Philippe, comte d'Artois (1757-1836) (futur Charles X de France) épouse en 1773 Marie-Thérèse de Savoie (dont deux fils et une fille)

    Marie Adélaïde Clotilde Madame (1759 X 1802) épouse en 1775 Charles-Emmanuel IV de Savoie, Roi de Sardaigne (sans postérité),déclarée "Vénérable"

    Elisabeth Philippine, Madame (1764-1794) (sans alliance ni postérité).

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    http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwik_Ferdynand_Burbon

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    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis,_Dauphin_of_France_%281729-1765%29

    Louis, Dauphin of France (1729X1765)

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    Louis-Ferdinand

    Dauphin of Viennois

    Louis-Ferdinand, Dauphin of France

    Spouse Infanta Maria Teresa of Spain

    Duchess Marie-Josèphe of Saxony

    Issue

    Louis XVI

    Louis XVIII

    Charles X

    Clothilde, Queen of Sardinia

    Princess Élisabeth

    Father Louis XV

    Mother Maria LeszczyXska

    Born 4 August 1729(1729-08-04)

    Palace of Versailles, Versailles, France

    Died 20 December 1765 (aged 36)

    Château de Fontainebleau, France

    Louis-Ferdinand de France,[1][2] Dauphin of France (4 September 1729 X 20 December 1765) was the only son of King Louis XV of France and his wife, Queen Maria LeszczyXska, to reach adulthood. He had a younger brother who died before his third birthday. As the son of the king, Louis was a Fils de France. He was the father of three kings of France, Louis XVI, Louis XVIII and Charles X.

    Contents

    [show]

    * 1 Early life and education

    * 2 Marriages

    o 2.1 Maria Teresa of Spain

    o 2.2 Marie-Josèphe of Saxony

    * 3 Issue

    * 4 Personality

    * 5 Later life and death

    * 6 Ancestry

    * 7 References

    * 8 Further reading

    * 9 External links

    [edit] Early life and education

    Louis-Ferdinand was born at the Palace of Versailles. The birth of an heir to the throne had long been awaited since the tragic decimation of the French royal family in the early 1710s (see Louis XV of France). When the fourth pregnancy of Marie LeszczyXska resulted in a son in 1729, there was popular rejoicing. In all the major cities of France there were fireworks (many memorialized in engravings).

    At Rome and other European courts there were also celebrations, since Louis' birth ensured the French succession. As the heir apparent to the throne of France, he was given the traditional title of Dauphin of France.

    According to the custom of the French royal family, Louis was baptised privately and without a name by Cardinal Armand de Rohan. On 27 April 1737 when he was seven years old the public ceremony of the other baptismal rites took place. It was at this point that he was given the name Louis-Ferdinand. His godparents were Louis, Duke of Orléans and the Dowager Duchess of Bourbon (widow of Louis III, Prince of Condé).

    Louis-Ferdinand's governess was Madame de Ventadour who had previously served as his father's governess. When he was seven years old, the Duke of Châtillon was named his governor, the Count of Muy was named under-governor, and Jean-François Boyer, formerly bishop of Mirepoix, was named preceptor.

    From an early age Louis-Ferdinand took a great interest in the military arts. He was bitterly disappointed when his father would not permit him to join the 1744 campaign in the War of the Austrian Succession. When his father became deathly ill with fever at Metz, Louis disobeyed orders and went to his bedside. This rash action, which could have resulted in the deaths of both Louis and his father, resulted in a permanent change in the relations between father and son. Up to this point Louis XV had doted on his son, but henceforth the relationship was more distant. He was very close to his three oldest sisters.

    [edit] Marriages

    [edit] Maria Teresa of Spain

    In 1744 Louis XV negotiated a marriage between his fifteen year old son and the nineteen year old Infanta Maria Teresa Rafaela of Spain, daughter of King Philip V of Spain and his Italian wife, Elisabeth of Parma, and first cousin of Louis XV. The marriage contract was signed 13 December 1744; the marriage was celebrated by proxy at Madrid 18 December 1744 and in person at Versailles 23 February 1745.

    Masked Ball at Versailles for the wedding of Louis, Dauphin of France to Maria Teresa of Spain, 1745.

    Louis and Maria Teresa were well matched and had a real affection for each other. They had one daughter:

    * Princess Marie Thérèse of France (19 July 1746 X 27 April 1748).

    Three days after the birth of their daughter Louis' wife Maria Teresa died on 22 July 1746. Louis was only sixteen years old. He grieved intensely at the loss of his wife, but his responsibility to provide for the succession to the French crown necessitated that he marry again quickly.

    In 1746 Louis received the Order of the Golden Fleece from his father-in-law King Philip V of Spain.[3]

    [edit] Marie-Josèphe of Saxony

    On 10 January 1747 Louis was married by proxy at Dresden to Princess Marie-Josèphe of Saxony, the fifteen year old younger daughter of Frederick Augustus II, Prince-Elector of Saxony and King of Poland and his wife, Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria. A second marriage ceremony took place in person at Versailles on 9 February 1747.

    [edit] Issue

    Name Portrait Lifespan Notes

    Marie Zéphyrine de France

    Madame Royale Marie Zéphirine de France par Nattier.jpg 26 August 1750 -

    1 September 1755 Born at Versailles, she was known as Madame Royale at court; died at Versailles aged 5

    Louis Joseph Xavier de France

    Duke of Burgundy Louis Joseph Xavier of France, Duke of Burgundy.jpg 13 September 1751-

    22 March 1761 Heir of the Dauphin, he died at Versailles at the age of nine much to the distress of his family;

    Xavier Marie Joseph de France

    Duke of Aquitaine Grand Royal Coat of Arms of France.svg 8 September 1753 X

    22 February 1754 Born at the Palace of Versailles dying there aged five months;

    Louis-Auguste de France

    Duke of Berry

    (future King Louis XVI of France)

    Ludvig XVI av Frankrike porträtterad av AF Callet.jpg 23 August 1754 X

    21 January 1793 Born at Versailles, was later husband of Marie Antoinette and King of France; had issue;

    Louis Stanislas Xavier de France

    Count of Provence

    (future King Louis XVIII of France)

    JoungLouisXVIII.jpg 17 November 1755 X

    16 September 1824 Born at Versailles, he married Princess Marie Josephine Louise of Savoy and had no issue; later King of France;

    Charles-Philippe de France

    Count of Artois

    (future King Charles X of France)

    Charles X Roi de France et de Navarre.jpg 9 October 1757 X

    6 November 1836 Born at Versailles, he married Princess Maria Theresa of Savoy and had issue; was later King of France;

    Marie Adélaïde Clotilde Xavière de France

    Madame Clotilde

    Queen of Sardinia

    Madameclotilde.jpg 23 September 1759 X

    7 March 1802 Born at Versailles, she married the future Charles Emmanuel IV of Sardinia and had no issue;

    Élisabeth Philippine Marie Hélène de France

    Madame Élisabeth Madame-elisabeth-2.jpg 3 May 1764 X

    10 May 1794 Born at Versailles, she never married and was executed during the French Revolution aged 30;

    Maria Josepha also had a stillborn son in 1748 and again in 1749. A stillborn daughter in 1752; Stillborn son in 1756. She also miscarried a son in 1762.

    Louis, Dauphin of France, in 1747.

    [edit] Personality

    Louis-Ferdinand was rather plump. He was well educated: a studious man, cultivated, and a lover of music, he preferred the pleasures of conversation to those of hunting, balls, or spectacles. With a keen sense of morality, he wasvery much committed to his wife, Marie-Josèphe, as she was to him.

    Very devout, he was a fervent supporter of the Jesuits, like his mother and sisters, and was led by them to have a devotion to the Sacred Heart. He appeared in the eyes of his sisters as the ideal of the Christian prince, in sharp contrast with their father who was a notorious womanizer.

    Louis, the Dauphin, in the uniform of Colonel General of the Dragoons, portrait by Alexander Roslin (ca.1765).

    [edit] Later life and death

    Kept away from government affairs by his father, Louis was at the center of the Dévots, a group of religiously-minded men who hoped to gain power when he succeeded to the throne.

    Louis-Ferdinand died of consumption at Fontainebleau in 1765 at the age of thirty-six, while his father was still alive, thus never becoming king of France. His mother, Queen Marie LeszczyXska, and his maternal grandfather, the former king of Poland, StanisXaw LeszczyXski, Duke of Lorraine, also survived him. His eldest surviving son, Louis-Auguste, duc de Berry, became the new dauphin, ascending the throne as Louis XVI at the death of Louis XV, in May 1774.

    Louis-Ferdinand was buried in the Cathedral of Saint-Étienne in Sens. His heart was buried at the Basilica of Saint-Denis.

    References

    1. ^ Achaintre, Nicolas Louis, Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la maison royale de Bourbon, Vol. 2, (Publisher Mansut Fils, 4 Rue de l'École de Médecine, Paris, 1825), 153.

    2. ^ He is called simply Louis by the most reputed biographies (including the earliest ones by Proyart and Rozoir), the major genealogical works about the House of Bourbon (including Achaintre and Dussieux) and numerous engravings. Several modern works (e.g. Antonia Fraser, Marie Antoinette) and some websites call him Louis Ferdinand to distinguish him from his father and his two sons.

    3. ^ Nicolas-Louis Achaintre, Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la maison royale de Bourbon (Paris: Mansut, 1825), II, 149. T. F. Boettger says he received it in 1739.

    [edit] Further reading

    * Broglie, Emmanuel de, Le fils de Louis XV, Louis, dauphin de France, 1729-1765. Paris: E. Plon, 1877.

