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  1. Maria Clementina Sobieska ( polnisch Maria Klementyna Sobieska; * 18. Juli 1702 in Ohlau, Fürstentum Ohlau, Königreich Böhmen, Heiliges Römisches Reich; † 18. Januar 1735 in Rom, Kirchenstaat) war eine polnische Prinzessin aus dem Adelsgeschlecht der Sobieskis und durch Heirat Titularkönigin von Großbritannien, Irland und ...

  2. Maria Clementina Sobieska (Polish: Maria Klementyna Sobieska; 18 July 1702 – 18 January 1735) was a titular queen of England, Scotland and Ireland by marriage to James Francis Edward Stuart, a Jacobite claimant to the British throne.

  3. 6. Juni 2023 · The tainted legend of Sobieska is put to an end by the monograph Maria Klementyna Sobieska, królowa i Służebnica Boża [Maria Clementina Sobieska, Queen and Servant of God] by Prof. Aleksandra Skrzypietz and Stanisław Jujeczka, PhD (University of Silesia Press, 2022).

  4. Maria Clementina Sobieska (1702-1735) is one of three women honored with monuments in the basilica. She was niece to the King of Poland and married to the Pretender of the English throne, James III Stuart . She looks down from her monument to that of her husband and sons. At the age of 33, she died of tuberculosis and was buried in St. Peter's

  5. 5. Jan. 2024 · Maria Clementina Sobieska was the last widely recognised Stuart queen, albeit in exile, and mother to the final generation of the Stuart dynasty. Examining the material and visual culture surrounding her funeral and afterlife, this chapter reinstates Clementina in Jacobite and Stuart history.

    • g.vullinghs@nms.ac.uk
  6. Maria Clementina Sobieska (polnisch Maria Klementyna Sobieska; * 18. Juli 1702 in Ohlau, Fürstentum Ohlau, Königreich Böhmen, Heiliges Römisches Reich; † 18. Januar 1735 in Rom, Kirchenstaat) war eine polnische Prinzessin aus dem Adelsgeschlecht der Sobieskis und durch Heirat Titularkönigin von Großbritannien, Irland und Frankreich.

  7. Princess Maria Clementina Sobieska (1702-1735), granddaughter of Jan Sobieski III, the famous King of Poland who defeated the Turks at the Battle of Vienna in 1683, was known in Jacobite circles from 1719 as 'our Queene'[1]). Maria Clementina was one of the most well-connected young ladies in Europe at this time.