The drawing portrait picture of Princess Teresa of the Two Sicilies. Princess Teresa Maria Cristina of the Bourbon-Sicilies and Bragança (Naples, 14 March 1822 - Porto, 28 December 1889), third and last Empress of Brazil, was the wife of emperor Pedro II, who was married on 4 September 1842. The Bay of Naples Naples (Italian: , Neapolitan: Nà pule, from Greek ÎεάÏολη < ÎÎα Î ÏÎ»Î¹Ï Néa Pólis New City) is the largest city in southern Italy and capital of the Campania region and the Province of Naples. ...
March 14 is the 73rd day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (74th in leap years) with 292 days remaining in the year. ...
1822 (MDCCCXXII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar) of the Gregorian calendar (or a common year starting on Thursday of the 12-day-slower Julian calendar). ...
Location - Country Portugal - Region Norte - Subregion Grande Porto - District or A.R. Porto Mayor Rui Rio - Party PSD Area 41. ...
December 28 is the 362nd day of the year (363rd in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 3 days remaining. ...
1889 (MDCCCLXXXIX) was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ...
September 4 is the 247th day of the year (248th in leap years). ...
1842 was a common year starting on Saturday (see link for calendar). ...
Son of the King Francis I of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, its enlace was reason of disillusionment for the husband. She has who affirms that, when knowing the wife, who marries for power of attorney, D. Pedro would have cogitated in asking for the cancellation of the marriage for account of its diminished physical attributes: she was low, she limps and ugly. Some chronicles tell that the marriage alone if would have consummated one year later and that the emperor did not only send the wife in return to its native land thanks to the intervention of D. Mariana Carlota de Verna Magalhães, Condessa de Belmonte and love of the young monarch. Francis I (Francesco Gennaro Giuseppe, August 14, 1777 â November 8, 1830) was King of the Two Sicilies from 1825 to 1830. ...
Princess Teresa on her later years (circa 1880s.) Despite these initial profits, the marriage would last 46 years. Princess Teresa she was endowed with rare cordial sense. Discret and intelligent, it conquered the esteem of the husband favors to the common interest in cultural subjects. In the fleet that brought it to Brazil made to embark artists, musicians, professors, botanical and other scholars. To the few, the cultural life would enrich and scientific Brazilian, having ordered to come of its land the first recouped artistic drawing of Herculaneum in Pompeii, sent for its brother, Fernando II. Good singer and good amateur musician, cheered the palace with saraus constant. Dedicated and submitted, was a dedicated mother to the two children who had avenged. Herculaneum (in modern Italian Ercolano) was an ancient Roman town, located in the territory of the current commune of Ercolano. ...
A computer-generated depiction of the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79 which buried Pompeii, from the BBCs Pompeii: The Last Day. ...
Pedro II was a loyal husband, even so has been unfaithful in some occasions, especially for account of its long romance with Luísa Margarida of Portugal and Barros, Condessa de Barral and Pedra Branca. Princess Teresa was in dramatical conditions, cardiac victim of one fainting few days after the military coup on 15 November 1889. During all the maritime trip that the Imperial Family lead Brazilian route to the exile, Princess Teresa was in state of shock, torpifyed for the treatment rude that the republicans had dedicated to the put down dynasty. To the ambassador of present Austria in the embarkment, it asked: "That we made to be treat as criminal" In the landing in Portugal one left for a simple hotel, in the city of the Porto, where it was felt badly. A doctor called to pressas nothing could make. Its last words would have been: "Brazil, blessed land that never more I will see". She was buried in the Pantheon of São Vicente de Fora, of where its remaining portions had been transferred for the Imperial Mausoleum of the Cathedral of Petrópolis. November 15 is the 319th day of the year (320th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 46 days remaining. ...
1889 (MDCCCLXXXIX) was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ...
Pantheon may refer to: Buildings: Pantheon, Rome, a temple built in 125 AD to all Roman gods, now a Christian church. ...