    * Dechêne, Abel, Le dauphin, fils de Louis XV. Paris: Librairie du dauphin, 1931.

    * Ducaud-Bourget, François. Louis, dauphin de France: le fils du Bien-Aimé. Paris: Conquistador, 1961.

    * Hours, Bernard. La vertu et le secret: le dauphin, fils de Louis XV. Paris: Champion, 2006.

    * Huertas, Monique de, Marie-Josèphe de Saxe: mère de nos trois derniers rois de France et de Madame Élisabeth, Paris: Pygmalion, 1995.

    * Proyart, Liévin-Bonaventure. Vie du dauphin, père de Louis XVI, Lyon: Bruyset-Ponthus, 1788.

    * Rozoir, Charles du, Le dauphin, fils de Louis XV et père de Louis XVI et de Louis XVIII, Paris: Eymery, 1815.

    * ZieliXski, Ryszard, Polka na francuskim tronie, Warszawa: Czytelnik, 1978.

    [edit] External links

    Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Louis, Dauphin of France (1729X1765)

    * De la Tour's pastels at the Musée l'Écuyer, Saint-Quentin, (in French) the pastel illustrated above described as a study for one of four portraits de la Tour made of the Dauphin (according to a letter of the Marquis de Marigny), of which the only known survivor, at the Louvre is dated 1748. The curators at the Musée l'Écuyer consider the study above to have served perhaps for the first of these portraits, that of 1745.

    This page was last modified on 17 July 2010 at 21:54.

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    Louis, Dauphin of France (1729-1765)

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Louis, Dauphin of France (Louis-Ferdinand de France [1]) (4 September 1729 X 20 December 1765), was the eldest and only surviving son of King Louis XV of France and his wife, Queen Marie LeszczyXska. As the son of the king, he was a Fils de France. He was the father of three kings of France.

    Birth and early life

    Louis was born at the Palace of Versailles. The birth of an heir to the throne had long been awaited since the tragic decimation of the French royal family in the early 1710s (see Louis XV of France). When the fourth pregnancy ofMarie LeszczyXska resulted in a son in 1729, there was popular rejoicing. In all the major cities of France there were fireworks (many memorialized in engravings). At Rome and other European courts there were also celebrations, since Louis' birth ensured the French succession. As the heir apparent to the throne of France, he was given the traditional title of Dauphin of France.

    According to the custom of the French royal family, Louis was baptised privately and without a name by Cardinal Armand de Rohan. On April 27, 1737 when he was seven years old the public ceremony of the other baptismal rites took place. It was at this point that he was given the name Louis. His godparents were Louis, Duke of Orléans and the Dowager Duchess of Bourbon (widow of Louis III, Prince of Condé).

    Louis' governess was Madame de Ventadour who had previously served as his father's governess. When he was seven years old, the Duke of Châtillon was named his governor, the Count of Muy was named under-governor, and Jean-FrançoisBoyer, formerly bishop of Mirepoix, was named preceptor.

    From an early age Louis took a great interest in the military arts. He was bitterly disappointed when his father would not permit him to join the 1744 campaign in the War of the Austrian Succession. When his father became deathlyill with fever at Metz, Louis disobeyed orders and went to his bedside. This rash action, which could have resulted in the deaths of both Louis and his father, resulted in a permanent change in the relations between father and son. Up to this point Louis XV had doted on his son, but henceforth the relationship was more distant.

    First marriage

    In 1744 Louis XV negotiated a marriage between his fifteen year old son and the nineteen year old Infanta Maria Teresa of Spain, daughter of King Philip V of Spain and his Italian wife, Elisabeth of Parma. The marriage contract was signed December 13, 1744; the marriage was celebrated by proxy at Madrid December 18, 1744 and in person at Versailles February 23, 1745.

    Louis and Maria Teresa were well matched and had a real affection for each other. They had one daughter:

    Marie-Thérèse (19 July 1746 X 27 April 1748).

    Three days after the birth of their daughter Louis' wife Maria Teresa died on July 22, 1746. Louis was only sixteen years old. He grieved intensely at the loss of his wife, but his responsibility to provide for the succession to the French crown necessitated that he marry again quickly.

    In 1746 Louis received the Order of the Golden Fleece from his father-in-law King Philip V of Spain. [2]

    [edit]Second marriage

    On January 10, 1747 Louis was married by proxy at Dresden to Princess Marie-Josèphe of Saxony, the fifteen year old younger daughter of Frederick Augustus II, Prince-Elector of Saxony and King of Poland and his wife, Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria. A second marriage ceremony took place in person at Versailles on February 9, 1747.

    Louis and Marie-Josèphe had eight children:

    Marie-Zéphyrine (26 August 1750X1 September 1755).

    Louis, Duc de Bourgogne (13 September 1751X22 March 1761).

    Xavier, Duc de Guyenne (8 September 1753X22 February 1754).

    Louis-Auguste, Duc de Berry, the future king Louis XVI (23 August 1754 X 21 January 1793) (guillotined).

    Louis-Stanislas, Comte de Provence, the future king Louis XVIII (17 November 1755 X 16 September 1824).

    Charles-Philippe, Comte d'Artois, the future king Charles X (9 October 1757 X 6 November 1836).

    Marie-Clotilde (23 September 1759 X 7 March 1802), married King Charles Emmanuel IV of Sardinia, Prince of Piedmont.

    Élisabeth-Philippine (3 May 1764 X 10 May 1794), known as Madame Élisabeth (guillotined).

    Personality and political role

    Louis was rather plump. He was well educated: a studious man, cultivated, and a lover of music, he preferred the pleasures of conversation to those of hunting, balls, or spectacles. With a keen sense of morality, he was very muchcommitted to his wife, Marie-Josèphe, as she was to him. Very devout, he was a fervent supporter of the Jesuits, like his mother and sisters, and was led by them to have a devotion to the Sacred Heart. He appeared in the eyes of his sisters as the ideal of the Christian prince, in sharp contrast with their father who was a notorious womanizer.

    Kept away from government affairs by his father, Louis was at the center of the Dévots, a group of religiously-minded men who hoped to gain power when he succeeded to the throne.

    [edit]Death

    Louis died of consumption at Fontainebleau in 1765 at the age of 36, while his father was still alive, thus never becoming king of France. His mother, Queen Marie LeszczyXska, and maternal grandfather, StanisXaw LeszczyXski, the Duke of Lorraine, also survived him. His eldest surviving son, Louis-Auguste, Duc de Berry, became the new dauphin, and later ascended the throne as Louis XVI at the death of Louis XV.

    Louis was buried in the Cathedral of St Étienne in Sens. His heart was buried at the Basilica of Saint Denis.


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    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis,_Dauphin_of_France_(1729-1765)

    "THE DAUPHIN"

    Louis giftet seg med Maria Josepha Karolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria von Sachsen 9 Feb 1747, Versailles, France. Maria (datter av Friedrich August II von Sachsen, Kurfürst zu Sachsen, Król Polski og Maria Josepha of Austria, Queen consort of Poland) ble født 4 Nov 1731 , Dresden, Dresden, Saxony, Germany; døde 13 Mar 1767, Versailles, Yvelines, Île-de-France, France; ble begravet cirka 1767, Basilique de Saint Denis. [Gruppeskjema] [Familiediagram]


  2. 3.  Maria Josepha Karolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria von Sachsen ble født 4 Nov 1731 , Dresden, Dresden, Saxony, Germany (datter av Friedrich August II von Sachsen, Kurfürst zu Sachsen, Król Polski og Maria Josepha of Austria, Queen consort of Poland); døde 13 Mar 1767, Versailles, Yvelines, Île-de-France, France; ble begravet cirka 1767, Basilique de Saint Denis.

    Notater:

    {geni:occupation} Dauphin of France, Princess of Saxony, Dauphine of France

    {geni:about_me} Marie-Josèphe de Saxe (Maria Josepha Carolina Eleonore Françoise Xavière von Sachsen, 1731 - 1767), fille d'Auguste III de Saxe et de Marie-Josèphe d'Autriche. Elle épousa en 1747 le Dauphin Louis-Ferdinand de France, fils de Louis XV, jeune et inconsolable veuf de l'infante d'Espagne Marie-Thérèse Raphaëlle de Bourbon dont il avait eu une fille, Marie-Thérèse en 1746.

    Marie-Josèphe de SaxeSommaire
    1 Une famille déchirée
    2 La mère des derniers rois de France
    3 La triste Pépa
    4 Victime de l'Amour

    Une famille déchirée
    Elle arriva, à quinze ans, dans une Cour dominée par Mme de Pompadour, favorite du roi et artisan de son mariage que lui a suggéré le populaire héros de Fontenoy, le maréchal de Saxe, oncle "par la main gauche" de Marie-Josèphe.

    La nouvelle dauphine, surnommée Pépa, sut se concilier à la fois la Pompadour et son beau-père Louis XV, mais dut aussi compter avec la haine de son mari et de ses belle-sXurs pour la favorite.

    Elle trouvait une belle-famille déchirée par les haines et les tensions : le roi et son épouse ne vivaient plus ensemble depuis dix ans. La pieuse reine Marie LeszczyXska vieillissait, recluse au milieu de vieux amis vieillissantmais elle n'oubliait pas que son père Stanislas Leszczynski avait été le concurrent malheureux au trône de Pologne face au grand père puis au père de Marie-Josèphe.

    Ses filles, "Mesdames", célibataires, ne cessaient de blâmer la vie de leur père.

    Le Dauphin, veuf de dix-sept ans, souffrant des souffrances de sa mère et "divinisé" par ses sXurs, ne savait dissimuler sa désapprobation et ne s'entendait pas non plus avec son père.

