Maria Pia of Savoy
Maria Pia of Savoy | |||||
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Queen consort of Portugal | |||||
Tenure | 6 October 1862 – 19 October 1889 | ||||
Born | 16 October 1847 Royal Palace, Turin, Sardinia | ||||
Died | 5 July 1911 Stupinigi Palace, Nichelino, Italy | (aged 63)||||
Burial | Royal Basilica, Turin | ||||
Spouse | |||||
Issue | |||||
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House | Savoy (By birth) Braganza (By marriage) | ||||
Father | Victor Emmanuel II of Italy | ||||
Mother | Adelaide of Austria | ||||
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Dona Maria Pia (16 October 1847 – 5 July 1911) was by birth an Italian princess of the House of Savoy and by marriage Queen of Portugal as the spouse of King Luís I of Portugal. On the day of her baptism, Pope Pius IX, her godfather, gave her a Golden Rose. Maria Pia was married to Luís on 6 October 1862 in Lisbon. She was the grand mistress of the Order of Saint Isabel. She was the third queen of the House of Savoy on the Portuguese throne, after Mafalda and Marie-Françoise of Savoy-Nemours.
Early life
Maria Pia was the youngest daughter of Victor Emmanuel II, the first King of Italy, by his wife Adelaide of Austria, a great-granddaughter of Leopold II, Holy Roman Emperor. Her sister Maria Clotilde was the "princesse Napoléon" as the wife of Napoléon Joseph Charles Paul Bonaparte, and her brothers were King Umberto I of Italy and King Amadeo of Spain. Additionally, she had paternal half-siblings born out of wedlock, who were never recognized as royalty despite their rich heritage.[citation needed]
Maria Pia married King Luís I of Portugal on 6 October 1862 at the age of 14 in the São Domingos Church in Lisbon, therefore she instantly became Queen consort of Portugal. A proxy wedding took place about a week before, on 27 September 1862, with her cousin Prince Eugene of Savoy taking the role of the groom. On the 29th, Maria boarded a ship at Genoa to visit her new homeland. The ship sailed into Lisbon on 5 October. Obviously Maria was smitten with Luís, as she later wrote "I like him more than his picture."[citation needed]
One year after the wedding at age 15, Maria Pia gave birth to her first son and heir, Carlos, Duke of Braganza.[1] Despite her young age she proved to be a wonderful mother. She wrote "my little Charles is good. Oh, it is such a great fortune to be a mother. My little one is white and pink with the large blue eyes of his father. It seems that he has already six months instead of a few weeks. He is always, always with me!"[2] In 1865 she had another son, Afonso, Duke of Porto.[1] Soon after her second pregnancy she experienced postpartum depression.
Despite her waning health problems both physical and mental, the queen was known to romp around with her sons and help with their studies, sometimes even studying alongside them.[citation needed]
Queen consort
As Queen, Maria Pia was considered by some as extravagant, but far more for her many charitable works in aid of the Portuguese people. She was known by the Portuguese people as an "angel of charity" and "mother of the poor" for her compassion and work on social causes. At a masquerade ball in 1865, she changed her costume three times. When the Portuguese parliament discussed her expenses, she replied saying "if you want a Queen, you have to pay for her".[3] As Queen, she was largely responsible for the interiors of the Ajuda Royal Palace in Lisbon, still used to this day for banquets during state visits by foreign heads of state.[citation needed]
Maria Pia did not involve herself in politics, but in a conflict with João Carlos Saldanha de Oliveira Daun, 1st Duke of Saldanha in 1870, she stated: "If I were the king, I would have you shot!"[3] Over the years, Luís began to indulge in several extramarital affairs. Despite her husband’s apparent wandering eye, Maria Pia remained faithful to her husband,[4] therefore causing her a great deal of depression. It is speculated that she too had an affair with Tomás de Sousa Rosa but this was never confirmed, and may have just been some mean-spirited gossip most likely out of the mouth of Infanta Antónia of Portugal, her sister-in-law.[citation needed] The rumors got around to the queen and she responded indignantly “They can talk until they explode.”[citation needed]
Maria Pia and Antónia both generally disliked each other. This hatred grew to the point where Antónia would refer to the penultimate queen of Portugal as ‘x’ in her letters to Luís.[citation needed] Antónia strongly believed that Maria Pia was having an affair and urged Luís to pursue a divorce, which was quite the double—standard considering she was well aware of Luís’ affairs.[citation needed] Maria Pia also maintained a rocky relationship with her father-in-law Ferdinand II of Portugal, disapproving his morganatic marriage to an opera singer.[citation needed]
Her son Carlos and his wife, Amélie, had a son named Luís Filipe, who was very close to his grandmother. Tragically they also conceived a premature daughter named Maria Ana who lived for a few hours. She expressed her sympathy, describing her lost granddaughter as “Very small, but perfect and beautiful, with well-defined features.”[5]
King Luís died on 19 October 1889 and Maria Pia became queen dowager. She remained very active and continued with her social projects while holding a dominating position at court. She served as regent during the absence of the king and queen abroad. The queen dowager was devastated after the assassination of her son King Carlos I of Portugal and grandson Crown Prince Luís Filipe, Duke of Braganza, on 1 February 1908 on the Praça do Comércio in Lisbon. During her last years in Portugal, she withdrew from the public eye. She was deeply saddened when her remaining grandson, King Manuel II of Portugal, was deposed by the 5 October 1910 Revolution.[citation needed]
Due to the 1910 coup that deposed Maria Pia’s grandson, Manuel II, and established the republic in Portugal, the whole Portuguese royal family was exiled. King Manuel and Queen Amélie went to England, while Maria Pia and Infante Afonso went to her native Italy. She died there on 5 July the following year, in Stupinigi, and was interred in the Basilica of Superga.
Gallery
- Portrait of Maria Pia, by Luigi Gandolfi (1863)
- Photograph of Maria Pia as a teenager (1863)
- Portrait of Maria Pia, by Michele Gordigiani (1865), Palace of Ajuda
- Portrait of Maria Pia, by Carolus Duran (1880), Palace of Ajuda
- The royal family of Portugal, by Joseph Layraud (1876)
- Portrait of Maria Pia, by Joseph Layraud
Issue
Name | Birth | Death | Notes |
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Dom Carlos, Prince Royal of Portugal[1] | 28 September 1863 | 1 February 1908 | Who succeeded his father as Carlos I, King of Portugal, murdered in 1908 by the Carbonária. |
Dom Afonso, Prince Royal of Portugal[1] | 31 July 1865 | 21 February 1920 | Infante of Portugal, Duke of Porto, Viceroy of Portuguese India, and after 1908 Prince Royal. |
Ancestry
Ancestors of Maria Pia of Savoy |
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References
- ^ a b c d Lencastre, Isabel (2012). Bastardos Reais: Os filhos ilegítimos dos Reis de Portugal. Oficina do Livro. p. 149.
- ^ Pollock, Sabrina (1 Jan 2015). Maria Pia, Queen of Portugal. Kensington House Books. p. 26. ISBN 978-0985460372.
- ^ a b Graeme, Chris. "Queen Dona Maria Pia remembered". Portugal Resident. The Resident Group. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
- ^ Pollock, Sabrina (1 Jan 2015). Maria Pia, Queen of Portugal. Kensington House Books. ISBN 978-0985460372.
- ^ Pollock, Sabrina (1 Jan 2015). Maria Pia, Queen of Portugal. Kensington House Books. p. 82. ISBN 978-0985460372.
External links
Media related to Maria Pia of Savoy at Wikimedia Commons