Archduchess Maria Amalia | |||||
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Archduchess of Austria Dowager Duchess of Parma |
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Duchess of Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla | |||||
Tenure | 19 July 1769 – 9 October 1802 | ||||
Born |
Hofburg Palace, Vienna, Archduchy of Austria, Holy Roman Empire (now Republic of Austria) |
26 February 1746||||
Died | 18 June 1804 Prague Castle, Prague, Kingdom of Bohemia (modern day Czech Republic), Holy Roman Empire |
(aged 58)||||
Burial | St. Vitus Cathedral, Prague Castle Complex, Prague, Czech Republic | ||||
Spouse | Ferdinand, Duke of Parma | ||||
Issue |
Princess Carolina King Louis I of Etruria Princess Maria Antonia |
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House | Habsburg | ||||
Father | Prince Francis, Duke of Lorraine | ||||
Mother | Empress Maria Theresa I, Holy Roman Empress | ||||
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Full name | |
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Maria Amalia Josepha Johanna Antonia |
Archduchess Maria Amalia of Austria (26 February 1746 – 18 June 1804) was the Duchess of Parma, Piacenza and Guastalla by marriage. Maria Amalia was a daughter of Empress Maria Theresa I and Francis of Lorraine. She was thus younger sister to Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor and older sister to Leopold II, Holy Roman Emperor, Queen Maria Carolina, Queen Consort of Naples and Queen Marie Antoinette, Queen Consort of France.
She was the eighth child of Empress Maria Theresa of Austria and Emperor Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor. Born at the Hofburg Imperial Palace, she was raised in the Habsburg Viennese court in winter and at Schönbrunn and Laxenburg in summer. As her siblings, she was regularly interviewed by her mother. Maria Amalia, as her sisters, was mainly raised to be an ideal consort and taught the arts and how to be obedient, dutiful and representative. Because of her age and the fact that the siblings were raised separated by gender, she was in practice raised as an only child. She did not have a good relationship with her mother: in fact, of all her daughters, Maria Theresa was said to have the worse relationship with Amalia. When she debuted as an adult in the society life in Vienna, she made a success because of her beauty.
One of her paintings, St. Therese and the child Jesus, still exists today in a private collection.
Against her will, Amalia was married to Ferdinand of Parma (1751–1802). The marriage was supported by the future Holy Roman Emperor Joseph II, whose first beloved wife had been Ferdinand's sister, Princess Isabella of Parma. The Archduchess's marriage to the Duke of Parma was part of a complicated series of contracts that married off Maria Theresa's daughters to the King of Naples and Sicily and the Dauphin of France. All three sons-in-law were members of the House of Bourbon.