    C'est dans ce contexte difficile que la Dauphine parvint à se faire aimer de tous, tant elle était intelligente, douce et aimante.


    La mère des derniers rois de France
    Après trois ans de stérilité (et de critiques de la cour), entre 1750 et 1764 elle mit au monde huit enfants :

    Marie-Zéphyrine (1750-1755) dite Madame
    Louis, duc de Bourgogne (1751-1761)
    Louis-Xavier, duc d'Aquitaine (1753-1754)
    Louis-Auguste, duc de Berry puis Dauphin puis Louis XVI (1754-1793)
    Louis-Stanislas, comte de Provence puis Louis XVIII (1755-1824)
    Charles-Philippe, comte d'Artois puis Charles X (1757-1836)
    Marie-Clotilde, princesse de Piémont puis reine de Sardaigne (1759-1802)
    Élisabeth, Fille de France (1764-1794)
    Son fils aîné, le duc de Bourgogne, enfant précoce, la comblait de fierté. Elle débordait pour lui d'amour maternel. De même que le dauphin, son mari, elle ne pouvait s'empêcher de le préférer à ses autres enfants (ce dont le futur Louis XVI souffrit). Sa mort, en 1761 fut pour elle une épreuve que, seule, sa piété lui permit d'accepter.

    Elle eut aussi à conquérir son mari, qui tout à son veuvage, la fuyait.A force de patience et d'attentions, mais aussi avec la complicité de sa belle-sXur, Henriette, elle réussit à former avec son époux un couple très uni.

    Elle contribua ensuite à rapprocher le roi de son fils.

    Louis XV adorait sa belle-fille, en qui il avait grande confiance.


    La triste Pépa
    Les épreuves ne furent pas épargnées à cette princesse que son beau-père surnomma "la triste Pépa": en 1757 son pays natal, la Saxe, est envahie et pillée par les armées de roi Frédéric II de Prusse. La mère de Marie-Josèphe, fille de l'Empereur Joseph Ier, brisée par la douleur, en meurt.En 1764, cédant au parlementaires, Louis XV fit expulser les jésuites au grand dam du couple delphinal.

    Au cours de ces années également, les deuils de la famille royale de France se multiplient:

    1752 : mort de Mme Henriette, sa belle-sXur à 25 ans,
    1755 : mort de sa fille aînée, Marie-Zéphyrine à 5 ans,
    1757 : mort de sa mère et pillage de la Saxe(cf ci-desssus).Louis XV victime d'un attentat, survivra,
    1759 : mort de Mme Elisabeth, duchesse de Parme, sXur jumelle d'Henriette,
    1761 : mort de son fils aîné,
    1763 : mort de son père, le roi Auguste III de Pologne et de sa nièce Isabelle de Parme à 22 ans, sa nièce, élevée à Versailles.Aînée des petits enfants du roi, elle avait épousé le futur Empereur Joseph II,
    1764 : mort de la marquise de Pompadour,
    1765 : mort de son époux le dauphin Louis-Ferdinand à 36 ans de tuberculose et de son beau-frère, Philippe Ier, duc de Parme,
    1766 : mort accidentelle du roi Stanislas Leszczynski, son grand père par alliance.

    Victime de l'Amour
    Marie-Josèphe ne se remit jamais de la mort du dauphin qu'elle avait soigné elle-même jusqu'à la fin. Elle contracta son mal et mourut de tuberculose en 1767, âgée de 36 ans, laissant orphelins ses enfants aux tragiques destins...

    Récupérée de « http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie-Jos%C3%A8phe_de_Saxe »

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    http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_J%C3%B3zefa_Wettyn_(1731-1767)
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    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duchess_Marie-Jos%C3%A8phe_of_Saxony
    Princess Maria Josepha of Saxony (1731X1767)
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    (Redirected from Duchess Marie-Josèphe of Saxony)
    Jump to: navigation, search
    Maria Josepha of Saxony
    Dauphine of France
    Portrait by Jean-Martial Frédou, 1760
    Spouse Louis-Ferdinand, Dauphin of France
    Detail
    Issue
    Louis XVI of France
    Louis XVIII of France
    Charles X of France
    Clothilde, Queen of Sardinia
    Madame Élisabeth
    Full name
    German: Maria Josepha Carolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria
    French: Marie Josèphe Caroline Eléonore Françoise Xavière
    Father Augustus III of Poland
    Mother Maria Josepha of Austria
    Born 4 November 1731(1731-11-04)
    Dresden Castle, Dresden, Saxony, modern-day Germany
    Died 13 March 1767 (aged 35)
    Palace of Versailles, Versailles, France

    Maria Josepha of Saxony (French: Marie Josèphe de Saxe; 4 November 1731 X 13 March 1767) was a Duchess of Saxony and the Dauphine of France. She became Dauphine at the age of fifteen through her marriage to Louis Ferdinand de France, the son and heir of Louis XV.

    Marie Josèphe was the mother of three kings of France, including the doomed Louis XVI, who died under the guillotine during the French Revolution. Her youngest daughter, Madame Élisabeth, also was beheaded during the Revolution.
    Contents
    [show]

    * 1 Family
    * 2 Marriage negotiations
    * 3 Marie-Josèphe de Saxe
    * 4 Widowhood
    * 5 Issue
    * 6 Ancestry
    * 7 See also
    * 8 Titles, styles, honours and arms
    o 8.1 Titles and styles
    * 9 References
    * 10 Titles

    [edit] Family

    Maria Josepha Carolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria was born on 4 November, 1731 in Dresden Castle to Frederick Augustus II, Prince-Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, and Maria Josepha of Austria, the daughter of Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor. As a daughter of the Electoral Prince, she was a Duchess in Saxony. Her mother was a first cousin of Maria Theresa of Austria, who in turn was the mother of Marie Antoinette, Maria Josepha's future daughter-in-law.

    Maria Josepha was the eighth of fifteen children and the fourth daughter. Her oldest sister Maria Amalia Christina married the future Charles III of Spain in 1738 and had a large family. Her second sister, Maria Margaretha, died in infancy; Maria Anna Sophia became the Electress of Bavaria in 1747. Her eldest surviving brother Frederick Christian became the Elector of Saxony in 1763 and reigned for only 74 days.

    Her younger sisters Maria Christina of Saxony and Maria Kunigunde of Saxony were Princess-abbesses of prestigious religious institutions.
    [edit] Marriage negotiations

    As noted, her oldest sister Maria Amalia had married a Spanish prince, Infante Carlos, in 1738. He was a member of the House of Bourbon. The Dauphin of France had been married to the Infanta Maria Teresa Rafaela of Spain since February 1745. The couple had been very happy together and deeply in love. The Infanta, known as Marie-Thérèse-Raphaëlle in France, died on 22 July 1746 after giving birth to a daughter, the couple's only child, Princess Marie-Thérèse of France. Ferdinand VI of Spain, half-brother of the deceased Marie-Thérèse-Raphaëlle, had offered the Dauphine another Bourbon princess, Infanta Maria Antonietta. Instead, Louis XV and his all-powerful mistress Madame de Pompadour wanted to open up diplomatic channels.

    The marriage between Maria Josepha and the Dauphin of France had first been suggested by Maria Josepha's uncle Maurice de Saxe, an illegitimate son of Maria Josepha's grandfather Augustus II. Louis XV and his mistress, were convinced that the marriage would be advantageous to French foreign affairs. France and Saxony had been on opposing sides in the recent War of the Austrian Succession and thus the marriage between the Saxon princess and the Dauphin of France would form a new alliance between the two nations.

    There was one problem with the suggested bride: Maria Josepha's grandfather Augustus II had dethroned StanisXaw LeszczyXski (then the Duke of Lorraine). StanisXaw was the father of the then Queen of France Maria LeszczyXska. The marriage was said to have humiliated the simple-living Queen, even though the Queen and Dauphine would later get on well.

    Other proposals came from Savoy in the form of Princess Eleonora of Savoy or her sister Princess Maria Luisa of Savoy.[1] Both were refused.

    Despite the disapproval of the Queen, the two were married on 9 February 1747, Maria Josepha of Saxony married Louis Ferdinand de France, Dauphin of France and Fils de France. Her marriage to a Fils de France ("Son of France") allowed Maria Josepha the style of Royal Highness, the right to travel and lodge wherever the king did, as well as the coveted right of dining with him in an armchair in his presence. However in practice, the Dauphine was addressed as Madame la Dauphine, the more traditional French style prevailing at Versailles till the Revolution.
    [edit] Marie-Josèphe de Saxe

    In France the Saxon princess was known as Marie-Josèphe de Saxe.
    Portrait by Jean Marc Nattier, 1751
    Allegory of Maria Josepha and her daughter Marie Zéphyrine, by Charles-Joseph Natoire, c.1751.

    Prior to the marriage, tradition demanded that the bride wear a bracelet which had a picture of her father on it; the Queen seeing the Dauphine asked to see the bracelet. The witty Marie-Josèphe then revealing the bracelet to theQueen showed a portrait of the Queen's father. The Dauphine said that the portrait represented the fact that the Duke of Lorraine was Marie-Josèphe's grandfather by marriage. The Queen and the court were strongly impressed by thetact of this girl of 15 years. The Dauphine was also very close to her father-in-law Louis XV.

    At the time of the marriage, the Dauphin was still grieving for his Spanish wife. This grief was very public on the part of the Dauphin but Marie-Josèphe was praised greatly for her conquering the heart of the Dauphin "bit by bit". Despite Marie-Josèphe being the patient wife, the Dauphin's grief worsened in April 1748 when his only child with the Infanta died at the age of two.

