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Joséphine de Beauharnais

Joséphine Bonaparte (French: [ʒozefin bɔnapaʁt], born Marie Josèphe Rose Tascher de La Pagerie; 23 June 1763 – 29 May 1814) was Empress of the French as the first wife of Emperor Napoleon I from 18 May 1804 until their marriage was annulled on 10 January 1810. As Napoleon's consort, she was also Queen of Italy from 26 May 1805 until the 1810 annulment. She is widely known as Joséphine de Beauharnais (French: [ʒozefin boaʁnɛ]).

Joséphine
Portrait by Antoine-Jean Gros, c. 1809
Empress consort of the French
Tenure18 May 1804 – 10 January 1810
Coronation2 December 1804
Queen consort of Italy
Tenure23 May 1805 – 10 January 1810
BornMarie Josèphe Rose Tascher de La Pagerie
(1763-06-23)23 June 1763
Les Trois-Îlets, Martinique, French Antilles
Died 29 May 1814 (aged 50)
Rueil-Malmaison, Kingdom of France
Burial
Church of Saint-Pierre-Saint-Paul, Rueil-Malmaison, France
Spouse
(m. 1779; died 1794)

(m. 1796; ann. 1810)
Issue
Names
Marie Josèphe Rose Tascher de La Pagerie
HouseTascher de La Pagerie
FatherJoseph Gaspard Tascher de La Pagerie
MotherRose Claire des Vergers de Sannois
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Signature

Joséphine's marriage to Napoleon was her second. Her first husband, Alexandre de Beauharnais, was guillotined during the Reign of Terror, and she was imprisoned in the Carmes Prison until five days after his execution. Through her children by Beauharnais, she was the grandmother of the French emperor Napoleon III and the Brazilian empress Amélie of Leuchtenberg. Members of the current royal families of Sweden, Denmark, Belgium, and Norway and the grand ducal family of Luxembourg also descend from her. Because she did not bear Napoleon any children, he had their marriage annulled and married Marie Louise of Austria. Joséphine was the recipient of numerous love letters written by Napoleon, many of which still exist.

A patron of art, Joséphine worked closely with sculptors, painters and interior decorators to establish a unique Consular and Empire style at the Château de Malmaison. She became one of the leading collectors of different forms of art of her time, such as sculpture and painting.[1] The Château de Malmaison was noted for its rose garden, which she supervised closely.

Name Edit

Although she is often referred to as "Joséphine de Beauharnais", it is not a name she herself used. "Beauharnais" is the name of her first husband, which she ceased to use upon her marriage to Napoleon, taking the last name "Bonaparte".[2] And she did not use the name "Joséphine" before meeting Napoleon, who was the first to call her such, perhaps from her middle name, Josèphe. Before she met Napoleon, she went by the name of Rose, or Marie-Rose Tascher de la Pagerie, later de Beauharnais. She sometimes reverted to using her maiden name in later life. After her marriage to then-General Bonaparte, she adopted the name Joséphine Bonaparte. The misnomer "Joséphine de Beauharnais" emerged during the restoration of the Bourbons, who were hesitant to refer to her by either Napoleon's surname or her imperial title.[citation needed]

Disputed birthplace Edit

In Henry H. Breen's 1844 The History of St. Lucia, he stated that he had met with "several well-informed persons" who were convinced that Empress Joséphine had been born there. Breen presented some evidence for this, including a newspaper clipping from 1831 which said that it was "alleged" that the de Taschers were among the first settlers of Saint Lucia, and that the future empress was born on a small estate on a hill then called La Cauzette, and later known as Morne Paix Bouche. According to this story, the family lived there until 1771, when the father went to serve as intendant of Martinique. Some people even claimed to have been among Joséphine's playmates, and one of them said that he had been "graciously received" by the widowed empress in Malmaison. Breen received further confirmation from Joséphine's enslaved nanny, Dede, who said that she nursed Joséphine at La Cauzette.

Joséphine's baptism was administered by Emmanuel Capuchin at Les Trois-Îlets, but the registry only stated she had been baptised there, not born. Dom Daviot, parish priest in Gros Islet, wrote a letter to one of his friends in 1802 stating that "it is in the vicinity of [his] parish that the wife of the first consul was born". He asserted that he was well acquainted with Joséphine's cousin, his parishioner.

Joséphine's father owned an estate in Soufrière District called Malmaison, the name of her famous French residence. It is also assumed that the de Tascher estate in Martinique was a pied-à-terre, occasional lodging, for when they wanted to stay with his mother-in-law. Saint Lucia switched hands between Great-Britain and France fourteen times, and there were no civil registers on the island when Joséphine was born. Saint Lucia's frequent change of ownership between Britain and France could be seen as the reason her birthplace was left out of her birth record as it would have affected her nationality.[citation needed]

Early life Edit

Childhood Edit

Marie-Josèphe-Rose Tascher de La Pagerie was born in Les Trois-Îlets, Martinique, to a wealthy French family who owned a sugarcane plantation, which is now a museum.[3] The Taschers were an ancient French family of country gentry, and Joséphine's grandfather, Gaspard-Joseph was the first to settle in Le Carbet on Martinique in 1726.[4] He seems to have lived in poverty there, but secured a position as a page for his son, Joseph-Gaspard (1735–1790) in the household of the Dauphine of France, Maria Josepha of Saxony.[4]