In her honor, the Brazilian cities of Teresina had been named after her (Piauí), Teresópolis (Rio de Janeiro), Cristina (Minas Gerais) and Santo Amaro da Imperatriz (Santa Catarina). Teresina (formerly written Theresina) is the capital and largest city of the Brazilian state of Piauà and the only inland capital in the northeastern region of the country. ...
Piauà is one of the states of Brazil, located in the northeastern part of the country, in the arid region of Sertão. ...
Teresópolis (informally known as Terê) is a municipality in the state of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, near Petrópolis. ...
Flag of Rio de Janeiro See other Brazilian States Capital Rio de Janeiro Largest City Rio de Janeiro Area 43,696. ...
For queens of this name, see Christina and Maria Christina. ...
Flag of Minas Gerais See other Brazilian States Capital Belo Horizonte Largest City Belo Horizonte Area 586,528. ...
Santa Catarina (the Spanish- and Portuguese-language name of St. ...
When donating its iconographic collection for the National Library of Brazil, D. Pedro II made an only requirement: that the collection gained the name of its wife (Collection Teresa Maria Cristina). The collection today is overthrown by UNESCO as world-wide patrimony.
Children
Princess Teresa Cristina was mother of Prince Alfonso (1845 - 1847), Princess Isabel (1846 - 1921), Princess Leopoldina (1847 - 1871) and Dom Pedro (1848 - 1850). 1845 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar). ...
1847 was a common year starting on Friday (see link for calendar). ...
Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil (July 29, 1846âNovember 14, 1921), nicknamed the Redeemer, was heir to the throne of Brazil (with the title of Princess Imperial) during the last decades of the reign of her father Pedro II of Brazil, and sometime Regent. ...
1846 was a common year starting on Thursday (see link for calendar). ...
1921 (MCMXXI) was a common year starting on Saturday (see link for calendar). ...
Leopoldina of Brazil, Princess of Brazil and Duchess of Saxe (São Cristóvão Palace, July 13, 1847 - Vienna, Austria, February 7, 1871). ...
1847 was a common year starting on Friday (see link for calendar). ...
1871 (MDCCCLXXI) was a common year starting on Sunday (see link for calendar). ...
1848 (MDCCCXLVIII) was a leap year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
1850 was a common year starting on Tuesday (see link for calendar). ...
External links - Casa Imperial do Brasil
- Instituto D. Isabel I
| Imperial Family of Brazil | | Forefathers - John VI of Portugal - Queen Carlota Joaquina Image File history File links Flag_of_Empire_of_Brazil. ...
In 1822 (7 September), Infante dom Pedro of Portugal, heir apparent to the Portuguese throne and kings representative in Brazil, was proclaimed Emperor of Brazil. ...
John VI, King of Portugal KG KGF (Portuguese João, pron. ...
Carlota Joaquina Teresa of Spain (25 April or 25 May 1775 - 6 January or 7 January 1830) was the eldest daughter of King Carlos IV of Spain (1748-1819) and his wife Maria Luisa of Parma (1751-1819). ...
First generation - Pedro I - Empress Leopoldina - Princess Amélie of Leuchtenberg Second Generation - Pedro II - Empress Teresa Cristina - Maria II da Glória - Princess Januária of Braganza - Princess Francisca of Braganza Third generation - Princess Isabel the Redeemer - Gaston of Orleans, Count d'Eu Pedro I, Emperor of Brazil, King of Portugal (pron. ...
Maria Leopoldina Josepha Caroline of Habsburg, archduchess of Austria, Empress consort of Brazil, was born in 1797 in Vienna, Austria. ...
This article contains information that has not been verified and thus might not be reliable. ...
Emperor Pedro II in regalia, in the opening of the annual session of the Brazilian Imperial Parliament (General Assembly), 1873. ...