    The Dauphin was deeply affected by the death of Marie-Thérèse, known as Madame Royale, as she was his only link to her deceased mother. Marie-Josèphe, her stepmother, later commissioned a painting (now lost)[2] of the infant to be left over her cradle.

    The new Dauphine was very grateful to Madame de Pompadour for helping arrange her marriage, and always maintained a good relationship with the royal mistress. Although it was an arranged marriage, Marie-Josèphe fell in love with the Dauphin.

    Like her husband, Marie-Josèphe was very devout. Together with Queen Maria LeszczyXska, she formed a counterbalance to the libertine behaviour of her father-in-law and his court. The couple were not fond of the various entertainments held at Versailles every week, preferring to stay in their apartments which can still be seen on the ground floor of Versailles overlooking the Orangerie.

    The couple's first child was a daughter, born in 1750 on the feast day of Saint Zephyrinus and named Marie Zéphyrine. The birth of the Princess, known as Madame Royale, was greeted with much joy by her parents even though Louis XV naturally had been disappointed the child was not a male. This princess died in 1755 without being mourned; in France, a princess had to live at least five years to be formally mourned.[3] Their second child, Louis Joseph Xavierde France, a son born on 15 September 1751, was given the title of duc de Bourgogne, a title traditionally given to the eldest son of the Dauphin of France. Bourgogne was the apple of his parents' eye. His talents appeared early and inspired hope for the future in the hearts of the entire court. He was adored by his older sister Marie Zéphyrine and he adored her too.

    Unfortunately, the royal couple concentrated so much time and energy on this eldest son that their other children suffered from neglect. He died on 22 March 1761 at the age of nine at Versailles after having fallen from a toy horse. He started limping and a tumour began to grow on his hip. This was operated on, but he never recovered the use of his legs. He was buried at the Basilica of St Denis.

    The couple's second son, Xavier de France, duc d'Aquitaine, born in 1753, died a year later. As a result, their third son, Louis Auguste de France, duc de Berry, born on 23 August 1754, became second in line to the French throne after his father. A strong and healthy boy, although very shy, he excelled in his studies and had a strong taste for Latin, history, geography, and astronomy, and became fluent in Italian and English. Louis Auguste would later become King of France being orphaned at the age of 12.

    Thanks to Marie-Josèphe's close relationship with the King and Dauphin, the relationship between father and son soon repaired itself. The Dauphin was at the center of the Dévots, a group of religious-minded men who hoped to gain power when he succeeded to the throne. They were against the way of Louis XV who openly had affairs at court in blatant view of the Queen. Naturally they were not popular with Louis XV.

    Her father-in-law named his loving daughter-in-law la triste Pepe; in 1754 Frederick II of Prussia invaded her native Saxony and that started the Seven Years' War in which France later joined. Saxony was pillaged by Frederick. Then in 1757 her mother died aged 58 in Dresden. Her father would die in 1763.

    Politically reserved, she exerted herself only once, in 1762, in vain, for the preservation of the Society of Jesus in France. The Society had been dissolved by the King on the initiative of the duc de Choiseul and Madame de Pompadour.
    [edit] Widowhood

    The death of her husband, on 20 December, 1765, dealt Marie-Josèphe a devastating blow from which she never recovered, sinking into a deep depression for the rest of her life. Her sisters by marriage, Mesdames Adélaïde, Victoire,and Sophie mourned intensely. The Queen grieved greatly.

    To save her the torment of remaining with bittersweet memories of her dead husband, Louis XV allowed her to move at Versailles from the apartments she had shared with her deceased spouse into the apartments of the late Madame de Pompadour, who had died in 1764. There, he visited her more than he had in the past and discussed with her the possible wedding of her son, the new dauphin. Marie-Josèphe was not pleased with the idea of her eldest son marrying Archduchess Maria Antonia of Austria, the future Marie Antoinette. Their mothers were first cousins, and Marie Antoinette's mother had seized the inheritance of the Habsburg Empire from Marie-Josèphe's mother.

    Soon, her health declined. She died on 13 March 1767 of tuberculosis, and was buried in the royal crypt in Saint-Denis. The marriage of her son Louis Auguste with Maria Antonia was celebrated three years later.
    [edit] Issue
    Name Portrait Lifespan Notes
    Marie Zéphyrine de France
    Madame Royale Marie Zéphirine de France par Nattier.jpg 26 August 1750 -
    1 September 1755 (aged 5) Born at Versailles, she was known as Madame Royale at court; died at Versailles aged 5
    Louis Joseph Xavier de France
    Duke of Burgundy Louis Joseph Xavier of France, Duke of Burgundy.jpg 13 September 1751-
    22 March 1761 (aged 9) Heir of the Dauphin, he died at Versailles aged 9 much to the distress of his family;
    Xavier Marie Joseph de France
    Duke of Aquitaine Grand Royal Coat of Arms of France.svg 8 September 1753 X
    22 February 1754 (aged 0) Born at the Palace of Versailles dying there aged 5 months;
    Louis Auguste de France
    King of France
    Duke of Berry Ludvig XVI av Frankrike porträtterad av AF Callet.jpg 23 August 1754 X
    21 January 1793 (aged 38) Born at Versailles, was later husband of Marie Antoinette and King of France; had issue;
    Louis Stanislas Xavier de France
    King of France
    Count of Provence JoungLouisXVIII.jpg 17 November 1755 X
    16 September 1824 (aged 68) Born at Versailles, he married Princess Marie Josephine Louise of Savoy and had no issue; later King of France;
    Charles Philippe de France
    King of France
    Count of Artois Charles X Roi de France et de Navarre.jpg 9 October 1757 X
    6 November 1836 (aged 79) Born at Versailles, he married Princess Maria Theresa of Savoy and had issue; was later King of France;
    Marie Adélaïde Clotilde Xavière de France
    Queen of Sardinia Madameclotilde.jpg 23 September 1759 X
    7 March 1802 (aged 42) Born at Versailles, she married the future Charles Emmanuel IV of Sardinia and had no issue;
    Élisabeth Philippine Marie Hélène de France
    Madame Élisabeth Madame-elisabeth-2.jpg 3 May 1764 X
    10 May 1794 (aged 30) Born at Versailles, she never married and was executed in the French Revolution aged 30;

    Maria Josepha also had a stillborn son in 1748 and again in 1749. A stillborn daughter in 1752; Stillborn son in 1756. She also miscarried a son in 1762

    See also

    * Nicolay

    [edit] Titles, styles, honours and arms
    [edit] Titles and styles

    * 4 November, 1731 - September, 1733 Her Highness Duchess Maria Josepha of Saxony
    * 9 February 1747 X 20 December 1765 Her Royal Highness the Dauphine of France (Madame la Dauphine [de France])
    * 20 December 1765 X 13 March 1767 Her Royal Highness the Dowager Dauphine of France

    Maria Josepha's father held the title of king of Poland. However, children of Polish kings were explicitly forbidden the use of the title of prince or princess of Poland.
    [edit] References
    Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Marie-Josèphe of Saxony

    1. ^ niece of the Queen of Spain of the same name
    2. ^ MARIE-THÉRÈSE, FILLE AÎNÉE DU DAUPHIN LOUIS-FERDINAND
    3. ^ Spawfourth. Tony, Versailles, New York, 2008, p.200-1

    This page was last modified on 20 July 2010 at 06:54.
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    Marie-Josèphe of Saxony
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Princess Maria Josepha Carolina of Saxony, Dauphine of France, (4 November 1731 X 13 March 1767), was the daughter of Frederick Augustus II, Prince-elector of Saxony and king of Poland, and Maria Josepha of Austria, (1699-1757), the daughter of Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor. She was the mother of three Kings of France, including the doomed Louis XVI, who died under the guillotine during the French Revolution. Her youngest daughter, Madame Élisabeth, also was beheaded during the Revolution.
    On February 9, 1747, Marie-Josèphe married Louis, Dauphin of France, son and heir of Louis XV. For the French prince it was his second marriage. His first wife, Maria Teresa of Spain, had died on July 22, 1746, after giving birthto a daughter, the couple's only child. The marriage came about on the suggestion of Maurice de Saxe, an uncle of the future bride. Louis XV and his mistress, Madame de Pompadour, were convinced that the marriage would be advantageous to French foreign affairs.
    The new Dauphine was very grateful to Madame de Pompadour for helping to arrange her marriage. She was always kind to her afterwards and had a good relationship with the royal mistress. Although an arranged marriage, Marie-Josèphe fell in love with the Dauphin. To a great extent, she was politically reserved and exerted herself in that arena only once, in 1762, in vain, for the preservation of the Society of Jesus in France. The Society had been dissolvedby the King on the iniative of the Duc de Choiseul and Madame de Pompadour. Like her husband, Marie-Josèphe was very devout. Together with Queen Maria LeszczyXska, she formed a counterbalance to the immoral behavior of her father-in-law and his court.

    The couple's first child was a daughter named Marie Zéphyrine who was born in 1750 and died in 1755. Their second child was a son who was born on September 15th, 1751, and received the name Louis Joseph Xavier. He was given the title of Duke of Burgundy|Duc de Bourgogne because Louis XV's father had previously held the same title. The duc became the apple of his parents' eye. His talents appeared early and inspired hope for the future in the hearts of theentire court.
    Unfortunately, though, the royal couple concentrated so much time and energy on this eldest son that their other children suffered from neglect. The Duc de Bourgogne died on March 22, 1761, of tuberculosis. Since the couple's second son, the Duc de Aquitaine, who had been born in 1753, had died one year later, their third son, Louis Auguste, Duc de Berry (future Louis XVI), born on August 23, 1754, became second in line to the French throne after his father.

