Maria Anna of Spain

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

House of Habsburg
Spanish line

Emperor Charles V
(King Charles I)
Children
   Philip II of Spain
   Maria, Holy Roman Empress
   Joan of Spain
   Don John (illegitimate)
   Margaret of Parma (illegitimate)
Philip II
Children include
   Carlos, Prince of Asturias
   Isabella of Spain
   Catherine, Duchess of Savoy
   Philip III of Spain
Philip III
Children include
   Anne, Queen of France
   Philip IV of Spain
   Maria Ana, Holy Roman Empress
   Infante Carlos
   Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand
Philip IV
Children include
   Balthasar Charles, Prince of Asturias
   Maria Theresa, Queen of France
   Margaret, Holy Roman Empress
   Charles II of Spain
Charles II
Portrait of the Infanta doña Maria, queen of Hungary, Diego Velázquez1630 (59,5 x 45,5 cm)Museo del Prado, Madrid
Portrait of the Infanta doña Maria, queen of Hungary, Diego Velázquez
1630 (59,5 x 45,5 cm)
Museo del Prado, Madrid

Maria Anna (18 August 160613 May 1646), also known as Maria Anna of Austria, Infanta of Spain, Archduchess of Austria, and after marriage, The Holy Roman Empress and Queen of Hungary, was the youngest daughter of King Philip III of Spain and Margaret of Austria.

She was a younger sister of Anne of Austria, queen consort of Louis XIII of France, and Philip IV of Spain. She was also an older sister of Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand.

In the early 1620s, James I of England envisioned Maria Anna as a possible bride for his son and heir, the future Charles I of England and Scotland. Charles even visited Madrid to meet the young Maria Anna. This romantic endeavor of the future king of England is set forth in the fictional Captain Alatriste by Arturo Pérez-Reverte published first in English in 2005. However negotiations failed, and Charles eventually married Henrietta Maria of France.

She was married instead to her first cousin, the future Ferdinand III, then the titular king of Hungary, on 20 February 1631. They were parents to six children:

During the Thirty Years War, the imperial family moved to Linz, where she died of poisoning during her last pregnancy. The child she was carrying, Maria, was still alive, and was born by cesarean section, but died soon after. Mother and daughter were buried together in a single coffin.

Preceded by
Eleonore Gonzaga
Empress of the Holy Roman Empire, German Queen, Archduchess consort of Austria
1637-1646
Succeeded by
Maria Leopoldine of Austria
Queen consort of Hungary, Queen consort of Croatia and Slavonia
1631-1646
Succeeded by
Margaret Theresa of Spain
Queen consort of Bohemia
1631–1646

[edit] References