Princess Louise of Stolberg-Gedern
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2017) |
Louise of Stolberg-Gedern | |
---|---|
Countess of Albany | |
Consort of the Jacobite pretender | |
Pretendence | 28 March 1772 – 30 January 1788 |
Born | Mons, Austrian Netherlands (modern day Belgium) | 20 September 1752
Died | 29 January 1824 Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany | (aged 71)
Spouse | |
House | Stolberg-Gedern |
Father | Prince Gustav Adolf of Stolberg-Gedern |
Mother | Princess Elisabeth of Hornes |
Princess Louise Maximilienne Caroline Emmanuele of Stolberg-Gedern (20 September 1752 – 29 January 1824) was the wife of Charles Edward Stuart, the Jacobite claimant to the English and Scottish thrones. She is commonly called the Countess of Albany.
Early life[]
Louise was born in Mons, Hainaut, in the Austrian Netherlands (now Belgium). She was the eldest daughter of Prince Gustav Adolf of Stolberg-Gedern and his wife, Princess Elisabeth of Hornes, the younger daughter of Maximilian, Prince of Hornes.[1] When she was only four years old, her father was killed at the Battle of Leuthen.
When she was seven, she was sent to be educated at the school attached to the convent of St. Waudru in Mons. The mission of this convent was to provide a home for young ladies of the nobility who had insufficient financial means to live unmarried in the world. In 1766, the Empress Maria Theresa arranged for the convent to give to Louise one of its endowed prebends. Although technically Louise was a canoness (a type of nun), she was not required to stay in the convent cloister and was still allowed to travel in society. Indeed, for most of the canonesses, the acceptance of a prebend was merely a temporary stage until they found appropriate noble husbands.
Marriage[]
In 1771, Louise's younger sister (also a canoness at St. Waudru) married the Marquess of Jamaica, only son of the 3rd Duke of Berwick (great-grandson of King James II of England and VII of Scotland). The Duke of Berwick's uncle, the Duke of Fitz-James, began negotiations with Louise's mother for a marriage between Louise and Charles Edward Stuart, the Jacobite claimant to the English and Scottish thrones. Although King Louis XV of France recognised the succession of the House of Hanover, he also hoped that the legitimate Stuart line would not die out and would be an ongoing threat to the Hanoverians.
The negotiations were delicate, since Louise's family had no money of its own and relied totally on the goodwill of the Empress Maria Theresa (who was allied to the Hanoverians). On 28 March 1772, Louise was married by proxy to Charles Edward in Paris. The couple met for the first time on 14 April 1772, when they renewed their marriage vows in person in the town of Macerata, Italy.[2] Louise was henceforward recognised by Jacobites as Queen of England, Scotland, France, and Ireland.
Charles and Louise spent the first two years of their married life in Rome. In spite of the difference in their ages (he was 52, while she was 20), the couple were at first happy together, but there were several shadows on the relationship. There was no sign of Louise conceiving a child. Charles had been encouraged in the belief that, if he married, the pope would recognise him as King of England and Scotland, and France might provide funds for another Jacobite rising. Louise had virtually been promised that she would be treated as a queen. Instead, Charles found his hopes both of a son and of diplomatic recognition disappointed, while Louise found herself married to an old prince with no prospects.
In 1774, Charles and Louise moved to Florence, where they began to use the title of "Count and Countess of Albany" to avoid difficulties the Italian nobility had with addressing them as King and Queen of Great Britain. They stayed as guests of Prince Corsini until Charles bought the Palazzo di San Clemente in 1777.[3]
Count Vittorio Alfieri[]
Count Vittorio Alfieri was born into a wealthy aristocratic family in Asti, now in Piedmont, in 1749. After several affairs with married women, he decided to devote himself to the writing of poetry and tragedies for the theatre.[4]
In 1776, during a stay in Florence, he came across Louise and was much taken by her. He did not follow up at this stage, but contented himself with admiring her from a distance. He left Florence to concentrate on study and furthering his literary ambitions. He returned to Florence in 1777 and this time sought an introduction to Louise. He fell in love with her and now determined to split her from Charles. He became a frequent visitor to the Palazzo di San Clemente and was welcomed unsuspectingly by Charles. There is no evidence of when Louise and Alfieri became lovers, but it was probably in 1778 when Alfieri penned her amorous sonnets, including one inviting her to elope with him.[5]
Meanwhile, Louise's husband Charles had become a drunkard again, as he had been a number of years before. In December 1780, Louise left Charles and took refuge in a convent. She claimed, and it is widely believed to be true, that Charles had become physically abusive to her. Louise received the support of the Grand Duchess of Tuscany, the pope, and her brother-in-law the Cardinal Duke of York, all of whom were unaware of Louise's ongoing adulterous relationship with Alfieri.
