'Mariana' or 'Maria-Anna of Austria' (
23 December 1634,
Vienna,
Austria -
16 may 1696,
Madrid,
Spain) Queen consort of
Spain as the second wife of her maternal uncle, King
Philip IV. She was the daughter of
Habsburg Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand III and Infanta
Maria Anna of Spain,
Philip's sister.
Mariana was born on
23 December 1634 in
Vienna at the court of her paternal grandfather
Ferdinand II. Her father, who would become Emperor in
1637, was as yet only the
King of Hungary and
Bohemia, and was away for most of his wife's pregnancy campaigning in the
Thirty Years' War.
Mariana was also a younger sister of
Ferdinand IV of Hungary and an older sister of
Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor. As a child, she was engaged to her Spanish Habsburg first cousin
Baltasar Carlos, Prince of Asturias, but when he died at 16 in
1646,
Philip IV was left without a male heir and Maria-Anna without a fiancé. In
1649 the king married his 14-year-old niece himself. Although known for being cheerful as a young girl, after her wedding to her uncle she became cold and bad-tempered.
Philip IV and Mariana had two children who survived infancy:
★
Margaret Theresa of Spain (
12 July,
1651 -
12 March,
1673). Married her maternal uncle
Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor.
★
Charles II of Spain (
6 November,
1661 -
1 November,
1700). Nicknamed ''the Bewitched'', the last Spanish
Habsburg king.
When
Philip IV died on
17 September 1665, their only surviving son,
Charles II of Spain, was only 3 years old, and Mariana served as
Regent until
1675.
Charles, at most times unable to walk or speak, needed a regent more than most child kings, and was carried as an infant in arms until he was 10. Mariana served as his regent for much of his life, except when she was successfully driven from
Madrid by
John of Austria the Younger, an illegitimate son of
Philip IV, in
1677 in a palace revolution, due to widespread dissatisfaction at court because of her support for her advisor
Fernando de Valenzuela. However, she returned to
Madrid upon John's death in
1679. That same year, her son
Charles II married the lovely French princess
Marie Louise of Orleans. Although he was madly in love with her, their marriage remained childless. Ten years later, in
1689,
Marie Louise died under mysterious circumstances and
Charles married again, this time a German princess:
Maria Anna of Neuburg. However, this second marriage was also childless.
Realizing that her son would never have children of his own, Mariana wanted her great-grandson,
Joseph Ferdinand of Bavaria, to become the next King of
Spain. This made her to argue frequently with her second-daughter-in-law,
Maria Anna of Neuburg, who wanted her nephew, Archduke
Charles of Austria, to become the next King of
Spain. After a lot of unpleasant arguments, the Queen Mother stated: "Two suns cannot live in the same sky". Once during an argument between the two royal ladies, the Queen Mother told her: "Learn to live, lady, and know once and for all that people far higher than you have humbled themselves before me, people over whom you have only one advantage, that you are the wife of my son, an honour which you owe to me alone." The hysterical
Maria Anna of Neuburg replied: "That is why I hate you so much!"
Mariana died of breast cancer on the night of
16 May 1696 in
Madrid,
Spain, at the moment when a total eclipse of the moon reached its maximum and the Spanish capital was completely covered in darkness. Soon after her funeral, some miracles begun to be reported. When her coffin was taken out so the crowds could say farewell, a white dove was seen flying around it and finally disappeared into the heavens. Everyone thought it was an omen. A nun who had attended the Queen Mother at the palace begged a garment for remembrance; she slept in it and next morning awoke cured of a life-long paralysis. The British ambassador in
Madrid, Lord Alexander Stanhope, wrote about this subject:
The infamous Countess of Berlips, a German lady living at the Spanish court, wrote the following lines on the subject:
In
1668, a voyage led by
Jesuit missionary San Vitores named the
Mariana Islands in the
North Pacific after the queen regent.
Bibliography
★ CALVO POYATO, José, ''La vida y epoca de Carlos II el Hechizado'' (Barcelona: Editorial Planeta, 1998).
★ CALVO POYATO, José, ''Reinas viudas de España'' (Barcelona: Península, 2002).
★ FISAS, Carlos, ''Historias de las reinas de España: la Casa de Austria'' (Barcelona: Editorial Planeta, 1999).
★ GONZÁLEZ-DORIA, Fernando, ''Las reinas de España'' (Madrid: Bitácora, 1990).
★ MAURA GAMAZO, Gabriel, ''Vida y reinado de Carlos II'' (Madrid: Espasa Calve, 1942).
★ PFANDL, Ludwig, ''Carlos II'' (Madrid: Afrodisio Aguado, 1947).
Links
http://www.xs4all.nl/~kvenjb/madmonarchs/carlos2/carlos2_bio.htm A biography of Charles II of Spain in Joan's Mad Monarchs Series