    The death of her husband on the December 20, 1765, dealt Marie-Josèphe a devastating blow from which she never recovered, sinking into a deep depression for the rest of her life. To save her the torment of remaining with bittersweet memories of her dead husband, Louis XV allowed her to move her apartments at Versailles from those she had shared with her deceased spouse into the apartments of the late Madame de Pompadour, who had died in 1764. There, he visited her more than he had in the past and discussed with her the possible wedding of her son, the new dauphin. Marie-Josèphe was not taken with the idea of her eldest son marrying Archduchess Maria Antonia of Austria. Soon, her health quickly declined. She suffered from the same illness as her late husband, lung tuberculosis. She died on March 13, 1767, and was buried in the royal crypt in Saint-Denis. The marriage of her son with the Austrian archduchess, who became Marie Antoinette, was carried out three years later on May 16, 1770.
    [edit]Marriages and children

    Marie-Josèphe married Louis, Dauphin of France, and they had eight children:
    Marie-Zéphyrine (26 August 1750X1 September 1755).
    Louis, Duc de Bourgogne (13 September 1751X22 March 1761).
    Xavier, Duc de Guyenne (8 September 1753X22 February 1754).
    Louis-Auguste, Duc de Berry, the future king Louis XVI (23 August 1754 X 21 January 1793) (guillotined).
    Louis-Stanislas, Comte de Provence, the future king Louis XVIII (17 November 1755 X 16 September 1824).
    Charles-Philippe, Comte d'Artois, the future king Charles X (9 October 1757 X 6 November 1836).
    Marie-Clotilde (23 September 1759 X 7 March 1802), married King Charles Emmanuel IV of Sardinia, Prince of Piedmont.
    Élisabeth-Philippine (3 May 1764 X 10 May 1794), known as Madame Élisabeth (guillotined).

    Barn:
    1. Stillborn Son de France ble født cirka 1748 , Versailles, Ile-de-France, France; døde cirka 1749, Versailles, Ile-de-France, France; ble begravet cirka 1749.
    2. Marie Zéphyrine de France ble født 26 Aug 1750 , Versailles, Seine-Et-Oise, France; døde 2 Sep 1755, Versailles, Seine-Et-Oise, France; ble begravet cirka 1755, Basilique Saint Denis, Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis, Île-de-France, France .
    3. Louis Joseph Xavier de Bourbon, duc de Bourgogne ble født 13 Sep 1751 , Palace of Versailles, Versailles, France; døde 22 Mar 1761, Palace of Versailles, Versailles, France; ble begravet cirka 1761, Basilique Saint Denis, Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis, Île-de-France, France.
    4. Stillborn Daughter de France ble født cirka 1752 , Versailles, Ile-de-France, France; døde cirka 1752, Versailles, Ile-de-France, France; ble begravet cirka 1752.
    5. Xavier Marie Joseph de Bourbon ble født 8 Sep 1753 , Versailles, Seine-Et-Oise, France; døde 22 Feb 1754, Versailles, Seine-Et-Oise, France; ble begravet 27 Feb 1754, Basilique Saint Denis, Saint-Denis, Seine-Saint-Denis, Île-de-France, France.
    6. 1. Louis XVI Auguste de Bourbon, roi de France ble født 23 Aug 1754 , Château de Versailles; ble døpt cirka 1754 , France - aka Louis Augustus; døde 21 Jan 1793, Paris, France; ble begravet 21 Jan 1815, Basilique Saint-Denis.
    7. Louis XVIII Stanislas Xavier de Bourbon, roi de France et Navarre ble født 17 Nov 1755 , Versailles, France; ble døpt cirka 1755 , Provence - Louis Stanislas Xavier Comte de Provence; døde 16 Sep 1824, Paris, Île-de-France, France; ble begravet cirka 1824, Basilica of St Denis, France.
    8. Stillborn Son de France ble født cirka 1756 , Versailles, Ile-de-France, France; døde cirka 1756, Versailles, Ile-de-France, France; ble begravet cirka 1756.
    9. Charles X Philippe de Bourbon, roi de France et Navarre ble født 9 Okt 1757 , Château de Versailles; ble døpt cirka 1757 , France - House of Bourbon - Count of Artois; døde 6 Nov 1836, Gorizia, Österreich; ble begravet 6 Nov 1836, Monastery of Nova Gorica.
    10. Marie Adelaïde Clotilde Savière Clotilde de France, Queen of Sardinia ble født 23 Sep 1759 , Versailles, Seine-Et-Oise, France; døde 7 Mar 1802, Naples, Campania, Italy; ble begravet cirka 1802, Vicolo Santa Caterina.
    11. Fils de France ble født cirka 1762 , Versailles, Ile-de-France, France; døde cirka 1762, Versailles, Ile-de-France, France; ble begravet cirka 1762.
    12. Elisabeth Philippine Marie Helene de Bourbon ble født 3 Mai 1764 , Versailles, Seine-Et-Oise, France; døde 10 Mai 1794, Guillotined at Paris, Seine, France; ble begravet cirka 1794, Catacombs.


Generasjon: 3

  1. 6.  Friedrich August II von Sachsen, Kurfürst zu Sachsen, Król Polski ble født 17 Okt 1696 , Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR) (sønn av Friedrich August I Xthe StrongX von Sachsen, Elektor og Christiane Eberhardine Eberhardine); døde 5 Okt 1763, Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR).

    Notater:

    {geni:occupation} King of Poland, XXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXX XXXXXX

    {geni:about_me}

    *'''Wikipedia:''' [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustus_III_of_Poland English ]
    [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_III._%28Polen%29 Deutsch ]
    [http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_III_Sas Polski]

    --------------------



    August III. (Polen)

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    August III., gemalt von Pietro Antonio Rotari, 1755

    Bildnis des Kurprinzen August im Harnisch aus dem Jahre 1715, gemalt von Nicolas de Largillière

    Ludwig XIV. von Frankreich empfängt den späteren König von Polen und Kurfürsten von Sachsen, August III. im Schloss Fontainebleau 1714

    August III. von Polen und Sachsen in polnischer Tracht

    August III. von Polen zu Pferde (Stich nach Johann Elias Ridinger)

    Friedrich August von Sachsen als Kurprinz im Harnisch und mit einem Mohr, gemalt von Hyacinthe Rigaud, 1715, Öl auf Leinwand, 250 × 173 cm, Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden

    Friedrich August von Sachsen

    Friedrich August II. (* 17. Oktober 1696 in Dresden; X 5. Oktober 1763 ebenda) war seit 1733 Kurfürst von Sachsen und als August III. auch König von Polen und Großherzog von Litauen. Er führte nach dem Tod seines Vaters, August I. als zweiter wettinischer Herrscher, die Personalunion Sachsen-Polen fort. Der in Polen auch als August der Sachse (August Sas) bekannte Regent gehörte zu den größten Kunstmäzenen seiner Zeit, stürzte jedoch durch die Fortführungder väterlichen Außenpolitik den Kurstaat Sachsen in die Katastrophe des Siebenjährigen Kriegs.

    Inhaltsverzeichnis

    [Anzeigen]

    * 1 Leben

    * 2 Baumaßnahmen in Sachsen

    * 3 Baumaßnahmen in Warschau

    * 4 Nachkommen

    * 5 Trivia

    * 6 Literatur

    * 7 Weblinks

    Leben [Bearbeiten]

    Gewöhnlich wird vom Sohn Augusts des Starken und der Christiane Eberhardine von Brandenburg-Bayreuth behauptet, dass er sich wenig um Politik gekümmert hätte. Solche Probleme hätten ihn überfordert. Betont wird, dass er gern Jagden veranstaltete, häufig in die Oper ging, sich um seine umfangreichen Kunstsammlungen kümmerte sowie großen Familiensinn bewies. Auch wenn dies nicht in Zweifel gezogen werden soll, zeigt die neuere polnische Forschung, dass August III. ein sehr fleißiger polnischer König gewesen ist (siehe die Veröffentlichungen von Jacek Staszewski).

    Der Kurfürst wurde mit Unterstützung Österreichs und Russlands und den üblichen Bestechungen gegen den Kandidaten Schwedens und Frankreichs, StanisXaw LeszczyXski, zum König von Polen gewählt, was den Polnischen Thronfolgekrieg auslöste. August III. wurde am 17. Januar 1734 gekrönt und behauptete die Krone im Frieden von Wien 1738. Seine Durchsetzung fand also im Rahmen eines deutlichen Souveränitätsverlusts Polen-Litauens statt, das einst einer der mächtigsten Staaten gewesen war.

    Die Spielräume für seine Regierung in Polen-Litauen waren angesichts des Streits zwischen den Magnatengruppen der Czartoryski und Potocki im Sejm äußerst eng. Die Magnatenparteiungen genossen ihrerseits ausländische Unterstützung, so dass Polen-Litauen zum Spielball rivalisierender Nachbarmächte wurde. Fast alle Reichstage blieben ergebnislos (vergleiche Liberum Veto). Ein Beispiel waren die Reichstage von 1744 und 1746, in denen die Krone und der Großkanzler vorsichtig definierte Reformen im Wirtschafts- und Militärsektor auf den Weg bringen wollten. Sie waren jedoch außerstande, die verfeindeten Magnatenparteien überhaupt an einen Tisch zu bringen. Letztlich scheiterten sie im Sejm, unter ausländischer Einmischung. Ohne ordnungsgemäß abgehaltene Sejms mussten die Minister auch keine Rechenschaft ablegen, was die Korruption förderte.