Within a few weeks, Louise moved back to Rome. She lived briefly at the Ursuline Convent before moving to her brother-in-law's official residence, the Palazzo della Cancelleria. Alfieri followed Louise to Rome, where for two years they carried on their affair in secret. In April 1783, the Cardinal Duke of York finally discovered the truth. In early May, Alfieri left Rome in order to avoid being expelled by force.
In April 1784, Charles was induced by King Gustav III of Sweden to grant Louise a decree of separation. The couple did not divorce (since no such legal procedure existed in the Papal States), but Louise was thereby permitted to live separately from her husband.
In June 1784, Louise left Rome, purportedly to summer at the baths of Baden. In August, she was reunited with Alfieri at Colmar. They spent the next two months together at the castle of Martinsburg. In order to continue to keep their meeting secret from the Cardinal-Duke of York (who was the chief source of Louise's income), they separated again, and Louise spent the winter of 1784/1785 in Bologna. She summered in Paris before returning to Martinsburg, where she was joined again by Alfieri in September. After two months, Louise returned to Paris.
In 1786, the Cardinal-Duke of York learnt of the ongoing relationship between Louise and Alfieri. This caused a complete rupture between Louise and her brother-in-law. Henceforth, she made no attempt to hide her relationship with Alfieri. From December 1786 onwards, they lived together as a couple, with only occasional and brief separations.
On the last day of January 1788, Louise's husband Charles died. This resulted in a substantial improvement in her financial situation, thanks to a previously agreed pension from the King of France. Although Louise now had the freedom to marry Alfieri, they did not regularise their relationship, since Alfieri had always opposed the institution of marriage. They lived at first in Paris. There, Louise established a famous salon in her home, to which the most important writers, artists, and intellectuals were invited.
In 1791, Louise and Alfieri paid a four-month visit to England. In 1792, the 10th of August insurrection encouraged them to flee from Paris, only two days before the republican authorities went to their home to arrest them.
Louise and Alfieri settled in Florence. In 1793, Alfieri purchased Palazzo Gianfigliazzi, a mansion overlooking the River Arno. Here, Louise re-established her famous salon, although perhaps on a somewhat smaller scale than in Paris. Louise continued to live with Alfieri until his death in 1803.
Later life[]
After Alfieri's death, Louise's companion was the artist François Xavier Fabre. It seems unlikely that their relationship was a romantic one. Louise continued to live in Florence until 1809, when she was summoned to Paris by Napoleon during France's war with Britain. He asked if she had ever given birth to Charles Edward's child, hoping to find a legal heir who could then be used to cause insurrection in Britain. When she replied "no", the meeting was abruptly terminated.[6] A year later, she was allowed to return to Florence.
Louise is buried in the Basilica di Santa Croce in Florence (in the Castellani Chapel); Alfieri is also buried in the basilica (between the tombs of Machiavelli and Michelangelo).
Ancestry[]
showAncestors of Princess Louise of Stolberg-Gedern |
---|
References[]
- ^ "ALBANY, Louise-Maximiliane-Caroline-Emmanuel, princesse de Stolberg, comtesse D'". Biographie nationale de Belgique. Brussels: H. Thiry-Van Buggenhoudt. 1866.
- ^ Bentley's Miscellany. Volume LI. London: Chapman and Hall. 1862. p. 68.
|volume=
has extra text (help) - ^ Vaughan, pp14, 24
- ^ Vaughan, pp31-36
- ^ Vaughan, pp37-49
- ^ Douglas p.249
Bibliography[]
- Douglas, Hugh. Bonnie Prince Charlie in love. Sutton Publishing, 2003.
- Vaughan, Herbert M. The Last Stuart Queen. Brentano's, 1911
Further reading[]
- Crosland, Margaret. Louise of Stolberg, Countess of Albany. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd, 1962.
- Lee, Vernon (i.e. Violet Paget). The Countess of Albany. London: W.H. Allen, 1884. Full text.
- Mitchiner, Margaret. No Crown for the Queen: Louise de Stolberg, Countess of Albany, and Wife of the Young Pretender. London: Jonathan Cape, 1937.
- Vaughan, Herbert. The Last Stuart Queen. London: Duckworth, 1910.
- Texts on Wikisource:
- "Albany, Louise, Countess of". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
- "Albany, Louisa, Countess of". Dictionary of National Biography. 1885–1900.
- "Albany, Louisa Maria Caroline". New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
- "Albany, Louisa Maria Caroline". Encyclopedia Americana. 1920.
- 1752 births
- 1824 deaths
- House of Stuart
- Jacobites
- People from Gedern
- 18th-century German people
- 19th-century German people
- 18th-century German women
- 19th-century German women
- House of Stolberg
- People from Mons
- British countesses