Princess Leopoldina of Brazil

Leopoldina
Princess of Brazil
Princess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
Duchess in Saxony

Princess Leopoldina around age 17, c.1864
Born (1847-07-13)13 July 1847
Paço de São Cristóvão, Rio de Janeiro, Empire of Brazil
Died 7 February 1871(1871-02-07) (aged 23)
Palais Coburg, Vienna, Austria-Hungary
Burial St. Augustine's Church, Coburg
Spouse Prince Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
Issue
Detail
Full name
Leopoldina Teresa Francisca Carolina Miguela Gabriela Rafaela Gonzaga
House Braganza
Father Pedro II of Brazil
Mother Teresa Cristina of the Two Sicilies
Religion Roman Catholicism

Dona Leopoldina Teresa Francisca Carolina Micaela Gabriela Rafaela Gonzaga de Bragança e Bourbon (13 July 1847 – 7 February 1871) was the daughter of Emperor Pedro II and Empress Teresa Cristina.

Princess of Brazil from birth, Leopoldina renounced her titles by marrying Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, taking the title of Princess of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha and Duchess of Saxony.

The Princess was also second in the line of succession to the throne of the Empire of Brazil, even after the marriage of its older sister, Princess Isabel, due to the latter's difficulties in generating heirs. After her untimely death, her two eldest sons were recognized as Brazilian princes and heirs presumptive to the crown until Isabel had her first child. From there, it originated the so-called branch of Saxe-Coburg and Braganza, of the Imperial House of Brazil.

Biography

Family and early years

Born at 6:45 am on July 13, 1847, in the Imperial Palace of São Cirstóvão, Leopoldina was the second daughter of Pedro II and Teresa Cristina of the Two Sicilies. Her paternal grandparents were the Emperor Pedro I and Empress Maria Leopoldina and her maternal grandparents were the King Francis I of the Two Sicilies and Maria Isabella of Spain.[1]

Leopoldina at age 6, c. 1853

She was baptized in the Cathedral and Imperial Chapel on 7 September 1847, by the bishop chief chaplain and diocesan gift Manuel do Monte Rodrigues de Araújo, Count of Irajá and her name was given in honor of her paternal grandmother. She had as godparents her uncle and aunt, the Prince and Princess of Joinville, François of Orléans and Francisca of Brazil—represented in the act by C. His de Buthenval (minister plenipotentiary of Louis Philippe I of France) and Mariana Carlota de Verna Magalhães Coutinho, Countess of Belmonte (chief chamberlain of the Empress), respectively.[1] From an early age, Pedro II sought to obtain a preceptor for his daughters. The choice fell on the Countess of Barral, indication of the Princess of Joinville, who began her functions in September 1855. Numerous teachers were instructed to educate the two young women, who followed an elaborate and rigorous system of studies constantly monitored by the Emperor.[2]

The Princesses attended classes six days a week, from 7 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. They could only receive visits on Sundays, at parties or on any other occasion determined by the Emperor. The subjects they studied were diverse: Portuguese and its Literature, French, English, Italian, German, Latin, Greek, Algebra, Geometry, Chemistry, Physics, Botany, History (whose subjects were divided by country and period), Cosmography, Drawing and Painting, Piano, Philosophy, Geography, Political economy, Rhetoric, Zoology, Mineralogy, and Geology.[3]

Marriage

Pedro II had commissioned Princess Francisca to find in Europe two young princes who could serve as consorts for his daughters. In the Speech from the Throne of May 1864, the sovereign announced the marriage of the princesses without, however, naming names of suitors.[4] However, the two candidates chosen by the emperor—his nephew, Pierre, Duke of Penthièvre, and Philippe, Count of Flanders (son of Leopold I of Belgium)—refused the proposed consortium, leading the monarch to opt for the Princes Ludwig August of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha and Gaston of Orléans, Count of Eu.[5][6]

The Dukes in Saxony with their first-born, Pedro Augusto, in 1866

At first it was thought that Ludwig August was to be assigned to the Princess Imperial and Gaston to Leopoldina, but Pedro II refused to proceed with the negotiations before hearing the opinion of his daughters about the suitors.[7] On 2 September 1864, the princes landed in Rio de Janeiro. In the days that followed, the initial plans were reversed, as Isabel recorded:

"Papa wanted this trip, keeping an eye on our marriages. The Count of Eu was thought of for my sister and the Duke of Saxe for me. God and our hearts decided differently, and on 15 October I had the happiness of marrying the Count of Eu."[8]

The union of Leopoldina and Ludwig August was settled through a marriage agreement between the Emperor of Brazil and Ernest II of Saxe-Coburg-Gota. The contract provided, in articles 3, 4 and 5 that, as long as Dom Pedro II did not consider Princess Isabel's succession assured, the couple should, among other things, reside part of the year in Brazil and have their children in Brazilian territory.[9]

Finally, on 15 December 1864, Leopoldina married the Duke of Saxony, the second son of August of Saxe-Coburg-Gota and Princess Clémentine of Orléans.[8] The couple received a grant of 300:000$000 for the acquisition of a residence in Rio de Janeiro, from which they and their descendants would have the usufruct, but which would remain as national patrimony.[10] The chosen property was a mansion next to the Palace of São Cristóvão, acquired in June 1865 and baptized as "Palace Leopoldina".[11]

Three of the sons of the Dukes in Saxony; from the left: Pedro Augusto, José and Augusto Leopoldo (1871)

Ten months after suffering a miscarriage, Leopoldina gave birth on 19 March 1866, to the one who would become Dom Pedro II's favorite grandson, Prince Pedro Augusto.[12][13] From then on, the Princess began to live between Brazil and Europe, always returning to her native land for the birth of her children. Thus it was with Augusto Leopoldo and José Fernando—born in 1867 and 1869, respectively. When she discovered she was pregnant with the fourth child, she and her husband decided that they would not return to Brazil, and on 15 September 1870, Prince Luís Gastão was born in Ebenthal Castle.[14]