    Angesichts dieser Sachlage hofften sich der König und sein Premierminister Brühl in Polen mit dem XMinisterialsystemX sachsentreuer Magnaten (die in Schlüsselpositionen gesetzt wurden) über Wasser zu halten und beide Länder politisch verbinden zu können. Sie erlangten im Siebenjährigen Krieg sogar die Zustimmung ihrer drei Verbündeten für eine erneute Thronkandidatur Sachsens, aber die Erfolge waren nur scheinbar und nicht von Dauer.

    Ein bescheidener Wirtschaftsaufschwung war in Polen weiterhin bemerkbar, später beeinträchtigt durch die Auswirkungen des Siebenjährigen Krieges (preußische Münzfälschung, Kontributionen, Requisitionen und teilweise Plünderungen durch russische Truppen).

    In Sachsen führte Heinrich von Brühl nach dem Sturz Graf Sulkowskis von 1738 bis 1756 die alleinige Regierung, 1746 wurde er formell Premierminister. Er war ein erfolgreicher Diplomat und festigte die Verwaltung, wurde aber wegenfalscher Finanzpolitik im Landtag 1749 scharf angegriffen. Trotz rücksichtsloser finanzieller Maßnahmen Brühls steuerte Sachsen in eine Staatskrise. Der Zwangsumtausch von Vermögenswerten in staatliche Schuldverschreibungen erschütterte die Wirtschaft, die ohnehin zu kleine Armee musste abgerüstet und ein bedeutender Anteil der Steuern verpfändet werden. Dazu kam der Druck von außen, denn der sächsische Export wurde durch die preußische (Zoll-)Politik jener Zeit stark behindert.

    Aber erst der Siebenjährige Krieg brachte für Sachsen 1756 den Absturz. Die zu kleine sächsische Armee kapitulierte unter Graf Rutowski kampflos am Lilienstein, August III. und sein Hof zogen nach Warschau um, wo sie bis zum Endedes Krieges in relativer politischer Ohnmacht verblieben. Sachsen, nun behelfsweise von den Preußen und von einigen Kabinettsministern verwaltet, wurde zum Kriegsschauplatz und litt unter den hohen Kontributionen beider Seiten. Es bezahlte zweifellos einen großen Teil der preußischen Kriegskosten (XSachsen ist wie ein Mehlsack, egal wie oft man draufschlägt, es kommt immer noch etwas heraus.X Zitat: Friedrich II. v. Preußen zugeschrieben). Dresden selbst wechselte die Besatzung und wurde von Friedrich II. 1760 belagert, was umfangreiche Zerstörungen zur Folge hatte.

    Als der Siebenjährige Krieg im Hubertusburger Frieden 1763 zu Ende ging, war das bis dahin recht wohlhabende Sachsen ruiniert, was der Hof nur ungern zur Kenntnis nahm. Auf die Vergabe der polnischen Krone hatte Sachsen zudem keinerlei Einfluss: Polen-Litauen war mehr denn je unter die Vorherrschaft Russlands geraten; den Nachfolger August III., StanisXaw August Poniatowski, bestimmte die Zarin Katharina II. Dauerhafteren Nachruhm bescherte jedoch dem Kurfürst-König seine eingangs erwähnte Liebe zur Kunst.

    Baumaßnahmen in Sachsen [Bearbeiten]

    * Schloss Hubertusburg

    * Katholische Hofkirche, Dresden

    * Spitzhaus in Radebeul 1749 nach Plänen von Matthäus Daniel Pöppelmann

    Baumaßnahmen in Warschau [Bearbeiten]

    * Sächsisches Palais (zerstört 1944)

    * Brühlsches Palais (zerstört 1944)

    Nachkommen [Bearbeiten]

    Am 20. August 1719 heiratete er in Wien

    * Maria Josefa Benedikta Antonia Theresia Xaveria Philippine (1699X1757), Erzherzogin von Österreich. Sie hatten gemeinsam folgende fünfzehn Kinder, von denen elf das Kindesalter überlebten:

    o Friedrich August Franz Xaver (* 18. November 1720 in Dresden; X 22. Januar 1721 ebd.), Königlicher Prinz von Polen und Kurprinz von Sachsen

    o Joseph August Wilhelm Friedrich Franz Xaver Johann Nepomuk (* 24. Oktober 1721 in Pillnitz; X 14. März 1728 in Dresden), Königlicher Prinz von Polen und Kurprinz von Sachsen

    o Friedrich Christian Leopold Johann Georg Franz Xaver (1722X1763), Königlicher Prinz von Polen und Kurfürst von Sachsen

    o totgeborene Tochter (*/X 23. Juni 1723 in Dresden)

    o Maria Amalia Christina Franziska Xaveria Flora Walburga (1724X1760), Königliche Prinzessin von Polen und Prinzessin von Sachsen X Karl, Herzog von Parma und Piacenza, König von Spanien, Neapel und Sizilien

    o Maria Margareta Franziska Xaveria (* 13. September 1727 in Dresden; X 1. Februar 1734 ebd.), Königliche Prinzessin von Polen und Prinzessin von Sachsen

    o Maria Anna Sophie Sabina Angela Franziska Xaveria (1728X1797), Königliche Prinzessin von Polen und Prinzessin von Sachsen X Maximilian III. Joseph, Kurfürst von Bayern

    o Franz Xaver Albert August Ludwig Benno (1730X1806), Königlicher Prinz von Polen und Prinz von Sachsen, Graf von der Lausitz, Administrator von Sachsen

    o Maria Josepha Karolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria (1731X1767), Königliche Prinzessin von Polen und Prinzessin von Sachsen X Ludwig Ferdinand, Dauphin von Frankreich

    o Karl Christian Joseph Ignaz Eugen Franz Xaver (1733X1796), Königlicher Prinz von Polen und Prinz von Sachsen, Herzog von Kurland und Semgallen

    o Maria Christina Anna Theresia Salomea Eulalia Franziska Xaveria (1735X1782), Königliche Prinzessin von Polen und Prinzessin von Sachsen, Sternkreuzordensdame und Fürstäbtissin in Remiremont

    o Maria Elisabeth Apollonia Kasimira Franziska Xaveria (* 9. Februar 1736 in Warschau; X 24. Dezember 1818 in Dresden), Prinzessin von Polen und Sachsen, Sternkreuzordensdame

    o Albert Kasimir August Ignaz Pius Franz Xaver (1738X1822), Königlicher Prinz von Polen, Prinz von Sachsen, Herzog von Teschen und Generalstatthalter der Österreichischen Niederlande

    o Clemens Wenceslaus August Hubertus Franz Xaver (1739X1812), Königlicher Prinz von Polen und Prinz von Sachsen, Domherr zu Köln, Propst von St. Johann und Ellwangen, Fürstbischof von Freising, Regensburg und Augsburg, Kurfürst und Erzbischof von Trier

    o Maria Kunigunde Dorothea Hedwig Franziska Xaveria Florentina (1740X1826), Königliche Prinzessin von Polen und Prinzessin von Sachsen, Sternkreuzordensdame, Kanonisse zu Münsterbilsen, Fürstäbtissin von Thorn und Essen

    Trivia [Bearbeiten]

    In der Filmreihe Sachsens Glanz und Preußens Gloria wurde er vom Schauspieler Rolf Hoppe verkörpert.

    Literatur [Bearbeiten]

    * Jacek Staszewski: August III. Kurfürst von Sachsen und König von Polen. Akademie-Verlag, Berlin 1996, ISBN 3-05-002600-6

    * Thomas Niklas: Friedrich August II (1733-1763) und Friedrich Christian (1763). In: Frank-Lothar Kroll (Hrsg.): Die Herrscher Sachsens Markgrafen, Kurfürsten, Könige 1089 - 1918. C. H. Beck, München 2005, ISBN 3-406-52206-8,S. 192X222.

    * Ariane James-Sarazin, « Hyacinthe Rigaud (1659-1743), portraitiste et conseiller artistique des princes Électeurs de Saxe et rois de Pologne, Auguste II et Auguste III », dans catalogue de lXexposition Dresde ou le rêve desprinces, la Galerie de peintures au XVIIIe siècle, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Dijon, Paris, RMN, 2001, p. 136-142.

    * Heinrich Theodor Flathe: Friedrich August II.. In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Band 7. Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1877, S. 784X786.

    Weblinks [Bearbeiten]

    *

    Commons Commons: August III. (Polen) X Sammlung von Bildern und/oder Videos und Audiodateien

    * Literatur von und über August III. (Polen) im Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek (Datensatz zu August III. (Polen) X PICA-Datensatz X Apper-Personensuche)

    * Biographie über August III. (Polen)



    Vorgänger

    Friedrich August I.

    Kurfürst von Sachsen

    1733X1763 Nachfolger

    Friedrich Christian

    Vorgänger

    August II. und Stanislaus I. (als Gegenkönig)

    König von Polen und

    Großherzog von Litauen

    1733/36X1763 Nachfolger

    Stanislaus II.

    Normdaten: PND: 118505092 X weitere Informationen | LCCN: n85330554 | VIAF: 35247491

    Diese Seite wurde zuletzt am 24. Mai 2010 um 10:50 Uhr geändert.