After spending three years from 1752 in France, Joseph-Gaspard returned to Martinique and married Rose-Claire des Vergers de Sannois (1735–1807), whose maternal grandfather, Anthony Brown, may have been Irish.[5] Rose-Claire was from one of the oldest European families on the plantation, and the Tascher family home near Les Trois-Îlets was part of her dowry. Joséphine was their first child, and they had two more: Catherine-Désirée in 1764 and Marie-Françoise in 1766.[4] Joseph-Gaspard earned his living as a plantation owner and a lieutenant of the Troupes de marine, apart from a small pension for his work in the royal household. He was almost always close to bankruptcy and suffered from ill health.[4]

Joséphine was raised by an enslaved nurse called Marion, whose freedom she would secure in 1807.[4] At the age of ten, she and Catherine-Désirée were sent to a boarding school in Fort-Royal, run by the Bénédictines de la Providence. There, they learned to read, write, sing, dance, and embroider for four years. After the death of Catherine-Désirée, Joséphine returned to her parents' plantation.[4]

First marriage Edit

Background Edit

 
Alexandre-Francois-Marie, Vicomte de Beauharnais by Georges Rouget

Joséphine's paternal aunt, Marie-Euphémie-Désirée Renaudin, was the mistress of a French naval officer, François de Beauharnais, from a less ancient but richer noble family.[4] While living on Martinique, de Beauharnais had a son, Alexandre, by his wife. Soon, the parents returned to France, and left the infant with the Tascher family until 1766.[4] When he had come of age, his father's mistress, who was also Alexandre's godmother, decided that it would be advantageous to her if he married one of her nieces. Aged seventeen, he judged fifteen-year-old Joséphine to be too close to him in age, and thus, Catherine-Désirée was chosen for him. As the bride's father was impoverished and the bridegroom was to become a wealthy man upon his marriage, he asked for no dowry.[6]

By the time Alexandre's father had proposed in a letter, however, Catherine-Désirée had died. Not wanting to lose the rich suitor, her father offered his youngest daughter instead, which was accepted by Alexandre. Marie-Françoise was not yet twelve, however, and her mother and grandmother were not willing to let her go. In the end, Joséphine was engaged to Alexandre.[7]

In October 1779, she went to France with her father. She married Alexandre on 13 December 1779, in Noisy-le-Grand. They had two children: a son, Eugène de Beauharnais, and a daughter, Hortense de Beauharnais (who later married Napoleon's brother Louis Bonaparte in 1802). Joséphine and Alexandre's marriage was not a happy one. Alexandre abandoned his family for over a year to live with a mistress and frequented brothels, leading to a court-ordered separation during which Joséphine and the children lived at Alexandre's expense in the Pentemont Abbey.

During the Reign of Terror Edit

On 2 March 1794, during the Reign of Terror, the Committee of Public Safety ordered the arrest of her husband. He was jailed in the Carmes prison in Paris. Considering Joséphine as too close to the counter-revolutionary financial circles, the Committee ordered her arrest on 18 April 1794. A warrant of arrest was issued against her on 21 April 1794, and she was imprisoned in the Carmes prison until 28 July. During this time, Joséphine was only allowed to communicate with her children by their scrawls on the laundry list, which the jailers soon prohibited.[5]

Her husband was accused of having poorly defended Mainz in July 1793, and being considered an aristocratic suspect, was sentenced to death and guillotined with his cousin Augustin on 23 July 1794, on the Place de la Révolution (today Place de la Concorde) in Paris. Joséphine was freed five days later, thanks to the fall and execution of Robespierre, which ended the Reign of Terror. On 27 July 1794 Tallien arranged the liberation of Thérèse Cabarrus, and soon after that of Joséphine.[5] In June 1795, a new law allowed her to recover the possessions of Alexandre.[citation needed]

Marriage to Napoleon Edit

Madame de Beauharnais had affairs with several leading political figures, including Paul François Jean Nicolas Barras. In 1795, she met Napoleon Bonaparte, six years her junior, and became his mistress. In a letter to her in December, he wrote, "I awake full of you. Your image and the memory of last night's intoxicating pleasures has left no rest to my senses." In January 1796, Napoleon Bonaparte proposed to her and they were married on 9 March. On the marriage certificate, Joséphine reduced her age by 4 years and increased Napoleon's by 18 months, making the newly-weds appear to be roughly the same age.[8] Until meeting Bonaparte, she was known as Rose, but Bonaparte preferred to call her Joséphine, the name she adopted from then on.[9]

The marriage was not well received by Napoleon's family, who were shocked that he had married an older widow with two children. His mother and sisters were especially resentful of Joséphine, as they felt clumsy and unsophisticated in her presence.[10] Two days after the wedding, Bonaparte left Paris to lead a French army into Italy. During their separation, he sent her many love letters. In February 1797, he wrote: "You to whom nature has given spirit, sweetness, and beauty, you who alone can move and rule my heart, you who know all too well the absolute empire you exercise over it!" However, Joséphine rarely wrote back and when she did, her letters were dry and often tepid.[citation needed] It is known that Joséphine did not love Napoleon as much as he loved her, and that it took her years before she warmed to his affections.[citation needed]


 
Joséphine at Malmaison in 1801 by François Gérard

Joséphine, left behind in Paris, in 1796 began an affair with a handsome Hussar lieutenant, Hippolyte Charles.[11] Rumors of the affair reached Napoleon; he was infuriated, and his love for her changed entirely.[12]

In 1798, Napoleon led a French army to Egypt. During this campaign, Napoleon started an affair of his own with Pauline Fourès, the wife of a junior officer, who became known as "Napoleon's Cleopatra." The relationship between Joséphine and Napoleon was never the same after this.[13] His letters became less loving. No subsequent lovers of Joséphine are recorded, but Napoleon had sexual affairs with several other women. In 1804, he said, "Power is my mistress."[14]

