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Theresa Kunegunda Sobieska

Electress of Bavaria from 1695 to 1726

Theresa Kunegunda Sobieska

Electress of Bavaria from 1695 to 1726

FieldValue
consortyes
nameTheresa Kunegunda Sobieska
imageFrançois de Troy - So-called portrait of Teresa Kunegunda Sobieska - Lviv National Art Gallery.jpg
captionPortrait by François de Troy, 1695
successionElectress consort of Bavaria
reign2 January 1695 – 26 February 1726
spouse
issue{{plainlist
issue-link#Children
houseSobieski
fatherJohn III Sobieski
motherMarie Casimire
birth_date
birth_placeWilanów, Poland, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
death_date
death_placeVenice, Republic of Venice
burial_placeTheatine Church
  • Charles VII, Holy Roman Emperor
  • Ferdinand Maria Innocent
  • Clemens August
  • Johann Theodor
  • Maria Anna Karoline
  • Philip Maurice Maria
  • William, Prince of Bavaria
  • Alois John Adolf
  • Maximilian Emanuel Thomas | issue-link = #Children

Theresa Kunegunda (, , ) (4 March 1676 – 27 March 1730) was a Polish princess, Electress of Bavaria and of the Electorate of the Palatinate. By birth, she was a member of the House of Sobieski and by marriage, she is also a member of the House of Wittelsbach. She served as Regent of the Palatinate in 1704–05.

Biography

Born on 4 March 1676, she was the daughter of the King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania John III Sobieski and Marie Casimire Louise de La Grange d'Arquien. While her parents had 13 children, she was the only daughter to survive childhood.

Theresa was baptized in Jaworow on 19 July, having for her godfather Charles II, king of England and for her godmother Marie-Thérèse of Austria, wife of Louis XIV, both by proxy.[[File:Teresa Kunegunda Sobieska 1676 1730.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Teresa Kunegunda as a young girl by [[Jerzy Siemiginowski-Eleuter]], c. 1690]]

Theresa was educated in painting and music, Latin, Italian and French. At the beginning of 1692, her father planned to marry her to the Crown Prince of Denmark, but this project was subsequently abandoned.

Wedding

On 15 August 1694, at the age of 19, she married Maximilian II Emanuel, elector of Bavaria, governor of the Spanish Netherlands. He was a former comrade in arms of her father and widower of Maria Antonia of Austria. The marriage took place by proxy in Warsaw, her oldest brother standing in for Max Emanuel. She would not meet the latter until 1 January 1695 in Brussels. Her journey, paid for by her mother, lasted approximately 50 days and was accompanied by splendors. Her dowry was 500,000 thalers. In honor of her wedding to Max Emanuel, the opera Amor vuol il giusto was created and staged. It used a libretto by the Italian writer Giovanni Battista Lampugnani.

Regency

In the Spanish Netherlands, Theresa gave birth to six children before the family moved to Munich in May 1701. Following the evacuation of the Bavarian court from the Spanish Netherlands after the defeat of the Battle of Blenheim (13 August 1704), she became Regent of the Government of the Elector of Bavaria. The move was smart since, legally, the war was against the Elector and not Theresa. It was the only time a woman ruled the Bavarian Electorate. However, Emperor Leopold I forced her to sign the treaty of Ilbersheim on 5 November 1704. This included a cease-fire and gave Theresa the Munich Rentamt, one of the four administrative districts of the Duchy of Bavaria, while the rest of Bavaria is placed under the military supervision of the Austrian Empire. At the beginning of this phase, Theresa strove to decide in collaboration with Max Emanuel but the courier took too long for this to be effective. She also had to face the defection of part of the Bavarian nobility in favour of the emperor.

Exile

On 21 December 1704, she gave birth to the last of her sons. In February 1705, she left to meet her mother in Padua following the discovery of written correspondence between her husband and Agnès Le Louchier, the Countess of Arco, his mistress. Upon her return in May, the imperial army would not allow her to return to Munich, in violation of the treaty of Ilbersheim. Her four sons were looked after by the Austrians in Klagenfurt while her two youngest ones and her daughter remained in Munich.

After the battle of Ramillies on 23 May 1706, Max Emanuel was forced to flee the Spanish Netherlands and found refuge at the court of France located in Versailles. Max Emmanuel would live with his French mistress Agnès Le Louchier during his exile from 1704 to 1715.

Theresa negotiated her return to Munich from the Emperor by asking for the help of the Republic of Venice, Pope Clement XI, Prince Eugene of Savoy and Anne, Queen of Great Britain. She tried to use the Duke of Modena and the Grand Duchess of Tuscany as mediators, but to no avail. On the domestic level, the financial and military retributions imposed by Joseph I created many revolts and she lost a son. Consequently, Theresa spent ten years in exile in Venice, not returning until 1715 when the War of the Spanish Succession ended and Max Emanuel regained his electorate on 7 September 1714 by the Treaty of Baden. Despite a short reign of seven months, Theresa left a positive balance where in particular the role of the nobility was improved.

Later life

Portrait c. 1720

Children

She was the mother of ten children by her husband, including Holy Roman Emperor Charles VII and Clemens August of Bavaria, Archbishop-Elector of Cologne, though only six of them survived to adulthood.

  • A stillborn child (1695)
  • Maria Anna Karoline (1696–1750), a nun
  • Charles VII, Holy Roman Emperor (1697–1745), King of Bohemia, and Elector of Bavaria
  • Philip Maurice Maria (1698–1719), posthumously elected Bishop of Paderborn and Bishop of Münster as news of his death had not yet spread
  • Ferdinand Maria Innocenz (1699–1738), Imperial Field Marshal
  • Clemens August (1700–1761), Archbishop of Cologne, Prince-Bishop of Hildesheim, Bishop of Paderborn
  • William (1701–1704), Prince of Bavaria, died in childhood
  • Alois John Adolf (1702–1705), Prince of Bavaria, died in childhood
  • John Theodore (1703–1763), Cardinal, Prince-Bishop of Regensburg, Bishop of Freising and Bishop of Liège
  • Maximilian Emanuel Thomas (1704–1709), Prince of Bavaria, died in childhood

Ancestors

References

References

  1. Skalmowski, Wojciech. (2003). "For East is East: Liber Amicorum Wojciech Skalmowski". Peeters Publishers.
  2. "Teresa Kunegunda Sobieska".
  3. "Poznań fireworks of Teresa Kunegunda Sobieska".
  4. Anna Szweykowska. (2002). "Lampugnani, Giovanni Battista (i)". [[Oxford University Press]].
  5. (1995). "The Treaties of the War of the Spanish Succession: An Historical and Critical Dictionary". Greenwood Publishing Group.
  6. Kägler, Britta. (30 June 2009). "zeitenblicke - Weibliche Regentschaft in Krisenzeiten. Zur Interimsregierung der bayerischen Kurfürstin Therese Kunigunde (1704/05)". zeitenblicke 8, n ° 2.
  7. "Teresa Kunegunda Sobieska in Venice".
  8. "Teresa Kunegunda Sobieska".
  9. [http://www.geneall.net/F/ Geneall.fr]
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