Infanta Maria Francisca of Portugal explained

Countess of Molina
Issue:
Full Name:Maria Francisca de Assis da Maternidade Xavier de Paula e de Alcântara Antónia Joaquina Gonzaga Carlota Mónica Senhorinha Sotera e Caia de Bourbon e Bragança
House:House of Braganza
Father:John VI of Portugal
Mother:Carlota Joaquina of Spain
Birth Date:22 April 1800
Birth Place:Queluz Palace, Kingdom of Portugal
Death Place:Alverstoke, Hampshire, United Kingdom

Infanta Maria Francisca of Braganza (pronounced as /pt/; English: Mary Frances); full name: Maria Francisca de Assis da Maternidade Xavier de Paula e de Alcântara Antónia Joaquina Gonzaga Carlota Mónica Senhorinha Sotera e Caia de Bourbon e Bragança; 22 April 1800  - 4 September 1834) was a Portuguese princess (Portuguese: [[infanta]]), daughter of King John VI of Portugal and his spouse Carlota Joaquina of Spain.

Biography

Maria was born in Queluz, Portugal. On 22 September 1816 in Madrid, she married her uncle Infante Carlos Maria Isidro of Spain, "Count of Molina". The couple had three children:

In 1833, Maria Francisca, her husband and children were exiled from Spain because they refused to recognize Isabella II as heiress to the Spanish throne. They went first to Portugal and then to Alverstoke in Hampshire, England. While in Hampshire, Maria became ill and died on 4 September 1834.

A crowd of several thousand was known to have visited the village to pay their respects as her body lay at the rectory of St Mary's Gosport, where her funeral was held and a marble stone honours her memory.[1] Although initially interred in St Mary's Catholic Church Gosport, Maria Francisca's remains were later transferred to Trieste Cathedral in Italy, where the Carlist pretenders and their wives are buried.

Four years after her death, Carlos married Maria Francisca's own sister, Maria Teresa, Princess of Beira.

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Carlist Queen Maria Francisca of Spain. St Mary's Catholic Parish.