Josephine of Leuchtenberg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Josephine of Leuchtenberg | |
| Queen of Sweden and Norway | |
Dowager Queen Josefina Photograph taken in 1874 |
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| Titles | HM Queen Josefina of Sweden (1859-1876) HM The Queen of Sweden & Norway (1844-1859) HRH The Crown Princess of Sweden (1823-1844) HGDH Duchess Josephine of Leuchtenberg (1807-1823) |
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| Born | March 14, 1807 |
| Birthplace | Milan |
| Died | June 7, 1876 (aged 69) |
| Place of death | Stockholm |
| Buried | Riddarholmen Church |
| Consort | March 8, 1844 - July 8, 1859 |
| Consort to | Oscar I |
| Issue | Charles XV, Gustaf, Oscar II, Eugénie, August |
| Royal House | Beauharnais |
| Father | Eugène de Beauharnais |
| Mother | Augusta of Bavaria |
Joséphine, Queen of Sweden and Norway (Joséphine Maximiliane Eugénie Napoléonne de Beauharnais) (14 March 1807 - 7 June 1876) was the Queen consort of Oscar I of Sweden and Norway. She was known as Queen Josefina.
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[edit] Background
Born in Milan, Italy, she was a daughter of Eugène de Beauharnais, the first Duke of Leuchtenberg, and his wife, Princess Augusta of Bavaria. Her paternal grandmother and namesake was Joséphine Tascher de La Pagerie, the first wife of Emperor Napoléon I of France.
At birth she was given the title Princess of Bologna by Napoléon, and later she was also made Duchess of Galliera.
Princess Joséphine married Oscar I at the Leuchtenberg Palace in Munich on May 22, 1823. They also conducted a wedding ceremony on June 19 in Stockholm. Through her mother (her maternal line of Hesse and upward through Hanau and Ansbach, Baden-Durlach and Kleeburg), Joséphine was a descendant of Gustav I of Sweden and Charles IX of Sweden, thus also making her children descendants of Gustav Vasa, etc. Through her paternal grandfather, she was also one of the descendants of Renata of Lorraine, granddaughter of Christian II of Denmark.
[edit] Crown Princess
Six days after her arrival in Sweden, her middle name Napoléonne was removed. This was because Sweden had fought against Bonaparte in the recent war. She had brought with her several pieces of exclusive jewelery made in Paris for her paternal grandmother, which are still among the possessions of the Royal Houses of Sweden and Norway (via Queen Louise of Denmark, née Princess of Sweden and Norway and also via Crown Princess Märtha of Norway, née Princess of Sweden and Norway).
Joséphine was interested in gardening, enjoyed painting, and was involved in charity and reforms in Sweden. Her interest in art was active and genuine; she greatly supported the career of the painter Sofia Adlersparre (1808-1862), tried to do the same for the sculptor Helena Isenberg, (who was, however, too independent to accept help from anyone) and also encouraged the artistical interest and talent of her own daughter, Princess Eugénie, who became a talented amateur-artist.
In 1824, the crown prince-couple visited Norway and stayed in Oslo, were they engaged in much representation to make the monarchy popular.
Although she was a devoted Catholic, she agreed to raise her children Lutheran. Oscar and Josephine had five children, of which two were to become kings of Sweden and Norway.
Her marriage was at the beginning a happy one, unusually so for a royal match, and her husband's unfaithfulness was successfully hidden from her. After she discovered it, however, she was deeply wounded and never really felt happy again; she wrote in her diary of her bitterness that a woman was expected to endure a husband's unfaithfulness. Her husband's affair with the famed actress Emilie Högquist was well known.
[edit] Queen
"Josefina", as she was called in Sweden, was very popular both within the court and with the public from the moment she arrived as crown-princess, and she was more popular as queen than both her predecessor and her successor. She was a success both socially and as a queen consort, and though she remained a devout Catholic, this did not lessen her popularity.
It is discussed wether she had any political influence during her husband and her son's reign, and it is very possible that she did, though it is unknown to what amount. She was pointed out to have acted as her husband's advisor and for having exerted large influence in several matters; in 1848, she tried to prevent the war of Schleswig-Holstein, in 1855, she was rumored to be responsible for the treaty between Sweden, Norway, France and Great Britain, and in 1860, she was, according to the rumors, the active force between the new law of freedom of religion; the old version of this law allowed different religious beliefs only if you were born in it; it did not allow for conversion from the Lutheran Faith.
Josephine died at the age of sixty-nine and received a Catholic burial. Her last words were "I am going home now. I am very happy."
[edit] Family and issue
Her children were:
- King Charles XV (Charles IV in Norway) (1826-1872)
- Prince Gustaf, Duke of Uppland (1827-1852)
- King Oscar II (1829-1907)
- Princess Eugenie (1830-1889)
- Prince August, Duke of Dalarna (1831-1873)
[edit] Ancestry
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François de Beauharnais, marquis de la Ferté-Beauharnais | ||||||||||||
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Alexandre, vicomte de Beauharnais |
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Marie Henriette Pyvart de Chastullé | ||||||||||||
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Eugène de Beauharnais, 1st Duke of Leuchtenberg |
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Joseph-Gaspard de Tascher | ||||||||||||
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Joséphine Tascher de La Pagerie |
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Rose-Claire des Vergers de Sanois | ||||||||||||
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Josephine of Leuchtenberg |
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Count Palatine Frederick Michael of Zweibrücken | ||||||||||||
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King Maximilian I of Bavaria |
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Countess Palatine Maria Franziska of Sulzbach | ||||||||||||
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Princess Amalia Augusta of Bavaria |
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Landgrave George William of Hesse-Darmstadt | ||||||||||||
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Princess Augusta Wilhelmine of Hesse-Darmstadt |
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Countess Luise of Leiningen-Dagsburg | ||||||||||||
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[edit] References
- Herman Lindqvist (2006). Historien om alla Sveriges drottningar (in Swedish). Norstedts Förlag. ISBN 9113015249.
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Josephine of Leuchtenberg
Born: 1807 Died: 1876 |
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| Swedish royalty | ||
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| Preceded by Désirée Clary (Queen consort) |
Royal Consort of Sweden (Queen consort) 1844 - 1859 |
Succeeded by Louise of the Netherlands (Queen consort) |
| Preceded by Désirée Clary 1818-1844 |
Queen Consort of Norway 1844-1859 |
Succeeded by Louise of the Netherlands 1859-1871 |