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    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustus_III_of_Poland

    Augustus III of Poland

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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    Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2010)

    Augustus III

    (Frederick Augustus II)

    King of Poland; Elector of Saxony

    King of Poland

    Reign 1734 X 5 October 1763

    Predecessor StanisXaw LeszczyXski

    Successor StanisXaw August Poniatowski

    Elector of Saxony

    Predecessor Frederick Augustus I

    Successor Frederick Christian

    Spouse Maria Josepha of Austria

    More

    Issue

    Frederick Christian, Elector of Saxony

    Maria Amalia, Queen of Spain

    Maria Anna Sophia, Electress of Bavaria

    Prince Franz Xavier

    Maria Josepha, Dauphine of France

    Carl, Duke of Courland

    Maria Christina, Princess-Abbess of Remiremont

    Albert, Duke of Teschen

    Clemens Wenceslaus, Archbishop of Trier

    Princess Maria Kunigunde, Princess-Abbess of Thorn and Essen

    House House of Wettin

    Father Augustus II the Strong

    Mother Christiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth

    Born 17 October 1696

    Dresden, Saxony, Germany

    Died 5 October 1763

    Dresden, Saxony, Germany

    Burial Dresden, family vault at Katholische Hofkirche

    Signature

    Coat of arms of PolishXLithuanian Commonwealth during the reign of House of Wettin

    Augustus III, known as the Saxon Polish: August III Sas; German: August III. von Polen; also Prince-elector Friedrich August II (Dresden, 17 October 1696 X 5 October 1763 in Dresden) was the Elector of Saxony in 1733-1763, as Frederick Augustus II (German: Kurfürst Friedrich August II.), King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania in 1734-1763.

    Contents

    [show]

    * 1 Biography

    * 2 Marriage and children

    * 3 Royal titles

    * 4 Ancestry

    * 5 Construction work at castles

    * 6 See also

    * 7 References

    [edit] Biography

    Augustus was the only legitimate son of Augustus II the Strong, Imperial Prince-Elector of Saxony and monarch of the PolishXLithuanian Commonwealth, by his wife, Christiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth. He was groomed to succeed his father as King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, and thus in 1721, converted to Catholicism.

    After his father's death, he inherited Saxony and was elected King of Poland, with the support of Russian and Austrian military forces in the War of the Polish Succession (1733-1738). As King, Augustus III was uninterested in theaffairs of his Polish-Lithuanian dominion, focusing on interests like hunting, opera and collecting paintings (see Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister). During his 30-year reign, he spent less than a total of three years in Poland, wherethe struggle between the House of Czartoryski and the Potocki paralysed the Sejm (Liberum Veto), fostering internal political anarchy and further weakening the PolishXLithuanian Commonwealth. Augustus III delegated most of his powers and responsibilities to Heinrich von Brühl, who became quasi-dictator of Poland.

    The thirty years of Augustus III's reign saw the Seven Years' War (1754 and 1756X1763) among them.

    His eldest surviving son, Frederick Christian, eventually succeeded his father as Elector of Saxony, but not as King of Poland. It was StanisXaw August Poniatowski, who was elected King of the PolishXLithuanian Commonwealth, after a coup d'état by the House of Czartoryski, supported by Russian troops on 7 September 1764.

    [edit] Marriage and children

    In Dresden on 20 August 1719, Augustus married the Archduchess, Maria Josepha of Austria, daughter of Joseph I, the Holy Roman Emperor. They had fifteen children:

    * Frederick Augustus Franz Xavier (b. Dresden, 18 November 1720 - d. Dresden, 22 January 1721).

    * Joseph Augustus Wilhelm Frederick Franz Xavier Johann Nepomuk (b. Pillnitz, 24 October 1721 - d. Dresden, 14 March 1728).

    * Frederick Christian Leopold Johann Georg Franz Xavier (b. Dresden, 5 September 1722 - d. Dresden, 17 December 1763), successor to his father as Elector of Saxony.

    * Stillborn daughter (Dresden, 23 June 1723).

    * Maria Amalia Christina Franziska Xaveria Flora Walburga (b. Dresden, 24 November 1724 - d. Buen Retiro, 27 September 1760); married on 19 June 1738 to Charles VII, King of Naples, later King Charles III of Spain.

    * Maria Margaretha Franziska Xaveria (b. Dresden, 13 September 1727 - d. Dresden, 1 February 1734).

    * Maria Anna Sophie Sabina Angela Franziska Xaveria (b. Dresden, 29 August 1728 - d. Munich, 17 February 1797); married on 9 August 1747 to Maximilian III Joseph, Elector of Bavaria.

    * Franz Xavier Albert August Ludwig Benno (b. Dresden, 25 August 1730 - d. Dresden, 21 June 1806), Regent of Saxony (1763-1768).

    * Maria Josepha Karolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria (b. Dresden, 4 November 1731 - d. Versailles, 13 March 1767); married on 9 February 1747 to Louis, Dauphin of France (1729X1765), son of Louis XV of France (she was the mother of Kings Louis XVI, Louis XVIII and Charles X) of France.

    * Karl Christian Joseph Ignaz Eugen Franz Xavier (b. Dresden, 13 July 1733 - d. Dresden, 16 June 1796), Duke of Courland and Zemgale (1758-1763).

    * Maria Christina Anna Teresia Salomea Eulalia Franziska Xaveria (b. Warsaw, 12 February 1735 - d. Brumath, 19 November 1782), Princess-Abbess of Remiremont. [1]

    * Maria Elisabeth Apollonia Casimira Francisca Xaveria (b. Warsaw, 9 February 1736 - d. Dresden, 24 December 1818). [2]

    * Albert Kasimir August Ignaz Pius Franz Xavier (b. Moritzburg, near Dresden, 11 July 1738 - d. Vienna, 10 February 1822), Duke of Teschen and Governor of the Austrian Netherlands (1781-1793).

    * Clemens Wenceslaus August Hubertus Franz Xavier (b. Schloss Hubertusburg, Wermsdorf, 28 September 1739 - d. Marktoberdorf, Allgäu, 27 July 1812), Archbishop of Trier.

    * Maria Kunigunde Dorothea Hedwig Franziska Xaveria Florentina (b. Warsaw, 10 November 1740 - d. Dresden, 8 April 1826), Princess-Abbess of Thorn and Essen; nearly married Louis Philippe II, Duke of Orléans; Philippe Égalité.

    [edit] Royal titles

    * Royal titles in Latin: Augustus tertius, Dei gratia rex Poloniae, magnus dux Lithuaniæ, Russiæ, Prussiæ, Masoviæ, Samogitiæ, Kijoviæ, Volhiniæ, Podoliæ, Podlachiæ, Livoniæ, Smolensciæ, Severiæ, Czerniechoviæque, nec non hæreditarius dux Saxoniæ et princeps elector. [3]

    * English translation: August III, by the grace of God, King of Poland, Grand Duke of Lithuania, Ruthenia (i.e. Galicia), Prussia, Masovia, Samogitia, Kiev, Volhynia, Podolia, Podlachia, Livonia, Smolensk, Severia, Chernihiv,and also hereditary Duke of Saxony and Prince-elector.

    Construction work at castles

    * Hubertusburg

    * Katholische Hofkirche, Dresden

    * Saxon Palace, Warsaw (destroyed 1944)

    * Brühl Palace, Warsaw (destroyed 1944)

    [edit] See also

    * History of Poland (1569X1795)

    * Mass in B Minor

    This page was last modified on 3 July 2010 at 11:28.

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    Augustus III of Poland

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Augustus III (Augustus III the Saxon or the Corpulent; German: August III. von Polen; Polish: August III Sas, August III Gruby; b. Dresden, 17 October 1696 - d. Dresden, 5 October 1763) was the Elector of Saxony in 1733-1763 (as Frederick Augustus II (German: Kurfürst Friedrich August II.) and also King of Poland in 1734-1763.

    Royal titles

    Royal titles in Latin: Augustus III, Dei Gratia rex Poloniae, magnus dux Lithuaniae, Russie, Prussiae, Masoviae, Samogitiae, Kijoviae, Volhyniae, Podoliae, Podlachiae, Livoniae, Smolensciae, Severiae, Czerniechoviae, nec non haereditarius dux Saxoniae princeps et elector etc.

    English translation: August III, by the grace of God, King of Poland, Grand Duke of Lithuania, Ruthenia (i.e. Galicia), Prussia, Masovia, Samogitia, Kyiv, Volhynia, Podolia, Podlachia, Livonia, Smolensk, Severia, Chernihiv, and also hereditary Duke of Saxony, prince and Elector, etc.

    Biography

    Augustus was the only legitimate son of Augustus II the Strong, Imperial Prince-Elector of Saxony and King of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, by his wife, Christiane Eberhardine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth. He was groomed to succeed his father as King of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and thus in 1721 converted to Catholicism.

    After his father's death, he inherited Saxony and was elected King of Poland with the support of Russian and Austrian military forces in the War of the Polish Succession (1733-1738).

    As King, August III was uninterested in the affairs of his Polish-Lithuanian dominion, focussing on interests like hunting, opera, and collecting paintings (see Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister). During his 30-year reign, he spent less than a total of three years in Poland, where the struggle between the Czartoryski and the Potocki paralysed the Sejm (Liberum Veto), fostering internal political anarchy and further weakening the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. August delegated most of his powers and responsibilities to Heinrich, Count von Brühl, who became quasi-dictator of Poland.

    The thirty years of August III's reign saw the Seven Years' War (1754 and 1756X1763), and neighboring Prussia, Austria, and Russia refined their plans to partition the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth among them.

    His eldest surviving son, Frederick Christian, eventually succeeded his father as Elector of Saxony, but not as King of Poland. It was StanisXaw August Poniatowski who was elected King of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth after a coup d'état by the Czartoryski Familia X supported by Russian troops X on September 7, 1764.

    [edit]Marriage and children

    In Dresden on 20 August 1719, Augustus married with the Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria, daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Joseph I. They had fifteen children:

    Frederick Augustus Franz Xavier (b. Dresden, 18 November 1720 - d. Dresden, 22 January 1721).

    Joseph Augustus Wilhelm Frederick Franz Xavier Johann Nepomuk (b. Pillnitz, 24 October 1721 - d. Dresden, 14 March 1728).

