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Eugénie de Montijo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eugenie redirects here. For other people called Eugenie, see Eugenie (disambiguation)
Eugénie de Montijo
Empress of the French
Portrait by Franz Winterhalter
Titles HIM The Empress of the French (1853-1871)
Doña María de Palafox y Portocarrero (1826-1853)
Born 5 May 1826
Granada, Spain
Died 11 July 1920
Madrid, Spain
Consort January 30, 1853 - January 11, 1871
Consort to Napoléon III
Issue Napoléon Eugene
Father Cipriano de Palafox y Portocarrero
Mother María Manuela Kirkpatrick
Empress Eugénie
Empress Eugénie
Styles of
Empress Eugénie of France as consort
Reference style Her Imperial Majesty
Spoken style Your Imperial Majesty
Alternative style {{{altstyle}}}

Doña María Eugenia Ignacia Agustina de Palafox y Kirkpatrick, Countess de Teba, who became Empress Eugénie [1] [2] [3] (May 5, 1826July 11, 1920) was Empress Consort of France (1853-1871), the wife of Napoléon III, emperor of the French.

Contents

[edit] Empress

The last Empress of the French was born in Granada, Spain to Don Cipriano de Palafox y Portocarrero, 1785-1839, Count de Teba, Count de Montijo, marquis de Algava and duke of Peñaranda, a grandee of Spain, and his half-Scottish, half-Spanish wife, María Manuela Kirkpatrick, a daughter of the Scots-born William Kirkpatrick of Closeburn, who became U. S. Consul to Málaga and later was a wholesale wine merchant. Eugenia's older sister, María Francisca de Sales, also known as Paca (1825-1860), who inherited most of the family honours, married the Duke of Alba in 1849. Until her own marriage in 1853, Eugénie variously used the titles of countess of Teba or countess of Montijo, but some family titles were legally inherited by her elder sister, through which they passed to the House of Alba. After the death of her father Eugenia became 9th Countess of Teba, and is named as such in the Almanach de Gotha (1901 edition). After Eugenia's demise all titles of the Montijo family came to the Fitz-James's (the Dukes of Alba and Berwick). Eugénie de Montijo, as she became known in France, was educated in Paris, at the fashionable convent of the Sacré Cœur, where she received an indelibly Catholic training. When Prince Louis Napoléon became president of the Second Republic she appeared with her mother at the several balls given by the "prince-president" at the Elysée Palace, and it was there that she met the future emperor, whom she wed on January 30, 1853, not long after he had been rebuffed in his attempts to marry first Princess Carola of Vasa (later Queen of Saxony), a granddaughter of the deposed King of Sweden Gustav IV Adolph and then Queen Victoria's teenage niece, Princess Adelheid of Hohenlohe-Langenburg.

[edit] Controversial marriage

In a speech from the throne on January 22 he formally announced his engagement, saying, "I have preferred a woman whom I love and respect to a woman unknown to me, with whom an alliance would have had advantages mixed with sacrifices." The so-called love match was looked upon with some sarcastic comment in the United Kingdom. The Times wrote, "We learn with some amusement that this romantic event in the annals of the French Empire has called forth the strongest opposition, and provoked the utmost irritation. The Imperial family, the Council of Ministers, and even the lower coteries of the palace or its purlieus, all affect to regard this marriage as an amazing humiliation..." A 26-year-old Spanish countess, of legitimate title and ancient lineage, the British newspaper implied with ill-concealed mirth, was not considered good enough for the House of Bonaparte, (only two generations removed from obscurity in Corsica).

On March 16, 1856, the empress gave birth to an only son, Napoléon Eugène Louis Jean Joseph Bonaparte, styled Prince Impérial.

By her beauty, elegance, and charm of manner she contributed greatly to the brilliance of the imperial regime. She had a very close friendship with Princess Pauline de Metternich, wife of the Austrian ambassador in Paris who played an important role in the social and cultural life of the imperial court.

When the empress wore the new cage crinolines in 1855, European fashion followed suit, and when she abandoned vast skirts at the end of the 1860s, at the encouragement of her legendary couturier, Charles Worth, the silhouette of women's dress followed her lead again. Eugénie's aristocratic elegance, splendour of dress and legendary jewels are well documented in innumerable paintings, especially by her favourite portraitist, Winterhalter. Her interest in the life of Marie Antoinette of Austria sparked a fashion for furniture and interior design in the neoclassical style popular during the reign of Louis XVI of France.

As she was educated and very intelligent, Eugénie's husband usually consulted her on important questions, and she acted as Regent during his absences in 1859, 1865 and 1870. A Catholic and a conservative, Eugénie's influence countered any liberal tendencies in the emperor's policies. She was a staunch defender of papal temporal powers in Italy and an ultramontanist. Because of this, she was hated, and often scurrilously slandered, by the anti-clericals in France.

[edit] After the Franco-Prussian War

The Empress Eugénie about 1890
The Empress Eugénie about 1890

When the Second French Empire was overthrown after France's defeat in the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871), the empress and her husband took refuge in England, and settled at Chislehurst, Kent. After his death in 1873 she moved 12 years later to Farnborough, Hampshire and to her villa "Cyrnos" (ancient Greek name of Corsica), that she had built at Cap-Martin near Cannes, where she lived in retirement, abstaining from all interference in French politics.

The former empress died in July 1920 at the age of 94, during a visit to her relatives, the Dukes of Alba in Madrid, in her native Spain, and she is interred in the Imperial Crypt at Saint Michael's Abbey, Farnborough, with her husband and her son, who had died in 1879 fighting in the Zulu War in Africa. She testamented all her possessions to various relatives: her Spanish estates went to the grandsons of her sister, the Fitz-James's (Dukes of Berwick and Alba), the house in Farnborough with all collections to the heir of her son, Prince Victor Bonaparte, Villa Cyrnos to his sister, Princess Laetitia of Aosta. Liquid funds were divided into three parts and given to the above relatives, except the sum of 100 000 francs bequeathed to the Committee for Rebuilding the Cathedral of Reims.

Her deposed family's friendly association with the United Kingdom was commemorated in 1887 when she became the godmother of Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg (1887-1969), daughter of Princess Beatrice, who later became Queen consort of Alfonso XIII of Spain. This baptism was an early example of ecumenism as Victoria Eugenie who was born at Balmoral was baptised according to the practice of the (presbyterian) Church of Scotland. A century later, the second daughter of the present Duke of York, born in 1990, was named Princess Eugenie.

The Empress has also been commemorated in space; the asteroid 45 Eugenia was named after her, and its moon, Petit-Prince, after the Prince Imperial.

[edit] Titles from birth to death

  • Doña Maria Eugenia Ignacia Augustina Palafox de Guzmán Portocarrero y Kirkpatrick (from birth till her father's death)
  • Her Excellency Doña Maria Eugenia Ignacia Augustina Palafox de Guzmán Portocarrero y Kirkpatrick, 9th Countess de Teba (from her father's death till her wedding)
  • Her Imperial Majesty The Empress of the French (1853–1871) as well as Her Imperial Majesty The Empress-Regent during several periods (including Italian, Crimean and Franco-Prussian wars)
  • Her Imperial Majesty Empress Eugénie of the French (1871–1920)

[edit] Film portrayals

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
House of Bonaparte
Born: 5 May 1826
Died: 11 July 1920
Regnal Titles
Preceded by
Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma
Empress of the French
30 January 185311 January 1871
Vacant
Title next held by
Title retired
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