In December 1800, Joséphine was nearly killed in the Plot of the rue Saint-Nicaise, an attempt on Napoleon's life with a bomb planted in a parked cart. On 24 December, she and Napoleon went to see a performance of Joseph Haydn's Creation at the Opéra, accompanied by several friends and family. The party travelled in two carriages. Joséphine was in the second, with her daughter, Hortense; her pregnant sister-in-law, Caroline Murat; and General Jean Rapp.[15] Joséphine had delayed the party while getting a new silk shawl draped correctly, and Napoleon went ahead in the first carriage.[16] The bomb exploded as her carriage was passing. The bomb killed several bystanders and one of the carriage horses, and blew out the carriage's windows; Hortense was struck in the hand by flying glass. There were no other injuries and the party proceeded to the Opéra.[17]

Empress of the French Edit

 
The Coronation of Napoleon by Jacques-Louis David (1804)
 
Empress Josephine in coronation costume in 1807–1808 by François Gérard

Napoleon was elected Emperor of the French in 1804, making Joséphine empress. The coronation ceremony, officiated by Pope Pius VII, took place at Notre-Dame de Paris, on December 2. Napoleon first crowned himself, then put the crown on Joséphine's head, proclaiming her empress. This showed his rejection of the clergy as the power of Europe.

In her role as empress, Napoleon had a court appointed to her and reinstated the offices which composed the household of the queen before the French revolution, with Adélaïde de La Rochefoucauld as Première dame d'honneur, Émilie de Beauharnais as Dame d'atour, and the wives of his own officials and generals, Jeanne Charlotte du Lucay, Madame de Rémusat, Elisabeth Baude de Talhouët, Lauriston, d'Arberg, Marie Antoinette Duchâtel, Sophie de Segur, Séran, Colbert, Savary and Aglaé Louise Auguié Ney, as Dame de Palais.[5]

Shortly before their coronation, there was an incident at the Château de Saint-Cloud that nearly sundered the marriage between the two. Joséphine caught Napoleon in the bedroom of her lady-in-waiting, Élisabeth de Vaudey, and Napoleon threatened to divorce her as she had not produced an heir. Eventually, however, through the efforts of her daughter Hortense, the two were reconciled.[18]

 
The Divorce of the Empress Josephine in 1809 by Henri Frédéric Schopin

When after a few years it became clear she could not have a child, Napoleon, while still loving Joséphine, began to think about the possibility of an annulment. The final die was cast when Napoleon's nephew Napoléon Charles Bonaparte, who had been declared his heir, died of croup in 1807. Napoleon began to create lists of eligible princesses. At dinner on 30 November 1809, he let Joséphine know that—in the interest of France—he must find a wife who could produce an heir. Joséphine agreed to the divorce so the Emperor could remarry in the hope of having an heir. The divorce ceremony took place on 10 January 1810 and was a grand but solemn social occasion, and each read a statement of devotion to the other.[19]

On 11 March, Napoleon married Marie-Louise of Austria by proxy;[20] the formal ceremony took place at the Louvre in April.[21] Napoleon once remarked that despite her quick infatuation with him, "It is a womb that I am marrying".[22] Even after their separation, Napoleon insisted Joséphine retain the title of empress. "It is my will that she retain the rank and title of empress, and especially that she never doubt my sentiments, and that she ever hold me as her best and dearest friend."[citation needed]

Later life and death Edit

 
Portrait of Joséphine later in life by Andrea Appiani

Duchess of Navarre Edit

After the divorce, Joséphine lived at the Château de Malmaison, near Paris. She remained on good terms with Napoleon, who once said that the only thing to come between them was her debts. (Joséphine remarked privately, "The only thing that ever came between us was my debts; certainly not his manhood."—Andrew Roberts, Napoleon.) In April 1810, by letters patent, Napoleon created her Duchess of Navarre. Some claim Napoleon and Joséphine were still secretly in love, though it is impossible to verify this.[23]

In March 1811, Marie Louise was delivered of a long-awaited heir, Napoleon II, to whom Napoleon gave the title "King of Rome". Two years later Napoleon arranged for Joséphine to meet the young prince "who had cost her so many tears".

 
Château de Malmaison near Paris

Death Edit

Joséphine died of pneumonia in Rueil-Malmaison on 29 May 1814, soon after walking with Emperor Alexander I of Russia in the gardens of Malmaison, where she allegedly begged to join Napoleon in exile. She was buried in the nearby church of Saint Pierre-Saint Paul[24] in Rueil. Her daughter Hortense is interred near her.

Napoleon learned of her death via a French journal while in exile on Elba, and stayed locked in his room for two days, refusing to see anyone. He claimed to a friend, while in exile on Saint Helena, that "I truly loved my Joséphine, but I did not respect her."[25] Despite numerous affairs, eventual marriage annulment, and his remarriage, the Emperor's last words on his death bed at St. Helena were: "France, the Army, the Head of the Army, Joséphine."("France, l'armée, tête d'armée, Joséphine").[26]

Descendants Edit

 
Joséphine's eldest granddaughter, Joséphine, Queen consort of Sweden and Norway. Portrait by Axel Nordgren

Hortense's son, Napoleon III, became Emperor of the French. Eugène's son Maximilian de Beauharnais, 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg married into the Russian Imperial family, was granted the style of Imperial Highness and founded the Russian line of the Beauharnais family, while Eugene's daughter Joséphine married King Oscar I of Sweden, the son of Napoleon's one-time fiancée, Désirée Clary. Through her, Joséphine is a direct ancestor of the present heads of the royal houses of Belgium, Denmark, Luxembourg, Norway and Sweden and of the grandducal house of Baden.[citation needed]

