Duchess Marie Gabrielle in Bavaria
Marie Gabrielle in Bavaria | |||||
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Princess Marie Gabrielle of Bavaria | |||||
Duchess Marie Gabrielle in Bavaria, photograph taken circa 1900 | |||||
Born |
Tegernsee, Germany | 9 October 1878||||
Died |
24 October 1912 34) Sorrento, Italy | (aged||||
Burial | Theatine Church, Munich | ||||
Spouse | Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria | ||||
Issue |
Luitpold, Hereditary Prince of Bavaria Princess Irmingard Albrecht, Duke of Bavaria Prince Rudolf | ||||
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House | Wittelsbach | ||||
Father | Karl Theodor, Duke in Bavaria | ||||
Mother | Infanta Maria Josepha of Portugal |
Duchess Marie Gabrielle in Bavaria (German: Marie Gabrielle Mathilde Isabelle Therese Antoinette Sabine Herzogin in Bayern) was born 9 October 1878 in Tegernsee in the Kingdom of Bavaria and died 24 October 1912 in Sorrento in the Kingdom of Italy).[1]
Biography
Family
Her parents were ophthalmologist Karl Theodor, Duke in Bavaria, a member of the House of Wittelsbach and kinsman of the Kings of Bavaria, and his second wife, Princess Maria José of Bragança, a daughter of King Miguel I, exiled monarch of Portugal. Her paternal aunt was Empress Elisabeth of Austria (Sissi) and one of her sisters was Elisabeth in Bavaria, consort of Albert I of Belgium.
Marriage
On 10 July 1900 in Munich, Marie Gabrielle married her second cousin once-removed, Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria.[1] He was the eldest son of Prince Ludwig of Bavaria (later Prince Regent and King of Bavaria) and Maria Theresia of Austria-Este. The wedding was attended by Prince Joachim of Prussia, representing his father Emperor Wilhelm II.[1] After their marriage, the couple settled down in Bamberg, Bavaria, where Rupprecht was head of an army corps.[2] Their two eldest children were born there.[2]
The couple traveled a great deal. For example, they journeyed to Japan and returned by way of the United States in 1903.[3] The trip to Japan was scientific in nature, and the couple were accompanied by a renowned professor from the University of Munich.[2] Marie Gabrielle wrote home quite enthusiastically about their journey. Like her parents, she was a great lover of science and nature, as well as poetry and music.[2]
While in Japan, Marie Gabrielle became seriously ill.[4] Upon their return to Bavaria, she underwent surgery for appendicitis. She made a full recovery.[4]
Her husband Rupprecht became the heir apparent when his father became King of Bavaria in 1913, however, Marie Gabrielle had died from renal failure the previous year and never became Crown Princess of Bavaria. Her husband later remarried, to her first cousin Princess Antoinette of Luxembourg, on August 26, 1918.
Marie Gabrielle was interred at Theatinerkirche in Munich near her deceased children. Her only child to survive to adulthood was her second son Albrecht.
Issue
Name | Birth | Death | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
By Rupprecht Maria Luitpold Ferdinand, Crown Prince of Bavaria (May 18, 1869–August 2, 1955; married on July 10, 1900 at the Court Church in The Residenz, Munich)[1] | |||
Luitpold Maximilian Ludwig Karl of Bavaria | May 8, 1901 | August 27, 1914 | died in childhood from polio. |
Irmingard Maria Therese José Cäcilia Adelheid Michaela Antonia Adelgunde | September 21, 1902 | April 21, 1903 | died in childhood from diphtheria. |
Albrecht Luitpold Ferdinand Michael | May 3, 1905 | July 8, 1996 | married first, 1930, Countess Maria Draskovich von Traskotjan; married second 1971, Countess Marie-Jenke von Buzin; had issue. |
Daughter | December 6, 1906 | December 6, 1906 | stillborn. |
Rudolf Friedrich Rupprecht | May 30, 1909 | June 26, 1912 | died in childhood from diabetes. |
Ancestry
References
- 1 2 3 4 "Prince Ruprecht Married" (PDF), The New York Times, Munich, 10 July 1900
- 1 2 3 4 "Bavarian Royalties Coming to America" (PDF), The New York Times, Munich, 9 May 1903
- ↑ "Bavarian Prince to See America" (PDF), The New York Times, Berlin, 26 April 1903
- 1 2 "Princess Rupprecht Ill" (PDF), The New York Times, Munich, 19 August 1903
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Duchess Marie Gabrielle in Bavaria. |