Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Joseph Bonaparte (Corte, 1768–Florence, 1844), King of Naples, then King of Spain, married Julie Clary, sister of Napoleon's childhood sweetheart, Désirée, who was to become the wife of General Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte (later Charles XIV, King of Sweden) Julie Joséphine Bonaparte (1796–1796) Zénaïde Laetitia Julie Bonaparte (1801–1854)

  2. 18. Okt. 2012 · File: Jacques-Louis David - The Sisters Zénaïde and Charlotte Bonaparte - Google Art Project.jpg From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository Jump to navigation Jump to search

  3. Mother. Maria Cristina Ruspoli. Eugénie Laetitia Bonaparte (Eugénie Laetitia Barbe Caroline Lucienne Marie Jeanne Bonaparte; 6 September 1872 – 1 July 1949) was the youngest daughter of Napoléon Charles Bonaparte, 5th Prince of Canino and princess Maria Cristina Ruspoli. [1] Eugénie was born in Grotta Ferrata, Italy.

  4. The sisters Zénaïde and Charlotte Bonaparte, Napoleon's nieces, embrace as they read a letter from their father, Joseph Bonaparte, who was exiled in the United States while they lived in Brussels, Belgium, after Napoleon's fall from power. The folds of the carefully creased paper are realistically rendered, and the viewer can even decipher a ...

  5. Zénaïde BONAPARTE 1801-1854 Married June 29, 1822 (Saturday), Bruxelles, toCharles-Lucien BONAPARTE, Prince de Canino 1803-1857 Charlotte BONAPARTE , Princesse Française 1802-1839 Married to Napoléon-Louis BONAPARTE , Prince Français 1804-1831

  6. Jacques-Louis David, 1821. 129.5 cm 100.6 cm. Portrait of the Sisters Zénaïde and Charlotte Bonaparte is a Neoclassical Oil on Canvas Painting created by Jacques-Louis David in 1821. It lives at the The J. Paul Getty Museum in the United States. The image is in the Public Domain, and tagged Girls, Family and Portraits.

  7. This double portrait of Zenaide and Carlotta, daughters of the king, Joseph Bonaparte, and of Giulia Clary, was commissioned from Jacques-Louis David in 1821 in Brussels, where the great painter lived in exile from 1816. Joseph’s family, which, after Waterloo, took refuge in America, stayed in this city for several years from June 1820.