A number of jewels worn by modern-day royals are often said to have been worn by Joséphine. Through the Leuchtenberg inheritance, the Norwegian royal family possesses an emerald and diamond parure said to have been Joséphine's.[citation needed] The Swedish royal family owns several pieces of jewelry frequently linked to Joséphine, including the Leuchtenberg Sapphire Parure,[citation needed] a suite of amethyst jewels,[citation needed] and the Cameo Parure, worn by Sweden's royal brides.[citation needed] However, a number of these jewels were probably never a part of Joséphine's collection at all, but instead belonged to other members of her family.[citation needed]

Another of Eugène's daughters, Amélie of Leuchtenberg, married Emperor Pedro I of Brazil in Rio de Janeiro, and became Empress of Brazil, and they had one surviving daughter, Princess Maria Amélia of Brazil, who was briefly engaged to Archduke Maximilian of Austria, before he became Maximilian I of Mexico, before her early death.[citation needed]

Personality and appearance Edit

 
Josephine in 1805 by Pierre-Paul Prud'hon

Her biographer Carolly Erickson wrote, "In choosing her lovers [Joséphine] followed her head first, then her heart",[7] meaning that she was adept in terms of identifying the men who were most capable of fulfilling her financial and social needs. She was not unaware of Napoleon's potential. Joséphine was a renowned spendthrift and Barras may have encouraged the relationship with Général Bonaparte in order to get her off his hands. Joséphine was naturally full of kindness, generosity and charm, and was praised as an engaging hostess.

Joséphine was described as being of average height, svelte, shapely, with silky, long, chestnut-brown hair, hazel eyes, and a rather sallow complexion. Her nose was small and straight, and her mouth was well-formed; however she kept it closed most of the time so as not to reveal her bad teeth.[27] She was praised for her elegance, style, and low, "silvery", beautifully modulated voice.[28]

Patroness of roses Edit

 
'Souvenir de la Malmaison'

In 1799 while Napoleon was in Egypt, Josephine purchased the Chateau de Malmaison.[29] She had it landscaped in an English style, hiring landscapers and horticulturalists from the United Kingdom. These included Thomas Blaikie, a Scottish horticultural expert, another Scottish gardener, Alexander Howatson, the botanist, Ventenat, and the horticulturist, Andre Dupont. The rose garden was begun soon after purchase; inspired by Dupont's love of roses. Josephine took a personal interest in the gardens and the roses, and learned a great deal about botany and horticulture from her staff. Josephine wanted to collect all known roses so Napoleon ordered his warship commanders to search all seized vessels for plants to be forwarded to Malmaison.

Pierre-Joseph Redouté was commissioned by her to paint the flowers from her gardens. Les Roses was published 1817–20 with 168 plates of roses; 75–80 of the roses grew at Malmaison. The English nurseryman Kennedy was a major supplier, despite England and France being at war, his shipments were allowed to cross blockades. Specifically, when Hume's Blush Tea-Scented China was imported to England from China, the British and French Admiralties made arrangements in 1810 for specimens to cross naval blockades for Josephine's garden.[30] Sir Joseph Banks, Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, also sent her roses.

The general assumption is that she had about 250 roses in her garden when she died in 1814. Unfortunately the roses were not catalogued during her tenure. There may have been only 197 rose varieties in existence in 1814, according to calculations by Jules Gravereaux of Roseraie de l’Haye. There were 12 species, about 40 centifolias, mosses and damasks, 20 Bengals, and about 100 gallicas. The botanist Claude Antoine Thory, who wrote the descriptions for Redouté's paintings in Les Roses, noted that Josephine's Bengal rose R. indica had black spots on it.[31] She produced the first written history of the cultivation of roses, and is believed to have hosted the first rose exhibition, in 1810.[32]

 
Rosa Joséphine de Beauharnais

Modern hybridization of roses through artificial, controlled pollination began with Josephine's horticulturalist Andre Dupont.[29] Prior to this, most new rose cultivars were spontaneous mutations or accidental, bee-induced hybrids, and appeared rarely. With controlled pollination, the appearance of new cultivars grew exponentially. Of the roughly 200 types of roses known to Josephine, Dupont had created 25 while in her employ. Subsequent French hybridizers created over 1000 new rose cultivars in the 30 years following Josephine's death. In 1910, less than 100 years after her death, there were about 8000 rose types in Gravereaux's garden. Bechtel also feels that the popularity of roses as garden plants was boosted by Josephine's patronage. She was a popular ruler and fashionable people copied her.

Brenner and Scanniello call her the "Godmother of modern rosomaniacs" and attribute her with our modern style of vernacular cultivar names as opposed to Latinized, pseudo-scientific cultivar names. For instance, R. alba incarnata became "Cuisse de Nymphe Emue" in her garden. After Josephine's death in 1814 the house was vacant at times, the garden and house ransacked and vandalised, and the garden's remains were destroyed in a battle in 1870.

