Infanta Maria Theresa of Portugal

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Infanta Maria Theresa
Austria, Nazi Germany
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1873; died 1896)
Issue
Names
Adelaide of Löwenstein
SignatureInfanta Maria Theresa's signature

Infanta Maria Theresa of Portugal (

sister-in-law of Emperors Franz Joseph I of Austria and Maximilian I of Mexico, as well as step-grandmother of Emperor Charles I of Austria
.

Early life

Maria Teresa was born in

Princess Adelaide of Löwenstein.[1] Her father became king of Portugal in 1828 after deposing his niece Queen Maria II. He reigned until 1834 when Maria II of Portugal
was restored and Miguel was forced into exile.

Maria Teresa with Archduke Ferdinand and Archduchess Margareta, her husband’s two youngest children by his second wife Maria Annunziata

Described as one of the most beautiful women in Europe, Maria Theresa became the third wife of

.

Maria Theresa managed to obtain considerable influence at the Austrian court when

Hofburg Imperial Palace with the Emperor until the death of her husband in 1896 when court etiquette ruled she had to go into retirement.[3]

Widowhood

Infanta Maria Theresa of Portugal in her wedding gown, 1873.
Archduchess Maria Theresa of Austria, 1897.

She remained such an influential figure behind the scenes at court after the death of her husband that when rumors spread that she was to marry the master of her household, Count Ladislaus Cavriani (1851–1919), no one dared to say a word against her. In the end the rumors turned out to be false.[4] During her widowhood she spent the winter months living in Vienna and the summer months at Reichstadt castle in Bohemia.[5]

She offered encouragement and support to her stepson Franz Ferdinand in his determination to marry Countess

Sophie Chotek against his family's will.[6] She traveled to a convent in Prague herself to fetch Sophie and took her into her own house, even pleading on Sophie's behalf with the Emperor Franz Joseph. After the union was finally permitted, Maria Theresa made all the arrangements for the wedding, insisting that it take place in her own private chapel.[7]

She remained close to Franz Ferdinand and Sophie until their

Ernst. She also managed to ensure the children's financial security after telling the Emperor that if he did not grant them a yearly income, she would resign the allowance which she drew as a widow in their favour. (Most of Franz Ferdinand's property went to his nephew the Archduke Charles).[8]

On 21 November 1916, her brother-in-law Emperor Franz Joseph died, and

First World War. After his departure from Austria (he never formally abdicated), Maria Theresa accompanied Karl and his wife Zita into exile in Madeira
, but eventually returned to Vienna, where she spent the rest of her life.

In 1929, following a decline in her finances, Maria Theresa engaged two agents to sell the Napoleon Diamond Necklace, a piece inherited from her husband, in the United States. After a series of botched sales attempts, the pair finally sold the necklace for $60,000 with the aid of the great-nephew of Maria Theresa, the Archduke Leopold of Austria, Prince of Tuscany but he claimed nearly 90% of the sale price as "expenses". Maria Theresa appealed to the United States courts, ultimately resulting in the recovery of the necklace, the imprisonment of her great-nephew, and the absconding of the two agents.[9]

Maria Theresa died in Vienna during World War II. She survived her husband by 48 years.

Issue

Name Birth Death Notes
by Archduke Karl Ludwig Joseph Maria of Austria (30 July 1833–19 May 1896; married on 23 July 1873 in Kleinheubach)
Archduchess Maria Annunciata of Austria 31 July 1876 in Reichenau, Austria-Hungary 8 April 1961 in
Principality of Liechtenstein
Abbess of the Theresia Convent in the
Hradschin, Prague
, died unmarried
Archduchess Elisabeth Amalie of Austria 7 July 1878 in Reichenau, Austria-Hungary 13 March 1960 in
Principality of Liechtenstein
married, 1903,
Prince Aloys of Liechtenstein
; had issue

Ancestry

See also

Sources

  • Radziwill, Catherine (1916). The Austrian Court From Within. Cassell and Company.

References

  1. ^ Almanach de Gotha (179th ed.). Justus Perthes. 1942. p. 37.
  2. ^ Radziwill, p. 58
  3. ^ Radziwill, p. 59
  4. ^ Radziwill, p. 59, 60
  5. ^ Radziwill, p. 60
  6. ^ Radziwill, 58, 59
  7. ^ Radziwill, 60
  8. ^ Radziwill, p. 61
  9. ^ Gaillou, Eloïse; Post, Jeffrey; "An Examination of the Napoleon Diamond Necklace", Gems and Gemology (Winter 2007), p. 353.