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01 december 2004

Marie Antoinette

Marie_Antoinette.gif


Queen Marie Antoinette

Marie Antoinette and her children (at Versailles) - 1787 by Vigée Le Brun
Oil on canvas, 104" x 82", Versailles, France

Self Portrait-1790 by Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun (1755-1842)
oil on canvas, 100 cm x 81 cm, Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy
The painting on the easel is of Marie Antoinette done from memory.

Marie Antoinette was born November 2, 1755 in Vienna, Austria. She was the youngest and most beautiful daughter of Francis I and Maria Theresa, Emperor and Empress of the Holy Roman Empire. Marie Antoinette was brought up believing her destiny was to become queen of France. She married the crown prince of France in 1770. Four years later she became queen when her husband was crowned King Louis XVI (House of Bourbon).

Archduchess Antonia grew up in the highly moral environment of her mother's court. Maria Theresa was a strong leader, beloved by her people. The busy empress supervised her children's upbringing as closely as she could, but Antonia's education was left largely in the hands of a governess who was happy to spoil the pretty, high-spirited little girl. Antonia spent more time playing than studying, although she enjoyed her music lessons and became an excellent harpist and dancer.

Unlike so many royal couples, her parents had married for love and truly enjoyed family life. Although the court was a place of great formality on important occasions, in private the royal family was rather casual. Antonia regarded her mother with awe but was close to her good-natured father. A shadow fell over Antonia's sunny life in 1765, when her father died of a stroke at the age of 56.

A few years later, Antonia's childhood came to an end. Her mother had arranged Antonia's marriage to the dauphin (crown prince) of France to cement an alliance between Austria and France. In 1770, at age 14, Marie Antoinette left her homeland and travelled to the French palace of Versailles to be married.
Her 15-year-old groom, Louis, was fat, awkward, and shy. He neglected his royal duties in favor of hunting and working in his locksmith shop. He also suffered from a medical condition known as phimosis which prevented him from fathering children for the first seven years of his marriage. The public, knowing nothing of this, blamed Marie Antoinette for her failure to bear heirs to the throne -- as she would so often be blamed for things beyond her control.

The court of Versailles was more rigid than Maria Theresa's court, and Marie Antoinette yawned and giggled openly during royal ceremonies. As time went on she became increasingly rebellious. She insisted on going out alone or with a few companions, instead of surrounded by attendants. She picked her own friends and even her own clothes, refusing to wear corsets and stays. When her brother visited the court he commented disapprovingly that she had bad manners and was not doing her job.

Many French people hated the queen for her Austrian blood and her formerly frivolous ways. She was rumored to have had numerous affairs. The most persistent rumor centered on Count Hans Axel Fersen, a Swedish diplomat. He was definitely one of the queen's favorites, but it is doubtful that they were lovers. Yet Marie Antoinette was reviled in pornographic songs, pictures and pamphlets. Someone even published a fake autobiography in which the queen supposedly confessed her sins, calling herself a prostitute.

Marie Antoinette was also called Madame Deficit and blamed for the country's financial problems. It is true that she enjoyed a lavish lifestyle; her mother wrote to warn her that "a queen can only degrade herself by this sort of heedless extravagance in difficult times." But Marie Antoinette was not quite as foolish and spoiled as the public believed. It certainly is not true that she said "Let them eat cake" when told that people were starving. As a woman and a foreigner she made a convenient scapegoat for the nation's problems, and it seemed that no slander against her was too wild to be widely believed.

As she matured Marie Antoinette became less extravagant. She tried to change her image by wearing simple gowns and posing for portraits with her children, but her efforts had little effect on the unforgiving public. The greatest damage to her reputation was created by a scandal in which she played no part at all: the Diamond Necklace Affair.

In 1789 the French Revolution erupted. Its causes were many, but much of the revolutionaries' fury focused on Marie Antoinette. On October 5 a mob of Parisian women marched on Versailles, shouting for the queen's blood. Some members of the mob were actually men in dresses, under the theory that royal troops were less likely to fire upon women.

When Marie Antoinette heard about the approaching mob she remained calm. "I know they have come from Paris to demand my head, but I learned from my mother not to fear death and I shall await it with firmness," she said. When the mob appeared outside the palace, Lafayette advised her to show herself on the balcony. Bravely she stepped out and faced them alone. As voices shouted, "Shoot! Shoot!" the queen bowed her head and curtsied. Then Lafayette joined her, bowed to her, and kissed her hand. He was considered a great hero, and his action impressed the crowd. "Vive la reine," they shouted ("Long live the queen!")

Because the king was apathetic, it fell to Marie Antoinette to negotiate with revolutionaries on the royal family's behalf. She also secretly urged Austria to intercede in France. When France went to war with Austria, Louis and Marie Antoinette were charged with treason. In 1792, the year the institution of royalty was officially abolished in France, the royal family was moved to the Temple Prison. They were treated fairly well and were permitted to live together. In December of that year Louis's trial began. He was found guilty and sentenced to death, and on January 21, 1793 he went bravely to the guillotine.

In October Marie Antoinette, now called "the Widow Capet," was tried and, like her husband, convicted of treason and sentenced to be guillotined. On October 16, 1793 she was taken through the streets of Paris in an open cart. She maintained her dignity to the end. On the scaffold she accidentally stepped on the executioner's foot, and her last words were, "Monsieur, I ask your pardon. I did not do it on purpose."

