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Princess Maria Antonia of Parma

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Name
  
Princess Antonia


House
  
House of Bourbon

Princess Maria Antonia of Parma

Born
  
28 November 1774 Parma, Italy (
1774-11-28
)

Father
  
Ferdinand, Duke of Parma

Mother
  
Maria Amalia of Austria

Died
  
February 20, 1841, Rome, Italy

Parents
  
Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria, Ferdinand, Duke of Parma

Grandparents
  
Maria Theresa, Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor, Louise Elisabeth of France, Philip, Duke of Parma

Cousins
  
Louis XVII of France, Marie Therese of France, Princess Sophie Helene B, Louis Joseph - Dauphin, Archduchess Maria Theresa

Similar People
  
Ferdinand - Duke of Parma, Archduchess Maria Amalia of, Philip - Duke of Parma, Francis I - Holy Roman E, Maria Theresa

Maria Antonia of Parma (Maria Antonia Giuseppa Walburga Anna Luisa Vicenza Margherita Caterina; 28 November 1774 – 20 February 1841) was a Princess of Parma, daughter of Duke Ferdinand I of Parma and his wife, Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria. Contrary to what has been frequently stated, she was not named after her aunt, Queen Marie Antoinette of France, who was not her godmother. Maria Antonia's godparents were her uncle, Emperor Joseph II, and her father's aunt, Maria Antonia of Spain, Queen of Sardinia, after whom the princess was named.

Contents

Biography

Maria Antonia grew up with her brother and sisters in the ducal court of Parma, where she was affectionately known as Tognina.

She was a gifted painter and received her training from Giuseppe Baldrighi and Domenico Muzzi, both court painters and professors of the Academy of Fine Arts of Parma.

In 1796, Parma was occupied by France. While their parents were allowed to formally remain on their throne but were watched by an entourage of French guards, Maria Antonia and her sister Carlotta were awarded their freedom as they were regarded apolitical. The sisters remained by the side of their parents as their support during the French occupation: they were both regarded to have the religiosity of their father and the willpower of their mother. However, while Carlotta was imposing enough for the French governor Andoche Junot to recommend that she be acknowledged a Princess by France and awarded a pension to be able to live according to her status, Maria Antonia was described as particularly severe and reserved. At the death of their father in October 1802, the sisters and their mother participated in his official state funeral. When their mother was exiled by the French after the funeral, they accompanied her to Prague, where they kept her company until her death. During their stay in Prague, she and her sister were described as humble and forgotten, passing their time in prayer.

A quiet person, Maria Antonia never married and became an Ursuline novice in 1802. The following year, on 22 April 1803, she officially received the habit of an Ursuline nun and changed her name to Sister Louise Marie (Luigia Maria). After the death of her mother in 1804, her sister moved to Rome. Maria Antonie remained in Prague until the fall of Napoleon, after which she returned to Parma.

During the following years she led a quiet and modest life in the Ursuline convent in Parma. After many years of living there, on 9 May 1831, she moved to the Convent of St Agatha in Rome, where she died in 1841.

Titles and styles

  • 28 November 1774 – 22 April 1803 Her Royal Highness Princess Maria Antonia of Parma
  • References

    Princess Maria Antonia of Parma Wikipedia