 
Impératrice Joséphine

Jacques-Louis Descemet dedicated Impératrice Joséphine to her sometime before 1815. Similarly, Jean-Pierre Vibert dedicated Joséphine Beauharnais in her honor in 1823. The rose 'Souvenir de la Malmaison' appeared in 1844, 30 years after her death, named in her honor by a Russian Grand Duke planting one of the first specimens in the Imperial Garden in St. Petersburg.[31]

Art patronage Edit

Empress Josephine was a great lover of all art. Her great interest in horticulture is well-known, but she also liked all things artistic. She surrounded herself with creative people whose work ranged from paintings and sculpture to furniture and the architecture all around her. Josephine always had an interest in art but it was with her marriage to her first husband that she would gain more access to art and artists. Due to her husband's high position in society she was often able to frequent many influential people's homes and learned from the works that were in their houses.[1] After marrying Napoleon and becoming Empress she was surrounded by the works of the time, however Josephine also appreciated the works of old masters. She was also drawn to artists and styles that were not widely used in her time, searching for artists that challenged the accepted standards. She visited the Salon to build relationships with contemporary artists. Josephine became a patron to several different artists, helping to build their careers though their connection to her. After buying the Château de Malmaison, Josephine had a blank canvas to showpiece her art and style and used it to create salons, galleries, a theater and her famous garden. The Malmaison and Tuileries Palace became centers for Napoleon's government but was recognized as an important place for the arts in any forms. Josephine's court became the leading court in Europe for the arts. She became the first French female royal collector of this scale, leading in the Consular and Empire Style.[33]

 
Antoine-Jean Gros, Bonaparte at the Pont d'Arcole, 1796

Paintings Edit

Josephine worked with and sought out the works of many artists throughout her lifetime. In the area of painters she mainly was a collector of paintings but she was painted by and worked with several artists such as Jacques-Louis David and Francois Gerard. However, there was one painter whom Josephine favored and commissioned more often than others, Antoine-Jean Gros. Gros, upon hearing that Josephine would be visiting Genoa, worked to get an introduction knowing that the association with Josephine would help him become more well-known.

Upon meeting with Gros and seeing his work, Josephine asked him to come back to Milan with her and to live in her residences. Josephine then commissioned him to create a portrait of her husband, the then General Napoleon. The work took several sittings between Gros and Napoleon and would be named "General Bonaparte at the Bridge of Arcole, November 17th,1796." This painting would become a big part of Napoleon's propaganda and iconography. Gros would go on to paint other portraits of Napoleon, which always portrayed him as a fierce conqueror, propagating the image of Napoleon as powerful and unstoppable. Josephine as a supporter and patron of Gros, aided him in becoming a central conduit for the message that the government was trying to disseminate about the rule of the Emperor in that time.

Sculpture Edit

 
Antonio Canova Dancer with Her Hands on her Hips, 1812

Over her lifetime Josephine commissioned four major pieces from the Italian Neoclassical sculptor Antonio Canova. The Empress was given a copy of Canova's work Psyche and Cupid, which was originally promised to Colonel John Campbell, but because of unforeseen circumstances it was gifted to Josephine. She would commission Canova to create a sculpture and the result would be Dancer with Hands on Hips. The work commissioned in 1802 but was not finished until 1812, Josephine allowed him to create on his own terms, which were based on the classics but with a more relaxed and joyful appearance. He would create several sculptures based on dancing. Dancer with Hands on Hips was praised by the art community because it was not based on any specific ancient sculpture, but with a classical spin, making it a completely original sculpture.

Josephine would commission Canova again for another sculpture called Paris. The work's plaster cast was completed in 1807 but the marble statue was not finished until 1812. arriving in Malmaison in 1813 a year before Josephine's death. The final sculpture that the Empress would commission was The Three Graces. This work would not be completed until after Josephine's death in 1816. All four works were eventually sold to Tsar Alexander of Russia.[34]

Furniture/Design Edit

The architects Charles Percier and Pierre Fontaine essentially became the decorators for Josephine and Napoleon. Many of Josephine's most well-known furnishings were created especially for her by Percier and/or Fontaine. The two architects worked within many of the Empire's residences, creating spaces for the Empress to feel at home in. Percier and Fontaine had their own unique style and created pieces for both the Emperor and his Empress, which can be easily identified as their work, even when they were not stamped as created by Percier or Fontaine. Percier and Fontaine are known for their use of cheval glass and the use of a feminine, softer feel for the pieces used in the boudoir of the Empress. These pieces were unique for the time and appreciated for their creativity. The architects Percier and Fontaine are connected to the Empire style associated with the time period.[35]

Arms Edit

 
Empress of the French
(1804–1809)
 
Monogram of the Empress of the French
(1804–1809)
 
Duchess of Navarre
(1810–1814)

In popular culture Edit

Statue Edit

In 1859, French emperor Napoleon III commissioned a statue of Josephine, which was installed in the La Savane Park in downtown Fort-de-France. In 1991, the statue was symbolically decapitated and spattered with red paint. The acts of vandalism were done on the belief that Joséphine had influenced her husband to issue the Law of 20 May 1802, which reinstated slavery in the French colonial empire (including Martinique).[36] The statue was never repaired by the city administration, and every year more red paint was added to it.[37] In July 2020, the statue was torn down and destroyed by rioters in the wake of the George Floyd protests.[38]

Fiction books Edit

  • Conan Doyle, Sir Arthur (1897). Uncle Bernac.
  • Fields, Bertram (2015). Destiny: A Novel Of Napoleon & Josephine.
  • Gulland, Sandra (1995). The Many Lives & Secret Sorrows of Josephine B.
  • ——— (1998). Tales of Passion, Tales of Woe.
  • ——— (2000). The Last Great Dance on Earth.
  • Kenyon, F. W. (1952). The Emperor's Lady.
  • Mossiker, Frances (1965). Napoleon and Josephine.
  • ——— (1971). More Than a Queen: The Story of Josephine Bonaparte.
  • Pataki, Allison (2020). The Queen's Fortune: Desiree, Napoleon, and the Dynasty That Outlasted the Empire.
  • Selinko, Annemarie (1958). Désirée.
  • Webb, Heather (2013). Becoming Josephine.
  • Winterson, Jeanette (1987). The Passion.
  • Parkyn, Stephanie (2019). Josephine's Garden

