Archive for the ‘Marie Antoinette Biography’ Category
Marie Antoinette: And The Decline Of French Monarchy
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Gr. 9-12. YAs who associate Marie Antoinette with frivolous excess may be surprised by the positive portrayal in this biography. Divided at age 14 from her Austrian homeland and forced to marry the “awkward, lumbering” heir to the French throne, the young dauphine faced indisputably tough circumstances. Unfortunately, the authors present the queen as the innocent target of a restive public’s ire without consistently offering supporting evidence.
Though the more sympathetic view is widely accepted by modern historians (many of whose own analyses are listed in the concluding bibliography), neglecting to support one’s conclusions and acknowledge surmise where it occurs does a disservice to young readers. Despite imperfections, though, this entry in the new European Queens series provides an engaging point of entry into the history of the French Revolution. Moreover, for YA appeal, it’s hard to beat a historical figure whose story features a controversial diamond necklace, public speculation about the royals’ troubled sex life, and, of course, a tragic, bloody conclusion. Jennifer Mattson
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The Family And Birth of Marie Antionette
The story of Marie Antoinette should rightfully begin with some background on her powerful family.
Maria Theresa, the mother of Marie Antoinette, was born on May 13th, 1717. She was the daughter of the German Emperor Charles VI (1711-1740) and his wife Elizabeth von Braunschweig-WolfenbYttel.
This made Maria Theresa the eldest daughter of the Holy Roman Emperor, which at the time was the most powerful land in eastern Europe.
As of 1711, Emporer Charles VI (Marie Antoinette’s Grandfather) did not have a son to succeed his throne. An old European law, the Salic Law, prohibited a woman from inheriting her father’s kingdom. Concerned that he may not father a son, Charles VI issued a decree in 1713, known as the Pragmatic Sanction. This document guaranteed the right of succession to his daughter, Maria Theresa.
At this time, many of the great powers of Europe agreed to her succession of power, at a price. Upon the death of Charles VI in 1740, however, challenges to the Habsburg lands led to the War of the Austrian Succession.
Empress Maria Theresa was courageous, generous and many say kind. She respected the rights of others and expected others to respect her rights. In the later part of Maria Theresa’s rule, the empress focused more on human concerns, and less on financial and administrative improvements.
Maria Theresa was married to Francis Stephen, Duke of Lorraine. Maria Theresa had 16 children altogether by Francis Stephen. She had 11 daughters (all of whom had the first name “Marie”) and 5 sons surviving to adulthood.
Maria Theresa gave birth to baby Marie Antoinette
The Empress was thirty-eight years old when she gave birth to Marie Antoinette in 1755. She had been married for nearly twenty years and had produced four Archdukes and ten Archduchesses.
By the time Marie Antoinette was born, seven of the ten Archduchesses were living. Maria Theresa looked quite well after giving birth to Marie Antoinette, in a way she had not before.
Emperor Frances Stephen and many courtiers were present to congratulate Maria Theresa on the birth of her fifteenth child. The baby, Archduchess Maria Antonia Josepha Johanna (or Marie Antoinette), was small but healthy. Somehow, Maria Theresa knew beforehand that she was going to have a daughter. The room where Marie Antoinette was born at the Hofburg Palace in Vienna is now the Austrian President’s salon.
Marie Antoinette’s wet nurse
Soon after Marie Antoinette was born, she was handed over to an official wet nurse, called Constance Weber, wife of a magistrate. This is a routine practice since great ladies of that time do not nurse their own children. By being appointed to be Marie Antoinette ’s wet nurse, Constance Weber was to acquired great fortune for her entire family.
Marie Antoinette’s Father
Although Maria Theresa and Francis Stephen loved each other, they did have affairs. Francis Stephen, Marie Antoinette’s father, tended to take ladies from the court to bed, and had a liking to Princess Charlotte, who later retired to a convent and became the Abbess of Remiremont.
Francis Stephen died while attending marriage of his second son Leopold in Innsbruck. Maria Theresa ’s love for Francis Stephen was so deep that it changed her life forever when he died in 1765.