Posted by jacob at 01 december 2004 09:52 to 02 - Queen | the State | Comments (6)

Comments

I can't wait to see the movie tonight woot woot lol talk to you guys tomorrow about bye

comment by: Emily to entry Marie Antoinette in Category: 02 - Queen | the State

hello my name is megan and im doing a article about marie antoinette.i personally think that she could have been a great ruler someday if the people would have given her a chance .no im not saying that she was right about spending all of that money on things so dumb(i guess) but it wasnt right 4 the france people to just accue her of things that she didnt do.it was also wrong of them to separte her childeren from her.(i wouldnt have been able to take that if it were me) but thatnks 4 letting me leave a comment , bye
-megan

comment by: megan bells to entry Marie Antoinette in Category: 02 - Queen | the State

I think that you alll should know that I was imperfect as a ruler, but it was no easy thing for me to rule. When I first arrived I was already condemmed. I loved children and my childen were the things that were the most precious to me. My husband was discusting and I couldn't stand to be around him, and so I tyred to distract myself from the real world. The rest is personal and you will probobly never know it.
Au revoir
Marie Antoinette

comment by: Marie to entry Marie Antoinette in Category: 02 - Queen | the State

I love marie antoinette!

comment by: Brittany to entry Marie Antoinette in Category: 02 - Queen | the State

From
The Memoirs of Madame Vigée Le Brun
Translated by Lionel Strachey 1903
Translation of : Souvenirs
Originally published New York: Doubleday, Page

"The last sitting I had with Her Majesty was given me at Trianon, where I did her hair for the large picture in which she appeared with her children. After doing the Queen's hair, as well as separate studies of the Dauphin, Madame Royale, and the Duke de Normandie, I busied myself with my picture, to which I attached great importance, and I had it ready for the Salon of 1788. The frame, which had been taken there alone, was enough to evoke a thousand malicious remarks. "Voilà le déficit! (that's how the money goes)," they said, and a number of other things which seemed to me the bitterest comments. At last I sent my picture, but I could not muster up the courage to follow it and find out what its fate was to be, so afraid was I that it would be badly received by the public. In fact, I became quite ill with fright. I shut myself in my room, and there I was, praying to the Lord for the success of my "Royal Family," when my brother and a host of friends burst in to tell me that my picture had met with universal acclaim. After the Salon, the King, having had the picture transferred to Versailles, M. d'Angevilliers, then minister of the fine arts and director of royal residences, presented me to His Majesty. Louis XVI. vouchsafed to talk to me at some length and to tell me that he was very much pleased. Then he added, still looking at my work, "I know nothing about painting, but you make me like it."
The picture was placed in one of the rooms at Versailles, and the Queen passed it going to mass and returning. After the death of the Dauphin, which occurred early in the year 1789, the sight of this picture reminded her so keenly of the cruel loss she had suffered that she could not go through the room without shedding tears. She then ordered M. d'Angevilliers to have the picture taken away, but with her usual consideration she informed me of the fact as well, apprising me of her motive for the removal. It is really to the Queen's sensitiveness that I owed the preservation of my picture, for the fishwives who soon afterward came to Versailles for Their Majesties would certainly have destroyed it, as they did the Queen's bed, which was ruthlessly torn apart."

comment by: willy to entry Marie Antoinette in Category: 02 - Queen | the State

Hello Jacob,
Elisabeth Louise Vigée-Le Brun was born on 16 April 1755 in Paris, daughter of the portrait painter Louis Vigée (1715-67), under whom she first studied. By 1770 she was practising on her own account as a portrait painter, and copying Greuze, Rubens and van Dyck. A visit to the Netherlands in 1781 further increased her admiration for these Flemish masters. In 1782she paints a self portrait with a straw hat (""I was so delighted and inspired by "Ruben's Chapeau de Paille" that I completed a self portrait whilst in Brussels in an effort to achieve the same effect. I painted myself wearing a straw hat and a feather and a garland of flowers, and holding a palette in one hand" - from 'Souvenirs') In 1776 she married the dealer J.-B.-P. Le Brun (1748-1813), by whom she had one daughter. Their Paris hôtel became a centre of fashionable society, amongst whom her beauty and style aided her professional success. She first painted Marie-Antoinette in 1778 (Vienna), and it was partly due to the Queen that she was reçue by the Académie in 1783, her morceau de réception being La paix ramenant l'abondance of 1780 (Louvre). She exhibited at the Salon 1783-91, 1798, 1802, 1817 and 1824. Her work attracted envious criticism before the Revolution, and in 1789 she and her little daughter Julie quickly left Paris to practise with eminent success in Italy 1789-92, Vienna 1792-5 and St. Petersburg 1795-1801. She was able to return to Paris in 1801. She visited London in 1803-4 (staying briefly in Portman Square) and the Netherlands in 1805. Her later years were passed in Paris and Louveciennes. She composed her somewhat anodyne Souvenirs in 1834-5, and died in Paris on 29 May 1842.

comment by: willy to entry Marie Antoinette in Category: 02 - Queen | the State

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