Television Edit

Film Edit

Music Edit

Fashion Edit

  • Galliano said that his inspiration was dressing the pregnant rock star Madonna — and then thinking "Empress Josephine."[40]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Delorme, Eleanor P. Josephine and the Arts of the Empire. Los Angeles: The J. PaulGetty museum, 2005, 1.
  2. ^ Branda, Pierre (2016). Josephine: Le Paradoxe du Cygne. Paris: Perrin. p. 9.
  3. ^ "Sights in Trois-Îlets". Lonely Planet.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Knapton, Ernest John (1963). "Chapter 2: Bird of the Islands". Empress Josephine. New York: Harvard University Press. pp. 15–16, 18, 20, 22–23. doi:10.4159/harvard.9780674188761. ISBN 978-0674252011. OCLC 1740591.
  5. ^ a b c d Andrea Stuart: Josephine: The Rose of Martinique.
  6. ^ Knapton, Ernest John (1963). "Chapter 3: A Marriage is Arranged". Empress Josephine. New York: Harvard University Press. pp. 26, 29, 30–31. doi:10.4159/harvard.9780674188761. ISBN 978-0674252011. OCLC 1740591.
  7. ^ a b Erickson, Carolly (2000). Josephine: A Life of the Empress. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. p. 82. ISBN 0-312-26346-5.
  8. ^ Stuart, Andrea (2005). The Rose of Martinique: A Life of Napoleon's Josephine. Grove Press. p. 489. ISBN 978-0802117700.
  9. ^ Williams, Kate (2014). Ambition and Desire: The Dangerous Life of Josephine Bonaparte. New York: Random House.
  10. ^ Epton, Nina (1975). Josephine, the Empress and Her Children. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., pp. 54, 66–67.
  11. ^ Hippolyte Charles 27 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Theo Aronson, Napoleon and Josephine: A Love Story.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 30 May 2012. Retrieved 15 March 2012.
  14. ^ "抖音歌曲_抖音排行歌曲_抖音英文音乐_抖音闽南音乐【573音乐网】". www.emmetlabs.com.
  15. ^ Epton, p. 94.
  16. ^ Epton, pp. 94–95.
  17. ^ Epton, p. 95.
  18. ^ Tschudi, Clara (1900). The great Napoleon's mother. Cornell University Library. New York, E. P. Dutton.
  19. ^ E. Bruce, Napoleon and Josphine, London : Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1995, pg.445.
  20. ^ "Napoleon: Napoleon and Josephine". PBS. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  21. ^ Esdaile, Charles (27 October 2009). Napoleon's Wars: An International History. Penguin. ISBN 9781101464373.
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  23. ^ Recueil général des lois et des arrêts, volume 38, Bureaux de l'Administration du recueil, 1859, p. 76.
  24. ^ "Empress Josephine's short biography in Napoleon & Empire website, displaying photographs of the castle of Malmaison and the grave of Josephine". Napoleon-empire.com. 11 June 2011. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
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  29. ^ a b Bechtel, Edwin de Turk. 1949, reprinted 2010. "Our Rose Varieties and their Malmaison Heritage". The OGR and Shrub Journal, The American Rose Society. 7(3)
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  • Aronson, Theo (1990). Napoleon and Josephine: A Love Story. St Martins Pr. ISBN 0-312-05135-2.
  • Brent, Harrison. (1946). Pauline Bonaparte, A Woman of Affairs. NY and Toronto Rinehart.
  • Bruce, Evangeline. (1995). Napoleon and Josephine: An Improbable Marriage. NY: Scribner. ISBN 0-02-517810-5
  • Castelot, André (2009). Josephine. Ishi Press. ISBN 978-4-87187-853-1.
  • Chevallier, Bernard; Pincemaille, Christophe. Douce et incomparable Joséphine. éd. Payot & Rivages, coll. «Petite bibliothèque Payot», Paris, 2001. ISBN 2-228-90029-X
  • Chevallier, Bernard; Pincemaille, Christophe. L'impératrice Joséphine. Presses de la Renaissance, Paris, 1988., 466 p.,ISBN 978-2-85616-485-3
  • Delorme, Eleanor P. (2002). Josephine: Napoleon's Incomparable Empress. Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 978-0-8109-1229-8
  • Epton, Nina. (1975). Josephine: the Empress and Her Children. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-393-07500-7
  • Erickson, Carolly (1998). Josephine; A Life of the Empress. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 1-86105-637-0.
  • Fauveau, Jean-Claude. Joséphine l'impératrice créole. L'esclavage aux Antilles et la traite pendant la Révolution française. Éditions L'Harmattan 2010. 390 p. ISBN 978-2-296-11293-3.
  • Knapton, Ernest John. (1963). Empress Josephine Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-671-51346-7
  • de Montjouven, Philippe. Joséphine: Une impératrice de légendes. Timée-éditions; 2010, 141 p. ISBN 978-2-35401-233-5
  • Mossiker, Frances (1964). Napoleon and Josephine; the Biography of a Marriage. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-00-000000-2.
  • Schiffer, Liesel. Femmes remarquables au XIX siècle. Vuibert éd. Vuibert, Paris, 2008, 305 p. ISBN 978-2711744428
  • Sergeant, Philip (1909). The Empress Josephine, Napoleon's Enchantress. NY: Hutchinson's Library of Standard Lives.
  • Stuart, Andrea. (2005). The Rose of Martinique: A Life of Napoleon's Josephine. Grove Press. ISBN 978-0-8021-4202-3
  • Wagener, Françoise, L'Impératrice Joséphine (1763–1814). Flammarion; Paris, 1999, 504 p.

