MARIE JOSEPHINE LOUISE OF SAVOY
'Marie Josephine Louise of Savoy' (2 September, 1753 - 13 November, 1810), titular Queen consort of France, wife of Louis XVIII of France, princess of Sardinia and of Piedmont, was born in Turin and died at Hartwell House, English residence of the exiled French Royal family.
==Princess of the House of Savoy==
'Maria Giuseppina Luigia', as she is called in Italian, was the third child and second daughter of Victor Amadeus III of Sardinia and his Queen consort Maria Antonieta Fernanda of Bourbon, Infanta of Spain.
Her paternal grandparents were Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia and his wife Polixena Christina of Hesse-Rotenburg. Polixena was a daughter of Ernest Leopold, Landgrave of Hesse-Rotenburg.
Her maternal grandparents were Philip V of Spain and his second wife, Elizabeth Farnese.
Her sister, Maria Teresa, married Charles X of France, Marie Josephine's brother-in-law.
She was also a cousin of the ill-fated Princesse de Lamballe who was instrumental in the arrangement of the marriage.
| Contents |
| ''De jure'' Queen of France |
| Death and Burial |
| References |
''De jure'' Queen of France
'Marie Josèphe de Savoie', as this princess is known to French history, married Louis Stanislas Xavier de Bourbon, Count of Provence, the future Louis XVIII on 16 April, 1771 and went with him into exile in the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1791.
There were no children of the marriage. She became pregnant in 1774 and 1781, but both pregnancies ended in miscarriages.
Louis XVII of France, only surviving son of Louis XVI of France and Marie Antoinette, died while imprisoned in the Temple on 8 June, 1795. The Count of Provence was proclaimed King of France as Louis XVIII (16 June, 1795) by the exiled French Court. Thus Marie Josèphe became ''de jure'' Queen consort of France.
Death and Burial
Queen Marie-Josèphe died at Hartwell House but was buried at the Cathedral of Cagliari, capital of Sardinia. There her brother, King Charles Felix of Sardinia, had an imposing monument erected over her grave, whereon she is described personally as "sapiens, prudens, pientissima" and as "''Galliarum Regina''" , literally "Queen of the Gauls", i.e. of France.
References
Fraser, Lady Antonia: ''Marie Antoinette: The Journey''. New York, Doubleday, 2001.
See also: http://geneweb.inria.fr/roglo?lang=en;
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