Death

At the beginning of 1871, Leopoldina presented the first symptoms of the disease that would kill her. The gastrointestinal problems and the fever, however, were not associated with the intake of contaminated water that plagued Vienna.[15] In the second week, however, the princess was in a state of worrying prostration. The intermittent fever, the spots on the skin and the hematochezia, classic symptoms of typhoid fever, appeared in the fourth week. The picture evolved rapidly and Leopoldina began to suffer delusions and convulsions, a situation witnessed by Princess Isabel and the Count of Eu.[16] The princess would succumb to the disease in the afternoon of 7 February 1871, at the age of 23. Clémentine of Orléans described the agony of her daughter-in-law in a letter sent to the Princess of Joinville:

"May God's will be done, my good Chica, but the blow is hard and we are very unhappy. The state of my poor Gusty breaks my heart, he sobs at every moment, does not eat nor sleeps, and it is a terrible change! She loved him so much. And they were so perfectly happy together! To see such happiness destroyed at age 24 is horrible!! And these poor children! I wrote you Saturday, and Sunday and Monday were calm and quiet. She did not open her eyes, but she heard what was being shouted in her ear, and she certainly recognized her sister's voice, for she spoke a few words in Portuguese. Monday night the doctors found a sensible improvement and we regained hope. The night was calm but by Tuesday morning the chest was taken and at 10 o'clock the doctors declared that there was no hope, and yet I still cared for her on this long day spent by her bed, seeing her so calm and so little changed; but by 4 p.m. the breathing became shorter. The abbot Blumel recited the prayer of the dying, we were all kneeling around her bed, and at 6 p.m. her breathing ceased, without the slightest contraction of her physiognomy. She was really beautiful then, and she had an angelic expression. Now she is lying in a coffin dressed in white silk clothes, a white crown, and her wedding veil over her head. She has not changed, it is good to look at her. She is all surrounded by fresh flowers, of crowns sent by all the princesses. Tomorrow there will be a religious ceremony at home and she will leave for Coburg, where we will all attend, including Gaston and Isabel who are very good. The latter is desperate. I embrace you, pray for us, we much need it. All yours, Clémentine."[17]

In honor of the Princess, Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria decreed official mourning for 30 days. After the solemn funeral rites celebrated by the apostolic nuncio, Monsignor Mariano Falcinelli Antoniacci, her body was transferred to Coburg, where representatives of all the royal houses of Europe attended its burial. Her body rests in the crypt of St. Augustinkirche, next to the tombs of her husband and children. Every year, until 1922, masses in her memory were celebrated in Vienna.[18][19][20]

Legacy

The infertility of Princess Isabel, heir presumptive to the crown—who would give birth to a son only after more than ten years of marriage and almost four years after her sister's death—included Leopoldina's two eldest sons on the 2nd and 3rd positions in the line of succession to the Brazilian throne. After the death of their mother, the young princes were taken by their grandfather to be raised and educated in Brazil. This situation made the princess, although involuntarily, the founder of the cadet branch of Saxe-Coburg and Braganza. Pedro Augusto and Augusto Leopoldo would only be deprived of the succession in 1875, with the birth of Pedro de Alcântara, Prince of Grão-Pará.[21][22][23]

Titles, styles, and honors

Styles of
Princess Leopoldina, Princess of Brazil
Reference style Her Highness
Spoken style Your Highness
Alternative style Madam

Titles and styles

Honors

Grand Cross of the Order of the Rose[26]

Dignitary of the Order of Queen Maria Luisa[27][28]

Dignitary of the Order of Saint Isabel[27][28]

Dignitary of the Order of the Starry Cross[28]

Issue

NamePictureBirthDeathNotes
Peter 18661934Prince of Brazil and of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Showed first signs of mental disorder soon after the Imperial Family's banishment following the Proclamation of the Republic, on 15 November 1889. He died in an asylum on the outskirts of Vienna.
August 18671922Prince of Brazil and of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Married (1894) Karoline Marie of Austria, with issue.
Joseph 18691888Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Never married.
Ludwig 18701942Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Married firstly (1900) Mathilde of Bavaria, with issue, and secondly (1907) Anna of Trauttmansdorff-Weinsberg, with issue.

Ancestry

References

  1. 1 2 Bragança (1959), 77-78
  2. Bragança (1959), 73
  3. Filgueiras (2004)
  4. Del Priore, 21
  5. Defrance, 204-205
  6. Barman (2002), 56-57
  7. Del Priore, 20
  8. 1 2 Bragança (1959), 74-75
  9. Bragança (1959), 78-81
  10. Bragança (2008), 282
  11. Bragança (2008), 283-284
  12. Del Priore, 32
  13. Bragança (1959), 75
  14. Defrance, 232
  15. Bragança (2004), 107-108
  16. Del Priore, 51-52
  17. Del Priore, 53
  18. Bragança (2008), 289
  19. Coburg - St. Augustinkirche
  20. Wehrs, 280
  21. Bragança (1959), 75-76
  22. Del Priore, 205
  23. Lessa, 123
  24. Bragança (1959), 87
  25. Bragança (1959), 90
  26. Cruz, Rafael Oliveira. "A Casa Imperial do Brasil - Ordens e Condecorações" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2011-11-21.
  27. 1 2 Almanak 1870, 22
  28. 1 2 3 "Augustíssima Casa Imperial - Genealogia" (in Portuguese). Retrieved 2011-11-21.

Bibliography

Media related to Princess Leopoldina at Wikimedia Commons

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