Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 1. Apr. 2020 · This tiara chronicle offers a bit of both scenarios. The turquoise and diamond diadem pictured above began as wedding gift from Napoleon to his second wife Marie Louise of Austria, in 1810; there ...

  2. Defeated in the Spring, Napoleon abdicated his throne and was forced into exile on the island of Elba. He would never see his wife or son again. Josephine caught a cold in mid-May 1814, and ...

  3. Marie Louise, second wife of Napoleon Bonaparte, was the daughter of Francis II, the very last Holy Roman Emperor (who later assumed the title of Emperor of Austria as Francis I), and of the princess Theresa of Naples. Her disposition, fresh and natural but lacking the qualities that make for distinction, gave no promise of eminence until ...

    • December 12, 1791
    • December 17, 1847
  4. For Archduchess Marie Louise, born in Vienna in 1791, both her childhood and her youth were overshadowed by the turbulent, and for the Austrian Imperial household often traumatic, events of world politics. These included the execution of her aunt, Marie Antoinette (1793), the expulsion of her relatives from their Italian principalities (1796-98 ...

  5. When Marie Louise, who was barely 18, learned of Napoleon's divorce at the end of 1809, the prospect of being forced to marry him seemed to her "an ordeal worse than any martyrdom imaginable". However, even though she admitted to her father that she had fallen in love with a relative, Archduke Franz of Modena-Este, she was finally forced to ...

  6. 28. Nov. 2023 · Welcome to Forgotten Lives! In today's episode we are looking into we are looking into the life of Marie Louise, an Austrian archduchess who was Napoleon's s...

    • 15 Min.
    • 48,3K
    • Forgotten Lives
  7. The marriage ceremony (civil) On 1 April, 1810, at the Palais de Saint-Cloud, the civil marriage between Napoleon and Marie-Louise took place. The ceremony was conducted by the Prince Arch chancellor, in the presence of the court and the imperial family. The ceremony was followed by an artillery gun salute, fired by the canon at Les Invalides.