External links Edit

  •   The Heroines of History public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • Empress Josephine by Ernest John Knapton. Complete transcription of the 1963 biography.
  • Joséphine de Beauharnais (de Tascher de la Pagerie) (in French). Site published by the current members of the family Tascher de la Pagerie.
  • (in French), Joséphine's residence from 1799 to 1814, the site of her death.
  • Memoirs of the Empress Josephine (Volume 1) at archive.org
  • Memoirs of the Empress Josephine (Volume 2) at archive.org
Joséphine de Beauharnais
Tascher de La Pagerie
Born: 23 June 1763 Died: 29 May 1814
Royal titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Marie Antoinette
as Queen consort of the French
Empress consort of the French
18 May 1804 – 10 January 1810
Vacant
Title next held by
Marie Louise of Austria
Preceded byas consort to the last crowned monarch, 1530 Queen consort of Italy
26 May 1805 – 10 January 1810
French nobility
New title Duchess of Navarre
9 April 1810 – 29 May 1814
Succeeded by

joséphine, beauharnais, granddaughter, queen, consort, sweden, norway, josephine, leuchtenberg, racehorse, empress, josephine, horse, joséphine, bonaparte, french, ʒozefin, bɔnapaʁt, born, marie, josèphe, rose, tascher, pagerie, june, 1763, 1814, empress, fren. For her granddaughter the queen consort of Sweden and Norway see Josephine of Leuchtenberg For the racehorse see Empress Josephine horse Josephine Bonaparte French ʒozefin bɔnapaʁt born Marie Josephe Rose Tascher de La Pagerie 23 June 1763 29 May 1814 was Empress of the French as the first wife of Emperor Napoleon I from 18 May 1804 until their marriage was annulled on 10 January 1810 As Napoleon s consort she was also Queen of Italy from 26 May 1805 until the 1810 annulment She is widely known as Josephine de Beauharnais French ʒozefin de boaʁnɛ JosephineViscountess of BeauharnaisDuchess of NavarrePortrait by Antoine Jean Gros c 1809Empress consort of the FrenchTenure18 May 1804 10 January 1810Coronation2 December 1804Queen consort of ItalyTenure23 May 1805 10 January 1810BornMarie Josephe Rose Tascher de La Pagerie 1763 06 23 23 June 1763Les Trois Ilets Martinique French AntillesDied29 May 1814 aged 50 Rueil Malmaison Kingdom of FranceBurialChurch of Saint Pierre Saint Paul Rueil Malmaison FranceSpouseAlexandre Viscount of Beauharnais m 1779 died 1794 wbr Napoleon I Emperor of the French m 1796 ann 1810 wbr IssueBy Alexandre Eugene Duke of LeuchtenbergHortense Queen of HollandNamesMarie Josephe Rose Tascher de La PagerieHouseTascher de La PagerieFatherJoseph Gaspard Tascher de La PagerieMotherRose Claire des Vergers de SannoisReligionRoman CatholicismSignatureJosephine s marriage to Napoleon was her second Her first husband Alexandre de Beauharnais was guillotined during the Reign of Terror and she was imprisoned in the Carmes Prison until five days after his execution Through her children by Beauharnais she was the grandmother of the French emperor Napoleon III and the Brazilian empress Amelie of Leuchtenberg Members of the current royal families of Sweden Denmark Belgium and Norway and the grand ducal family of Luxembourg also descend from her Because she did not bear Napoleon any children he had their marriage annulled and married Marie Louise of Austria Josephine was the recipient of numerous love letters written by Napoleon many of which still exist A patron of art Josephine worked closely with sculptors painters and interior decorators to establish a unique Consular and Empire style at the Chateau de Malmaison She became one of the leading collectors of different forms of art of her time such as sculpture and painting 1 The Chateau de Malmaison was noted for its rose garden which she supervised closely Contents 1 Name 2 Disputed birthplace 3 Early life 3 1 Childhood 3 2 First marriage 3 2 1 Background 3 2 2 During the Reign of Terror 4 Marriage to Napoleon 4 1 Empress of the French 5 Later life and death 5 1 Duchess of Navarre 5 2 Death 6 Descendants 7 Personality and appearance 8 Patroness of roses 9 Art patronage 9 1 Paintings 9 2 Sculpture 9 3 Furniture Design 10 Arms 11 In popular culture 11 1 Statue 11 2 Fiction books 11 3 Television 11 4 Film 11 5 Music 11 6 Fashion 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksName EditAlthough she is often referred to as Josephine de Beauharnais it is not a name she herself used Beauharnais is the name of her first husband which she ceased to use upon her marriage to Napoleon taking the last name Bonaparte 2 And she did not use the name Josephine before meeting Napoleon who was the first to call her such perhaps from her middle name Josephe Before she met Napoleon she went by the name of Rose or Marie Rose Tascher de la Pagerie later de Beauharnais She sometimes reverted to using her maiden name in later life After her marriage to then General Bonaparte she adopted the name Josephine Bonaparte The misnomer Josephine de Beauharnais emerged during the restoration of the Bourbons who were hesitant to refer to her by either Napoleon s surname or her imperial title citation needed Disputed birthplace EditIn Henry H Breen s 1844 The History of St Lucia he stated that he had met with several well informed persons who were convinced that Empress Josephine had been born there Breen presented some evidence for this including a newspaper clipping from 1831 which said that it was alleged that the de Taschers were among the first settlers of Saint Lucia and that the future empress was born on a small estate on a hill then called La Cauzette and later known as Morne Paix Bouche According to this story the family lived there until 1771 when the father went to serve as intendant of Martinique Some people even claimed to have been among Josephine s playmates and one of them said that he had been graciously received by the widowed empress in Malmaison Breen received further confirmation from Josephine s enslaved nanny Dede who said that she nursed Josephine at La Cauzette Josephine s baptism was administered by Emmanuel Capuchin at Les Trois Ilets but the registry only stated she had been