Princess Teresa Cristina of Bourbon-Two Sicilies (1822-1870) was the tenth child of king Francis II of the Two Sicilies (1777-1839) and his second wife, Princess Isabel of Bourbon, daughter of king Charles IV of Spain. ...
Maria II da Glória, (pron. ...
Januária Maria of Bragança (pron. ...
Francisca Carolina of Bragança (pron. ...
Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil (July 29, 1846âNovember 14, 1921), nicknamed the Redeemer, was heir to the throne of Brazil (with the title of Princess Imperial) during the last decades of the reign of her father Pedro II of Brazil, and sometime Regent. ...
...
The Vassouras Branch (dynastic) Fourth generation - Prince Luiz of Orleans-Braganza - Princess Maria Pia Fifth generation - Prince Pedro Henrique of Orleans-Braganza - Princess Maria Elisabeth Sixth generation - Prince Luiz of Orleans-Braganza - Prince Bertrand of Orleans-Braganza - Prince Antonio of Orleans-Braganza - Christine, Princess de Ligne Seventh generation - Prince Pedro Luís of Orleans-Braganza - Prince Rafael of Orleans-Braganza - Princess Amélia of Orleans-Braganza Prince Pedro Henriqe of Orleans-Bragança (1909-1981), was the great-grandson of the last emperor of Brazil, Pedro II of Brazil and grandson of Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil, and he successed her as the titular emperor of Brazil in 1921. ...
Prince Luiz of Orleans-Bragança. ...
Bertrand of Orleans-Braganza (born February 2, 1941) in Mandelieu, France, with baptism name of Bertrand Maria José Pio Januário Miguel Gabriel Raphael Gonzaga de Orleans e Bragança , is a member of Imperial House, being the third son of Prince Pedro Henrique of Orleans-Braganza and Princess Maria...
Antonio of Orleans-Braganza (born June 24, 1950 in Rio de Janeiro), with the baptism name of Dom Antonio João Maria José Jorge Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga de Orleans e Bragança e Wittelsbach, is a member of Imperial House of Brazil, being the third (according monarchists claims) in...
Prince Antonio of Orleans-Braganza: current Prince of Grão-Pará of the Brazilian Imperial Family. ...
The Petrópolis Branch (non-dynastic) Fourth generation - Prince Pedro de Alcantara of Orléans-Braganza - Countess Elisabeth Dobrzensky Fifth generation - Prince Pedro Gastão of Orleans-Braganza - Princess Isabel of Orleans-Braganza - Princess Francisca of Orleans-Braganza - Prince João of Orleans-Braganza Sixth generation - Prince Pedro Carlos of Orleans-Braganza - Princess Maria da Gloria of Orléans-Braganza - Princess Cristina of Orleans-Braganza - Prince Jan Sapieha-Rozánski Seventh generation - Prince Pedro Thiago of Orleans-Braganza - Princess Paula Maria Sapieha - Princess Ana Tereza Sapieha Pedro de Alcantara LuÃs Filipe Maria Gastão Miguel Gabriel Rafael Gonzaga of Orléans-Braganza, Prince of Grao Para (15 October 1875 - 29 January 1940) was the first born son of Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil and her husband Gaston, comte dEu. ...
Pedro Gastao, titularly 6th Prince of Grao Para, born 1913, is head of the so-called Petropolis branch of the Brazilian Imperial House and a claimant to that throne. ...
Princess Isabelle of Orleans-Braganza became by marriage duchess of Orléans, of Valois, of Chartres, of Guise, of Enghien, of Vendome, of Penthievre, of Aumale, of Nemours and of Montpensier, dauphine of Auvergne, princess of Joinville, princess of Condé, etc. ...
Princess Maria da Gloria of Orléans-Braganza (1946- ) is the former wife of Alexander, Crown Prince of Yugoslavia and is now the Duchess of Segorbe. ...
| References - This article incorporates text translated from the corresponding article in the Portuguese Wikipedia.
|