    Frederick Christian Leopold Johann Georg Franz Xaver (b. Dresden, 5 September 1722 - d. Dresden, 17 December 1763), succesor of his father as Elector of Saxony.

    Stillborn daughter (Dresden, 23 June 1723).

    Maria Amalia Christina Franziska Xaveria Flora Walburga (b. Dresden, 24 November 1724 - d. Buen Retiro, 27 September 1760); married on 19 June 1738 to Charles VII, King of Naples, later King Charles III of Spain.

    Maria Margaretha Franziska Xaveria (b. Dresden, 13 September 1727 - d. Dresden, 1 February 1734).

    Maria Anna Sophie Sabina Angela Franziska Xaveria (b. Dresden, 29 August 1728 - d. Munich, 17 February 1797); married on 9 August 1747 to Maximilian III, Elector of Bavaria.

    Franz Xavier Albert August Ludwig Benno (b. Dresden, 25 August 1730 - d. Dresden, 21 June 1806), Regent of Saxony (1763-1768).

    Maria Josepha Karolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria (b. Dresden, 4 November 1731 - d. Versailles, 13 March 1767); married on 9 February 1747 to the Dauphin Louis, son of King Louis XV of France (she was the mother of King Louis XVIof France).

    Karl Christian Joseph Ignaz Eugen Franz Xaver (b. Dresden, 13 July 1733 - d. Dresden, 16 June 1796), Duke of Courland and Semigallia (1758-1763).

    Maria Christina Anna Teresia Salomea Eulalia Franziska Xaveria (b. Warsaw, 12 February 1735 - d. Brumath, 19 November 1782), Princess-Abbess of Remiremont. [1]

    Maria Elisabeth Apollonia Casimira Francisca Xaveria (b. Warsaw, 9 February 1736 - d. Dresden, 24 December 1818). [2]

    Albert Kasimir Augustus Ignaz Pius Franz Xavier (b. Moritzburg, near Dresden, 11 July 1738 - d. Vienna, 10 February 1822), Duke of Teschen and Governor of the Austrian Netherlands (1781-1793).

    Clemens Wenceslaus August Hubertum Franz Xavier (b. Schloss Hubertusburg, Wermsdorf, 28 September 1739 - d. Marktoberdorf, Allgäu, 27 July 1812), Archbishop-Elector of Trier.

    Maria Kunigunde Dorothea Hedwig Franziska Xaveria Florentina (b. Warsaw, 10 November 1740 - d. Dresden, 8 April 1826), Princess-Abbess of Thorn and Essen.

    Friedrich giftet seg med Maria Josepha of Austria, Queen consort of Poland 20 Aug 1719, Vienna, Austria. Maria ble født 8 Des 1699 , Vienna, Austria; døde 17 Nov 1757, Dresden, Germany; ble begravet , Catholic Court Church, Dresden, Germany. [Gruppeskjema] [Familiediagram]


  2. 7.  Maria Josepha of Austria, Queen consort of Poland ble født 8 Des 1699 , Vienna, Austria; døde 17 Nov 1757, Dresden, Germany; ble begravet , Catholic Court Church, Dresden, Germany.

    Notater:

    {geni:about_me} http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_Josepha_of_Austria

    http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_J%C3%B3zefa_Habsbur%C5%BCanka

    http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_Josepha_von_%C3%96sterreich_%281699%E2%80%931757%29

    http://www.geneall.net/D/per_page.php?id=4803

    Barn:
    1. Duke Friedrich of Sachsen ble født 18 Nov 1720 , Dresden, Sachsen; døde 22 Jan 1721, Dresden, Sachsen.
    2. Duke Joseph of Sachsen ble født 24 Okt 1721 , Pillnitz, Sachsen; døde 14 Mar 1728, Dresden, Sachsen.
    3. Friedrich Christian von Sachsen, Kurfüst ble født 5 Sep 1722 , Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland (HRR); ble døpt , Dresden; døde 17 Des 1763, Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR); ble begravet , Katholische Hofkirche.
    4. Maria Amalia Christina Franziska Xaveria Flora Walburga von Sachsen, Königin von Spanien ble født 24 Nov 1724 , Dresden, Saxony, Germany; døde 27 Sep 1760, Madrid, España; ble begravet 27 Sep 1760, El Escorial.
    5. Princess Maria of Sachsen ble født 13 Sep 1727 , Dresden, Sachsen; døde 1 Feb 1734, Dresden, Sachsen.
    6. Anna Sophie Sabina Angela Franziska Xaveria Wettin ble født 29 Aug 1728 , Dresden, Saxony, Germany; døde 17 Feb 1797, Munich, Bavaria.
    7. Franz Xavier Wettin ble født 25 Aug 1730 , Dresden, Saxony, Germany; døde 21 Jun 1806, Dresden, Saxony, Germany.
    8. 3. Maria Josepha Karolina Eleonore Franziska Xaveria von Sachsen ble født 4 Nov 1731 , Dresden, Dresden, Saxony, Germany; døde 13 Mar 1767, Versailles, Yvelines, Île-de-France, France; ble begravet cirka 1767, Basilique de Saint Denis.
    9. Karl Christian Wettin ble født 13 Jul 1733 , Dresden, Saxony, Germany; døde 16 Jun 1796, Dresden, Saxony, Germany; ble begravet , Dresden, Sachsen, Tyskland.
    10. Princess Maria of Wettin ble født 12 Feb 1735 , Warsaw, Poland; døde 19 Nov 1782, Brumath.
    11. Albert Kasimir August Ignaz Pius Franz Xaver von Sachsen, Herzog zu Sachsen-Teschen ble født 11 Jul 1738 , Schloss Moritzburg; ble døpt , Saxe-Teschen - aka Albrecht Kasimir; døde 10 Feb 1822, Wien, Österreich; ble begravet , Imperialcrypt von Stephansdom.
    12. Clemens Wenceslaus Wettin ble født 28 Sep 1739 , Hubertsburg; døde 27 Jul 1812, Oberndorf.
    13. Maria Kunigunde Wettin ble født 10 Nov 1740 , Warsaw, Poland; døde 8 Apr 1826, Dresden, Sachsen.


Generasjon: 4

  1. 12.  Friedrich August I Xthe StrongX von Sachsen, Elektor ble født 12 Mai 1670 , Dresden, Sachsen, Germany; ble døpt , Wettin - House from Saxony (sønn av Johann Georg III von Sachsen, Kurfürst og Anna Sophie Oldenburg, Kurfürstin zu Sachsen); døde 1 Feb 1733, Warszawa, Mazowieckie, Poland; ble begravet cirka 1733.

    Notater:

    {geni:about_me} *Knight in the Order of the Golden Fleece
    *August der Starke/August the Strong
    *August Mocny


    ==Links:==

    *[http://thepeerage.com/p11152.htm#i111511 The Peerage]
    *[http://www.geneall.net/D/per_page.php?id=4461 Geneall]
    *[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustus_II_the_Strong Wikipedia]
    *'''Elector of Saxony:''' Reign 27 April 1694 X 1 February 1733
    >'''Predecessor:''' [http://www.geni.com/people/John-George-IV-Elector-of-Saxony/6000000001469968240 John George IV] '''Successor:''' [http://www.geni.com/people/Auguste-III/5318646737330089414 Frederick Augustus II]
    *'''King of Poland:''' Reign 15 September 1697X1706 Coronation: 15 September 1697 Wawel Cathedral, Kraków, Poland
    >'''Predecessor:''' [http://www.geni.com/people/John-III-Sobieski-King-of-Poland/6000000002842160255 John III] '''Successor:''' [http://www.geni.com/people/Stanis%C5%82aw-Leszczy%C5%84ski-king-of-Poland/6000000000845147888 StanisXaw I]
    *'''King of Poland:''' Reign 1709 X 1 February 1733
    >'''Predecessor:''' [http://www.geni.com/people/Stanis%C5%82aw-Leszczy%C5%84ski-king-of-Poland/6000000000845147888 StanisXaw I] '''Successor:''' [http://www.geni.com/people/Stanis%C5%82aw-Leszczy%C5%84ski-king-of-Poland/6000000000845147888 StanisXaw I]

    Friedrich giftet seg med Christiane Eberhardine Eberhardine 20 Jan 1693, Bayreuth, Oberfranken, Bayern, Germany. Christiane (datter av Christian Ernst von Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Markgraf og Sophie Luise Württemberg, Markgräfin zu Brandenburg-Bayreuth) ble født 19 Des 1671 , Bayreuth, Oberfranken, Bayern, Germany; døde 4 Sep 1727, Pretzsch (Elbe); ble begravet , Queen Consort. [Gruppeskjema] [Familiediagram]


  2. 13.  Christiane Eberhardine Eberhardine ble født 19 Des 1671 , Bayreuth, Oberfranken, Bayern, Germany (datter av Christian Ernst von Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Markgraf og Sophie Luise Württemberg, Markgräfin zu Brandenburg-Bayreuth); døde 4 Sep 1727, Pretzsch (Elbe); ble begravet , Queen Consort.

    Notater:

    {geni:occupation} Electress of Saxony from 1694 to 1727 (her death) and titular, Queen of the PolishXLithuanian Commonwealth from 1697 to 1727

    {geni:about_me} http://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krystyna_Eberhardyna_Hohenzollern%C3%B3wna

    Barn:
    1. 6. Friedrich August II von Sachsen, Kurfürst zu Sachsen, Król Polski ble født 17 Okt 1696 , Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR); døde 5 Okt 1763, Dresden, Sachsen, Deutschland(HRR).
    2. Maria Amalia ble født 24 Nov 1724 , Dresden, Saxony, Germany; døde 27 Sep 1760, Madrid, Spain.