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Princess Marguerite of Orléans

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Princess Marguerite of Orléans
Princess Małgorzata Adelajda Maria Czartoryska
Born(1846-02-16)16 February 1846
Pavillon de Marsan, Tuileries Palace, Paris, Kingdom of France
Died24 October 1893(1893-10-24) (aged 47)
Paris, French Republic
SpousePrince Władysław Czartoryski
IssuePrince Adam Ludwik Czartoryski
Prince Witold Kazimierz Czartoryski
Names
French: Marguerite Adélaïde Marie
HouseOrléans
FatherPrince Louis, Duke of Nemours
MotherPrincess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha

Princess Marguerite Adélaïde Marie of Orléans, French: Marguerite d'Orléans, Polish: Małgorzata Orleańska, (16 February 1846 – 24 October 1893[1]) was a member of the House of Orléans and a Princess of France by birth. Through her marriage to Prince Władysław Czartoryski, Marguerite was a princess of the House of Czartoryski by marriage.

Early life

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Princess Marguerite Adélaïde Czartoryska, early 1870s

Marguerite was the third child of Prince Louis, Duke of Nemours and his wife Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.[2] On February 17, 1846, the day after her birth, she was baptized at the Tuileries Palace in Paris and held at the baptismal font by her paternal uncle François of Orléans, Prince of Joinville, and by her paternal great-aunt Princess Adélaïde of Orléans.[3] She lived in Bushy House after the death of her grandmother, Queen Maria Amalia who received the house after the death of Queen Adelaide where then her father inherited after the death of her grandmother.

In 1865, Marguerite became romantically involved with her first cousin, Louis of Orléans, Prince of Condé, but the young man's premature death the following year put an end to their plans.[4]

Marriage and issue

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Marguerite married Prince Władysław Czartoryski, second son of Prince Adam Jerzy Czartoryski and his wife, Princess Anna Zofia Sapieha, on 15 January 1872 in Chantilly. His first was María Amparo Muñoz y Borbón, 1st Countess of Vista Alegre, eldest morganatic daughter of Queen Maria Christina of Spain and her second husband, Agustín Fernando Muñoz y Sánchez, Duke of Riánsares.[5] Marguerite and Władysław had two sons:

Death

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The death of Princess Marguerite, seems to have occurred, the St James's Gazette observes, under painful circumstances. For some years she had been suffering from tuberculosis, and had ceased to play a part in the society of the Faubourg, of which she was once so bright an ornament, devoting all her remaining strength to the care of her two children, Princes Adam and Withold.

The winter and spring of 1893, which she passed at San Remo, the she had made terrible progress, and a fortnight before she was brought from the sanatorium near Frankfurt, where the summer was spent, to the Hôtel Lambert, her Paris home, in a well-nigh hopeless state.

She rallied, however, and on Tuesday, at the usual dinner-hour, she was able to take some nourishment, looking forward to congratulating her father, Prince Louis, Duke of Nemours, the next day on the eightieth anniversary of his birth.

An hour later a fatal crisis came on, and at nine o'clock she breathed her last in the arms of her devoted husband and in the presence of her sons. The Duke of Nemours, who was sent for at once, arrived too late to take a last farewell of his child, and the Duc de Chartres, the Duke of Aumale, the Prince de Joinville, the Duc and Duchess d'Alençon, and the Comte and Comtesse d'Eu did not reach the house of morning.[6]

She was buried in Saint-Louis-en-l'Île, Paris, but after some time, both her grave and that of her husband Władysław, were moved to the Czartoryski family crypt in Sieniawa, Poland.[citation needed]

Ancestry

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References

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  1. ^ NOTE:Extract of Paris Civil records 1893: p. 25. Rem: the death was declared on 25 October but she actually died on the 24th at 9 pm Archived 26 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ NOTE:Extrait de Paris des registres d'état Civil 1893: p. 25. Archived 26 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Le courrier royal.
  4. ^ Berthe Clinchamp (1897), The Duke of Aumale, prince soldier: A great lord of the 19th century (in French), vol. XIX, section 8.
  5. ^ https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00054735&tree=LEO [bare URL]
  6. ^ Western Daily Press, 28 October 1893 [full citation needed]