Maria Clementina Sobieska

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Maria Clementina Sobieska (Polish: Maria Klementyna Sobieska;[1] 18 July 1702 – 18 January 1735) was a titular queen of England, Scotland and Ireland by marriage to James Francis Edward Stuart, a Jacobite claimant to the British throne. The granddaughter of the Polish king John III Sobieski, she was the mother of Charles Edward Stuart ("Bonnie Prince Charlie") and of Henry Benedict Cardinal Stuart (Jacobite Duke of York, later Jacobite claimant).

Maria Clementina Sobieska
Martin van Meytens (after), Maria Clementina Sobieska, 1727/28, Scottish National Gallery
Consort of the Jacobite pretender
Pretence3 September 1719 – 18 January 1735
Born(1702-07-18)18 July 1702
Ohlau, Silesia
(now Oława, Poland)
Died18 January 1735(1735-01-18) (aged 32)
Palazzo Muti, Rome, Papal States
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1719)
IssueCharles Edward Stuart
Henry Benedict Stuart
Names
English: Maria Clementina Sobieska
Polish: Maria Klementyna Sobieska
HouseSobieski
FatherJakub Ludwik Sobieski
MotherHedwig Elisabeth of Neuburg

Coat of arms of Maria Clementina Sobieska

Biography

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Early life

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She was born Maria Klementyna Sobieska, on 18 July 1702 in Oława (Ohlau), Silesia, in Poland. Her parents were Prince Jakub Ludwik Sobieski (1667–1737), the eldest son of the Polish King Jan III Sobieski, and Countess Palatine Hedwig Elisabeth of Neuburg (1673–1722). Jan III Sobieski was famous for his victorious Battle of Vienna against the Ottoman Turks on 12 September 1683. Her older sister Maria Karolina (known as Charlotte) was the Duchess of Bouillon by marriage.

 
The solemnisation of the marriage of Prince James Francis Edward Stuart and Princess Maria Clementina Sobieska (Montefiascone 1 September 1719) by Agostino Masucci

Marriage

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Being one of Europe's wealthiest heiresses from inheriting vast estates in Poland from her paternal grandfather, she was betrothed to James, Prince of Wales, the exiled son of James II and VII. King George I of Great Britain was opposed to the marriage because he feared that the union might produce heirs to James Francis Edward's claim to his thrones. To placate him, Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor (Maria Clementina's own maternal first cousin) had her arrested while on her way to Italy to marry James Francis Edward. She was confined in Innsbruck Castle but eventually the guards were deceived and, with the help of Charles Wogan, Maria Clementina escaped to Bologna, where, for safety from further intrusions, she was married by proxy to James, who was in Spain at that time.[2][3] Maria Clementina's father approved her escape, declaring that, as she became engaged to James Francis Edward, she ought to "follow his fortune and his cause".

Maria Clementina and Prince James were formally married on 3 September 1719 in the chapel of the episcopal palace of Montefiascone, Italy, in the Cathedral of Santa Margherita.[4] Following their marriage, James and Maria Clementina were invited to reside in Rome at the special request of Pope Clement XI, who acknowledged them as the king and queen of England, Scotland and Ireland.

Titular queen

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The Pope provided them with a papal guard of troops and gave them the Palazzo Muti in the Piazza dei Santi Apostoli in Rome to live in, as well as a country villa at Albano. The Catholic Church also provided them with an annual allowance of 12,000 crowns out of the papal treasury. Popes Clement XI and Innocent XIII considered James and Maria Clementina, both Catholics, the rightful king and queen of England, Scotland and Ireland.