After the death of her husband, Maria Theresa painted her rooms black and wore only black mourning clothes for the rest of her life. She turned her attention towards marrying off her children to strengthen the empire.
Once Francis Stephen died, Marie Antoinette ’s life and her relationship with her mother, Maria Theresa, changed. Maria Theresa became withdrawn and Marie Antoinette saw her mother less and less frequently.
After her husband’s death, Maria Theresa made her son Joseph II co-regent of her Austrian dominions, but she actually kept most of the power to herself, which led to tension between her and her son.
After a long reign of fourty years, Maria Theresa died on November 29, 1780. In the 650 years of Hapsburg reign in Austria, Maria Theresa was the only woman to rule in her own right. She was succeeded by her son, Joseph, who became Emperor Joseph II of the Holy Roman Empire.
Maria Theresia was buried in the Kapuzinergruft in Vienna. Her husband Francis’ tomb is also in the Kapuzinergruft.
Marie-Therese: The Fate of Marie Antoinette’s Daughter
Marie Therese: The Fate of Marie Antoinette’s Daughter
What was the fate of Marie Therese (Marie-Thérèse (1778–1851)) after the beheadings of her parents, King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette of France?
Nagel, professor of humanities at Marymount Manhattan College (Mistress of the Elgin Marbles), relates the dramatic highs and lows experienced by the woman known as Madame Royale. Her uncle, the Austrian emperor, wanted her to marry his brother, when she escaped from the Temple Prison at age 17 after three hellish years. Instead, she endured a loveless and childless marriage to her Bourbon cousin the Duc d’Angoulême, but became the close political ally of their uncle, Louis XVIII, whom she joined in his peripatetic exile and saw in his triumphant return to France in 1814 as king. Marie Thérèse survived the 1830 abdication of her father-in-law, Charles X, and died in exile.
Known for her kindness and wit, she also endured persistent rumors that she was not the real Marie-Thérèse and the constant threat of abduction and assassination. Nagel’s highly detailed and sympathetic account competently fills in historical gaps, but, unfortunately, is hampered by plodding prose. 16 pages of color illus; map. (Apr.)
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Review
Most people who know about the sad end of Queen Marie Antoinette of France also know that she left behind a daugher and a son. The boy died as a result of appalling abuse at the hands of prison guards, but what became of the girl?
Born in 1778, Marie-Thérèse was just 17 when her release from three harrowing years of imprisonment was finally negotiated. Almost immediately, she became a powerful symbol and a political pawn. But Nagel shows her as having a mind of her own as she found refuge at the Austrian court; then she married her cousin and became part of the peripatetic French monarchy-in-exile.
Finally, she helped to preside over the Restoration. Through it all she was an object of fascination, admired for her dignity and her steadfast devotion to the ideals of the ancien régime. The fascination persists even today in the legend of the Dark Countess, according to which the princess switched identities, and the woman the world knew as Marie-Thérèse was an imposter. This highly detailed, exhaustively researched, often-riveting account will appeal especially to all those readers who’ve immersed themselves in the many recent books about Marie Antoinette. –Mary Ellen Quinn
Overview: Why Was Marie Antoinette So Fascinating?
Marie Antoinette was one of history’s most compelling figures, and this blog is intended to explore exactly why we all find her so fascinating.
Was it because she lived and partied like a rock star? Was it because she was thrust into queendom at such a young age and with such an odd husband? Or perhaps it was because we still haven’t decided yet which light to see her in more; the Austrian-born queen that bankrupted France, or the victimized, simple, country girl who was thrust into a situation that none of us would easily handle… And then be beheaded for her way of coping with it.
Whatever it was, we find it a great story, regardless. So let’s begin at the beginning.
Marie Antoinette was born November 2, 1755 in Vienna, Austria, a daughter to the Emperor and Empress of the Holy Roman Empire.
Born into a life of luxury, she preferred the country life as a child and was never prepared for a life of politics or responsibility. Her sudden marriage to Louis XVI was deemed the most spectacular Europe had ever seen. Yet, her story was a tragic one. Within a few years, Marie Antoinette went from the most well known queen of France to the woman who was largely blamed for the French revolution.
