Caroline Bonaparte

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Birth Date:
25.03.1782
Death date:
18.05.1838
Length of life:
56
Days since birth:
88415
Years since birth:
242
Days since death:
67907
Years since death:
185
Extra names:
Caroline Bonaparte, Каролина Бонапарт, Karolīna Bonaparte,
Cemetery:
Set cemetery

Maria Annunziata Carolina (Marie Annonciade Caroline) Murat (née Bonaparte) (25 March 1782 – 18 May 1839), better known as Caroline Bonaparte, was the seventh surviving child and third surviving daughter of Carlo Buonaparte and Letizia Ramolino, and a younger sister of Napoleon I of France. Her complete title was "Princesse française, Grand Duchess Consort of Berg and Cleves, Queen Consort of Naples and Sicily, Princess Consort Murat, Comtesse de Lipona".

Early years

Caroline was born in Ajaccio, Corsica. She was a younger sister of Joseph Bonaparte, Napoléon Bonaparte, Lucien Bonaparte, Elisa Bonaparte, Louis Bonaparte and Pauline Bonaparte. She was an older sister of Jérôme Bonaparte.

In 1793, Caroline moved with her family to France during the French Revolution. There, she fell in love with Joachim Murat, one of her brother's generals, and they married on 20 January 1800. Caroline was seventeen years old. Initially, Napoleon did not wish to allow them to marry, however, his wife Joséphine de Beauharnais persuaded him to change his mind. Caroline had been a pupil at the school in St-Germain-en-Laye founded by Madame Jeanne Campan. She attended the school at the same time as Hortense, Joséphine's daughter and Caroline's brother Louis' wife.

Queen of Naples

c.1810 jewelry of Caroline Bonaparte.

Ambitious, extravagant, and power-hungry[citation needed], she became Grand Duchess of Berg and Cleves on 15 March 1806 and Queen consort of Naples on 1 August 1808. She was intensely jealous of her sister-in-law Joséphine and her children, as she felt Napoleon favored them over his Bonaparte relatives. Caroline continuously plotted against Joséphine. It was Caroline who arranged for Napoleon to take a mistress, Éléonore Denuelle, who duly gave birth to his first illegitimate child.This had the desired effect of establishing that Joséphine was infertile as Napoleon showed he was clearly capable of siring children.

When Napoleon married his second Empress Consort Marie Louise of Austria, Caroline was responsible for escorting her to France. After meeting her at the border of Austria and her duchy, Caroline forced Marie-Louise to leave all her luggage, servants, and even her pet dog, behind in Austria.

Consequently, she devoted herself to the interests of her husband Joachim Murat, the King of Naples. Her relations with Napoleon became increasingly strained in 1813–1814, as Joachim shifted allegiances. She supported his decision to make a separate peace with the anti-Napoleonic allies, keeping his throne while Napoleon was deposed. Then, during the Hundred Days of 1815, Joachim came out for Napoleon. He was defeated and executed, and Caroline fled to the Austrian Empire.

In 1830, she married Francesco Macdonald (1777–1837), who had been Minister of War of the Kingdom of Naples in 1814 and 1815. She lived in Florence until her death in 1839. The couple had no children.

One of her direct descendants is the American actor René Auberjonois. Specifically, he is her great-great-great-grandson.

Issue

Caroline and Joachim were the parents of four children:

  • Achille Charles Louis Napoléon Murat, 1st Sovereign Prince of Pontecorvo, 2nd Prince Murat (Paris, 21 January 1801 - Jefferson County, Florida, 15 April 1847), m. Tallahassee, Florida, 12 July 1826 Catherine Daingerfield Willis (near Fredericksburg, Virginia, 17 August 1803 - Tallahassee, Florida, 6 August 1867), daughter of Colonel Byrd C. Willis (29 August 1781 - 1846) and wife Mary Lewis, without issue;
  • Princess Marie Letizia Joséphine Annonciade Murat (Paris, 26 April 1802 - Bologna, 12 March 1859), m. Venice, 27 October 1823 Guido Taddeo Marchese Pepoli, Conte di Castiglione (Bologna, 7 September 1789 - Bologna, 2 March 1852), and had one daughter;
  • Lucien Charles Joseph Napoléon Murat, 2nd Sovereign Prince of Pontecorvo, 3rd Prince Murat (Milan, 16 May 1803 - Paris, 10 April 1878), m. Bordentown, New Jersey, 18 August 1831 Caroline Georgina Fraser (Charleston, South Carolina, 13 April 1810 - Paris, 10 February 1879), daughter of Thomas Fraser and wife Anne Lauton, and had issue; he was an associate of his first cousin Napoleon III of France;
  • Princess Louise Julie Caroline Murat (Paris, 21 March 1805 - Ravenna, 1 December 1889), m. Trieste, 25 October 1825 Giulio Conte Rasponi (Ravenna, 19 February 1787 - Florence, 19 July 1876), had issue.

Ancestry

Source: wikipedia.org

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        Relations

        Relation nameRelation typeBirth DateDeath dateDescription
        1Napoleons Lisjēns Šarls Jozefs  MuratNapoleons Lisjēns Šarls Jozefs MuratSon16.05.180310.04.1878
        2
        Napoléon Achille MuratSon00.00.180100.00.1847
        3
        Луиза Юлия Каролина МюратDaughter
        4
        Letīcija Marija Jozefīne MuratDaughter26.04.180212.03.1859
        5Napoleon  BonaparteNapoleon BonaparteBrother15.08.176905.05.1821
        6Joachim-Napoléon  MuratJoachim-Napoléon MuratHusband25.03.176713.10.1815
        7
        Marchese Guido Taddeo Pepoli, Conte di CastiglianoSon in-law07.09.178902.03.1852
        8
        Carolina Georgina MuratDaughter in-law13.04.181010.02.1879
        9Joséphine de  BeauharnaisJoséphine de BeauharnaisSister in-law23.06.176329.05.1814
        10Gioacchino Napoleone PepoliGioacchino Napoleone PepoliGrandson10.10.182526.03.1881
        11
        Луи Наполеон МюратGrandson22.12.185122.09.1912
        12René  AuberjonoisRené AuberjonoisDescendant01.06.194008.12.2019
        13
        Eugénie Caroline MuratDescendant13.11.191310.05.1986

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