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Sister Margarita of Jesus

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Imperial House
  
Iturbide

House
  
House of Iturbide

Name
  
Sister of

Religion
  
Roman Catholicism

Father
  
Augustin I of Mexico


Sister Margarita of Jesus

Born
  
10 March 1812 Mexico City (
1812-03-10
)

Mother
  
Ana Maria de Huarte y Muniz

Died
  
October 2, 1828, Georgetown, Washington, D.C., United States

Place of burial
  
Georgetown, Washington, D.C., United States

Parents
  
Ana Maria de Huarte y Muniz, Agustin de Iturbide

Grandparents
  
Isidro Huarte, Jose Joaquin de Iturbide y Arregui, Maria Josefa de Aramburu y Carrillo de Figueroa

Similar People
  
Agustin de Iturbide, Ana Maria de Huarte y Muniz, Juan Davis Bradburn

Juana María de Iturbide y Huarte (10 March 1812 – 2 October 1828), Princess of Mexico, known as Sister Margarita of Jesus, was the third child of Agustín I of Mexico (Agustín de Iturbide) and Empress Ana María. She died at a young age at the Georgetown Visitation Monastery in Washington, D.C..

Biography

Juana was born in New Spain, when the colony was still under the control of King of Spain and ruled by the Viceroy of New Spain. Her birth year coincided with the Mexican War of Independence, which would catapult her father to fame and secure his place on the Mexican imperial throne.

The Iturbides originated from minor Spanish nobility of Basque descent, who came to Mexico in the mid-18th century. Juana had two elder siblings, Agustin Jeromino and Sabina, and several younger siblings: Josefa, Ángel, María, Dolores, Salvador, Felipe and Agustín Cosme. She was baptised as a Roman Catholic.

She was designated Princesa de México upon her father's accession in 1822. She was referred to as Her Highness rather than Imperial Highness, which was reserved for the Prince Imperial. In 1823, during the last days of the Mexican Empire, Juana was the sixth in line to the throne, after her four brothers and elder sister. Her father abdicated his throne after less than 10 months reign and the royal family was exiled from Mexico. On May 11, 1823, the royal family and some servants boarded the English ship "Rawlins", bound for Livorno, Italy. There her father rented a small country house and began to write his memoirs. Under pressure from Spain, Italy expelled the Iturbide family, and they moved to England.

Iturbide returned to Mexico and was executed July 9, 1824, in Padilla, Tamaulipas. The Dowager-Empress Ana Maria moved her family, including Juana, to the United States. They lived in Washington, D.C. and in Philadelphia on Spruce St. near 13th, and later at 226 Broad St.

Juana became a novice in the Visitation Monastery at Georgetown in Washington, D.C. On her deathbed, she professed herself a nun and took the name "Sister Margarita of Jesus, Marie and Joseph". She died at the age of 16 at the monastery, where she is also buried.

References

Sister Margarita of Jesus Wikipedia