Marie Antoinette was the fifteenth child of Francis Stephen I and Maria Theresa, Emperor and Empress of the Holy Roman Empire, which was seated in Austria at the time. Her beauty and appearance may have been overstated, as was her personality and behavior. One thing is clear, however, there were many rumors spread by Marie Antoinette’s enemies.
In future chapters of this Biography category of the blog here, we’ll tell the story of Marie Antoinette from her birth to her dreaded execution. We’ll try to focus on many important people in Marie Antoinette ’s life such as her mother, the Empress Maria Theresa, whom many people pin blame on for Marie Antoinette’s tragedy.
Had Maria Theresa prepared Marie Antoinette more of a how to run a country, things might have turned out quite differently for Marie Antoinette. (Although not as interestingly.)
We discuss Maria Theresa in quite a bit of a detail here on this blog since she had great influence on Marie Antoinette’s life. The treaty of Versailles which Maria Theresa signed also came into play, and will be discussed. The treaty of Versailles marked the event that would changed Marie Antoinette’s life forever.
We will even touch on the subject of the French revolution itself, and a few characters involved such as Madame DuBarry and Axel von Fersen, whom many think had an affair with Marie Antoinette.
So we hope you enjoy our biography on Marie Antoinette; feel free to drop us a line with any questions or corrections as we create it. You can reach us from the about us page anytime.
Marie Antoinette: Princess of Versailles
Marie Antoinette: Princess of Versailles, Austria-France, 1769 (The Royal Diaries)
“I look up now into the oval mirror and see barely a trace of the mud-splattered girl tearing through the woodland on her horse, or the barefoot girl wading at Schonbrunn… I have become what Mama set out for me to be. Majestic. A Dauphine and eventually a Queen.”
So writes the headstrong 13-year-old Maria Antonia–future Queen of France–in her diary on October 23, 1769. In this engrossing addition to the Royal Diaries series (Elizabeth I: Red Rose of the House of Tudor, Cleopatra VII: Daughter of the Nile), Kathryn Lasky invents a diary of the young Marie Antoinette in 1769–the year she is to be married off to Dauphin Louis Auguste, eldest grandson of the French king Louis XV. Arranged marriages were common in that day and age–as the Empress Theresa (of the Holy Roman Empire of the Germanic Nations) sought to consolidate power among nations by marrying off her children. Thus, the future of Austria and France falls upon Maria Antonia’s young shoulders.
To prepare her for this awesome responsibility, she must be trained to write, read, speak French, dress, act… even breathe. Things get even more grim as she is shipped off to the court of Versailles and introduced to her puffy, awkward future husband and confronted with the court’s ridiculous customs. Marie–an opinionated and insightful young woman–mocks the court of “impeccable etiquette and manners” that makes up nasty rhymes about those they hate, but panics when her hair is mussed. Lasky has done an excellent job of creating a very human character in the young Marie Antoinette–one whom young readers will want to learn more about. Fortunately, her story is given plenty of context with an epilogue describing the history of the young Queen after 1769, a historical note offering an 18th-century context, a Habsburg-Bourbon family tree, and various portraits of the royal family. (Ages 9 to 13) –Karin Snelson
From School Library Journal
Grade 5-8-Lasky takes historical fact and weaves it into a sympathetic account of an adolescent Marie Antoinette. Antonia’s diary begins shortly before her politically arranged betrothal and marriage to Louis Auguste, Dauphin of France. It describes her struggles with strange new customs, in particular the elaborate French Court etiquette. The descriptions of Versailles and palace life hold true to fact and fit well into the diary of the Dauphine experiencing her new country. The diary also does a believable job of taking Marie Antoinette from a girl of 13 to a young woman of 15. Antonia goes from playing childhood games to become Marie Antoinette, future queen, playing political games with Madame du Barry. At the conclusion of the novel, an epilogue continues the story to its historical completion. Notes and a family tree are useful for readers who know little of 18th-century royalty and politics. This will be a popular addition for readers who favor the diary format in historical fiction. An excellent companion to this series is Milton Meltzer’s Ten Queens (Dutton, 1998).
Carolyn Janssen, Rockford Public Library, IL
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