 
Memorial in St. Peter's, Rome

The married life of James and Maria Clementina proved turbulent and unhappy. Reportedly, James initially had a favourable impression of her because of her beauty, while she disliked him because of his lack of it, as well as his passive nature.[5] She befriended the governess of her son, a Mrs Sheldon, who became her confidant and favourite.[5] On the other hand, she disliked the influence of James's favourite John Hay of Cromlix and his wife Marjorie, and reportedly, she suspected James of having an affair with Marjorie Hay.[5]

In 1725, soon after their second child's birth, James fired Sheldon and appointed James Murray as the guardian of their sons against the wishes of Maria Clementina.[5] She left him and went to live in convent of St. Cecilia in Rome with her favourite Sheldon and the rest of her personal retinue. She accused her husband of adultery, while he said it was sinful to leave him and her children. Upon the advice of Cardinal Alberoni, who claimed it was her only chance to gain support against her husband, Maria Clementina claimed that James wished to give his son a Protestant education.[5] This claim secured her the support of the Pope as well as the Kingdom of Spain against James and the sympathy of the public when she demanded that James remove the Duke of Dunbar and the Hays from his court and reinstate Sheldon in her position.[5] In April 1726, James granted her sons permission to visit her. The whole affair was seen as a scandal in Europe and reported about by anti-Jacobite agents in Rome.[5] In May 1727, through the mediation of the duke of Liria, James removed the Hay couple from his court, and in January 1728, Maria Clementina and James reconciled in Bologna.[5]

In practice, however, Maria Clementina and James lived the rest of their marriage separated: James preferred to reside in Albano, while Maria Clementina lived in the Palazzo Muti in Rome.[5] She was prone to depression, spending much of her time praying and submitting to religious fasting and other Catholic ascetic rituals, which is thought to have played a role in the fact that she never conceived again.[5] Her sexual relations with James soon discontinued; they seldom dined together, and though they were officially reconciled, she preferred to avoid him outside formal occasions.[5] Maria Clementina did perform the ceremonial functions she had as Jacobite queen: in June 1729, for example, she gave an audience for Montesquieu.[5] Her favourite Mrs Sheldon did not officially reside at the Jacobite court, but she provided her with a residence close to it, and kept her as a confidante.[5] Her relation to her younger son was not close, as he was his father's favourite, but she was close to their elder son Charles, who was his mother's favourite: during an illness of Charles in 1732, for example, Maria Clementina tended to him despite the fact that he fell ill in Albano and she was thus forced to meet James.[5]

Death

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Her health was weakened by her ascetic life style and deteriorated as the years went by.[5] Maria Clementina died at the early age of 32 on 18 January 1735. Her doctor named the cause of death as 'scorbutic disease', more commonly known as scurvy.[6] She was interred with full royal honours in St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. Pope Clement XII ordered that she have a state burial. Pope Benedict XIV commissioned architect Filippo Barigioni to design a monument for her memory, Pietro Bracci sculpted a statue for it, and it was erected 1742 in the Basilica.

Issue

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Maria Clementina and James Francis Edward had two sons:

Ancestry

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In fiction

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A fictionalised re-telling of Maria Clementina's rescue from Innsbruck in 1719 forms the plot of A. E. W. Mason's 1901 novel Clementina.

References

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  1. ^ Sobieska is the proper spelling of her last name, for she was female. However, English language literature commonly uses the spelling Sobieski, which is appropriate for a male member of the family.
  2. ^ Aronson, Theo (1979). Kings over the Water: The Saga of the Stuart Pretenders. Thistle Publishing. pp. 182–187. ISBN 978-1910198070.
  3. ^ Maher, Richard. "The Rescue & Escape of Princess Maria Clementina Sobieska (recording of lecture)". History Hub. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  4. ^ "Maria Clementina Sobieska". 8 July 2016. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Frank McLynn: Bonnie Prince Charlie: Charles Edward Stuart
  6. ^ Kybett, Susan M. (1988). Bonnie Prince Charlie: A Biography of Charles Edward Stuart. London: Unwin Hyman. p. 40. ISBN 978-0044403876.
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Titles in pretence
Vacant
Title last held by
Mary of Modena
— TITULAR —
Queen consort of England, Scotland, and Ireland
1719–1735
Reason for succession failure:
Glorious Revolution
Vacant
Title next held by
Louise of Stolberg-Gedern