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Maria
Antonia Josepha Joanna of Habsburg-Lorraine, daughter of the Austrian Empress
Marie Therese of Hapsburg and her husband Francis I of Lorraine, was born on
2nd November 1755 in Vienna. She spent her childhood in Schonbrunn and in 1770
she married the Dauphin and future King of France
Louis XVI.
On her arrival to Versailles, she was welcomed by Louis XV and his
court. However the King's favourite, Madame du
Barry, who Marie Antoinette later nicknamed "the creature", would
never get on well with the Dauphine because of the Countess'
controversial past. When Louis XV died and Marie Antoinette became the new Queen
of France, she had to fight the envy of some privileged courtiers who held high
positions and influence under the former King.
This envy extended to the favors 20-year old queen bestowed upon her few chosen
young friends, such as the Countess Yolande
Gabrielle de Polignac, Princess Marie Therese de
Lamballe and Princess de Guéménée. These and other
of the Queen’s greedy friends enjoyed every sort of privilege taking
advantage of the Queen's generosity and the King's weakness.
However the Queen's popularity had been fading away since her official
entrance in Paris on 8th June 1773. Under the pressure of her disloyal friends,
she created innumerable useless offices such as that of Superintendent of the
Queen's House for the Princess de Lamballe.
Furthermore, she used to buy a great deal of dresses and jewelry making her
milliner Madame Bertin famous all over France. Finally,
the Queen spent enormous amounts for her personal buildings. Marie-Antoinette
had the Petit Trianon readapted to her taste as well as her exclusive theatre
and the Hameau, a miniaturized hamlet built in the park of Versailles, where
she and her friends loved to dress and act the role of
peasants.
No matter
that the Queen's heart was generous and her donation to the poor was
considerable,
the rumors about her oddity increased her people's open criticism - if not
hatred. This contributed much to cause the French Revolution. The French had
been waiting for long years for a royal heir and at last the Queen
gave birth to a daughter, Marie Therese Charlotte duchess of Angouleme - Madame
Royale - on 19th December 1778 after a very difficult delivery that nearly
caused the mother's death. Then,
Marie-Antoinette had three more children. They were Louis Joseph, who died at a
very early age due to a respiratory failure, Louis Charles - the Duke
of Normandy and future Louis XVII - who died in 1795 at the age of ten, and
Marie Sophie Elene Beatrix, who died in just her first year of life of
tuberculosis.
Happiness
over
the heir's birth didn't last long though,
and on 5th October 1789,
thousands women marched from Paris to Versailles armed as real soldiers demanding
bread. That night,
they slept outside in front of the Royal Palace, but at 5 a.m., they entered
the Palace and found their way straight to the sleeping
Queen’s apartments. While the Queen's guards were murdered defending
her, Marie-Antoinette awakened by her ladies,
rushed to the King's apartments. The Queen showed
great courage when she decided to show herself and greet the crowd. Her bravery
much impressed Lafayette who bowed to Marie Antoinette and kissed her hand.
The people shouted "Long live the Queen!", but that same day
the Royal family was moved from Versailles to Paris into the uninhabited palace
of Tuileries. Daily, their lives seemed to be more
and more in danger so they decided to escape from the palace with Madame Royale,
Louis Charles in a girl's dress, Louis XVI's sister Madame Elisabeth de France
and Count Hans Axel Fersen, Marie-Antoinette’s most
intimate friend, who was dressed up as
a coachman.
On 22th
June 1791, at Varennes, over 200 miles from Paris and almost in sight of their
destination and freedom they were recognized and arrested. During that long
journey back to the Capital,
the French insulted the Queen calling her " The Austrian". The Royal
family was confined in the tower of the Temple and on 21th January 1793 at 8:10
pm, Louis XVI was guillotined. The Queen was separated from her children and
brought to the Conciergerie. Marie-Antoinette was executed on 16th October 1793
at 12:15 p.m. by the same guillotine that would later symbolize The
Terror.
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