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Princess Maria of Romania (1870–1874)

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Father
  
Carol I of Romania

Religion
  
Romanian Orthodox

Role
  
1870–1874

Mother
  
Elisabeth of Wied

Name
  
Princess of

House
  
Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen

Princess Maria of Romania (1870–1874)
Burial
  
Cotroceni Palace (1874–1916) Curtea de Arges Cathedral (1916–present)

Died
  
April 9, 1874, Peles Castle, Sinaia, Romania

Parents
  
Carol I of Romania, Elisabeth of Wied

Cousins
  
Ferdinand I of Romania, Prince Karl Anton of Hohenzollern, William, Prince of Hohenzollern

Grandparents
  
Karl Anton, Prince of Hohenzollern

Similar People
  
Carol I of Romania, Elisabeth of Wied, Ferdinand I of Romania, Michael I of Romania, Princess Margareta of Romania

Princess Maria/Marie of Romania (Maria/Marie von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, 8 September 1870 – 9 April 1874) was the only child of Carol I of Romania and his wife, Elisabeth of Wied.

Contents

Life

Princess Maria of Romania (1870–1874) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Princess Maria was born in Bucharest as the first Princess of Romania that was also of the House of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, on 8 September [O.S. 27 August] 1870. After a month, in October [O.S. September] 1870, she was baptised as a Romanian Orthodox at the monastery of Cotroceni (near the site of the present-day Cotroceni Palace). In her family, the young princess was nicknamed "Mariechen" (a possible homage to her parents' German heritage) or "Itty". Everyone who knew Maria described her as a beautiful and precocious young child, as she was said to look at maps and identify different countries for fun at the age of only two and a half. It is said that sometime before she died, Princess Maria told her mother that she would someday like to be able to ride a star.

Maria had no prospect of inheriting her father's throne; the 1866 Constitution limited succession to males.

Death

On 5 April [O.S. 24 March] 1874, the Princess became ill with scarlet fever. An epidemic had been ravaging the capital at the time. She was immediately transported to the Peleş Castle. Despite being treated with much care by a doctor named Theodori and many others, the young princess expired on 9 April [O.S. 28 March] 1874 and was buried at the monastery of Cotroceni. At Elisabeth's request, Maria's tombstone read the Bible verse, Luke 8:52:

The funeral service took place at the Cotroceni Church within the grounds of the Cotroceni Royal Palace. The coffin was covered with white satin, criss-crossed with silver lace ornaments and was as large as one for an adult, because the infant princess' body was enclosed in several decreasing size caskets placed one inside another. After the religious service in the Romanian Orthodox rite, the cortege walked through the palace gardens to the burial place next to the palace church. Those gardens were the favorite playing grounds for the young princess, where only half a dozen days previously she had played with her nurse.

Legacy

Her parents were devastated by her death. On 5 May that year, Carol wrote to Charles Anthony, Prince of Hohenzollern that they intended to move to the Cotroceni Palace, in order to be closer to the resting place of their infant daughter:

In another letter to Lascăr Catargiu, he wrote:

The death of their only child worsened the relationship between Carol and Elisabeth and they did not have any further children. In 1875, Karl Storck created a bust of the sleeping princess which was erected by her tomb. This bust inspired Elisabeth to write many emotional poems. When Queen Elisabeth died in 1916, according to her wishes, her daughter's remains were exhumed and the casket placed on her coffin for the public procession. Mother and daughter were then buried together in the same tomb at the Cathedral of Curtea de Argeș. At the Elisabeta Palace, one can still see an 1880s style piece of furniture that contains a plaster-mold of the infant princess.

Ancestors

See also

  • Carol I of Romania
  • Elisabeth of Wied
  • House of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
  • References

    Bibliography

  • Muzeul Național de Istorie a României (2009). The Royal Family: A history in pictures (in Romanian). Cetatea de Scaun. ISBN 978-973-8966-97-0. 
  • References

    Princess Maria of Romania (1870–1874) Wikipedia