baptised there not born Dom Daviot parish priest in Gros Islet wrote a letter to one of his friends in 1802 stating that it is in the vicinity of his parish that the wife of the first consul was born He asserted that he was well acquainted with Josephine s cousin his parishioner Josephine s father owned an estate in Soufriere District called Malmaison the name of her famous French residence It is also assumed that the de Tascher estate in Martinique was a pied a terre occasional lodging for when they wanted to stay with his mother in law Saint Lucia switched hands between Great Britain and France fourteen times and there were no civil registers on the island when Josephine was born Saint Lucia s frequent change of ownership between Britain and France could be seen as the reason her birthplace was left out of her birth record as it would have affected her nationality citation needed Early life EditChildhood Edit Marie Josephe Rose Tascher de La Pagerie was born in Les Trois Ilets Martinique to a wealthy French family who owned a sugarcane plantation which is now a museum 3 The Taschers were an ancient French family of country gentry and Josephine s grandfather Gaspard Joseph was the first to settle in Le Carbet on Martinique in 1726 4 He seems to have lived in poverty there but secured a position as a page for his son Joseph Gaspard 1735 1790 in the household of the Dauphine of France Maria Josepha of Saxony 4 After spending three years from 1752 in France Joseph Gaspard returned to Martinique and married Rose Claire des Vergers de Sannois 1735 1807 whose maternal grandfather Anthony Brown may have been Irish 5 Rose Claire was from one of the oldest European families on the plantation and the Tascher family home near Les Trois Ilets was part of her dowry Josephine was their first child and they had two more Catherine Desiree in 1764 and Marie Francoise in 1766 4 Joseph Gaspard earned his living as a plantation owner and a lieutenant of the Troupes de marine apart from a small pension for his work in the royal household He was almost always close to bankruptcy and suffered from ill health 4 Josephine was raised by an enslaved nurse called Marion whose freedom she would secure in 1807 4 At the age of ten she and Catherine Desiree were sent to a boarding school in Fort Royal run by the Benedictines de la Providence There they learned to read write sing dance and embroider for four years After the death of Catherine Desiree Josephine returned to her parents plantation 4 First marriage Edit Background Edit nbsp Alexandre Francois Marie Vicomte de Beauharnais by Georges RougetJosephine s paternal aunt Marie Euphemie Desiree Renaudin was the mistress of a French naval officer Francois de Beauharnais from a less ancient but richer noble family 4 While living on Martinique de Beauharnais had a son Alexandre by his wife Soon the parents returned to France and left the infant with the Tascher family until 1766 4 When he had come of age his father s mistress who was also Alexandre s godmother decided that it would be advantageous to her if he married one of her nieces Aged seventeen he judged fifteen year old Josephine to be too close to him in age and thus Catherine Desiree was chosen for him As the bride s father was impoverished and the bridegroom was to become a wealthy man upon his marriage he asked for no dowry 6 By the time Alexandre s father had proposed in a letter however Catherine Desiree had died Not wanting to lose the rich suitor her father offered his youngest daughter instead which was accepted by Alexandre Marie Francoise was not yet twelve however and her mother and grandmother were not willing to let her go In the end Josephine was engaged to Alexandre 7 In October 1779 she went to France with her father She married Alexandre on 13 December 1779 in Noisy le Grand They had two children a son Eugene de Beauharnais and a daughter Hortense de Beauharnais who later married Napoleon s brother Louis Bonaparte in 1802 Josephine and Alexandre s marriage was not a happy one Alexandre abandoned his family for over a year to live with a mistress and frequented brothels leading to a court ordered separation during which Josephine and the children lived at Alexandre s expense in the Pentemont Abbey During the Reign of Terror Edit On 2 March 1794 during the Reign of Terror the Committee of Public Safety ordered the arrest of her husband He was jailed in the Carmes prison in Paris Considering Josephine as too close to the counter revolutionary financial circles the Committee ordered her arrest on 18 April 1794 A warrant of arrest was issued against her on 21 April 1794 and she was imprisoned in the Carmes prison until 28 July During this time Josephine was only allowed to communicate with her children by their scrawls on the laundry list which the jailers soon prohibited 5 Her husband was accused of having poorly defended Mainz in July 1793 and being considered an aristocratic suspect was sentenced to death and guillotined with his cousin Augustin on 23 July 1794 on the Place de la Revolution today Place de la Concorde in Paris Josephine was freed five days later thanks to the fall and execution of Robespierre which ended the Reign of Terror On 27 July 1794 Tallien arranged the liberation of Therese Cabarrus and soon after that of Josephine 5 In June 1795 a new law allowed her to recover the possessions of Alexandre citation needed Marriage to Napoleon EditMadame de Beauharnais had affairs with several leading political figures including Paul Francois Jean Nicolas Barras In 1795 she met Napoleon Bonaparte six years her junior and became his mistress In a letter to her in December he wrote I awake full of you Your image and the memory of last night s intoxicating pleasures has left no rest to my senses In January 1796 Napoleon Bonaparte proposed to her and they were married on 9 March On the marriage certificate Josephine reduced her age by 4 years and increased Napoleon s by 18 months making the newly weds appear to be roughly the same age 8 Until meeting Bonaparte she was known as Rose but Bonaparte preferred to call her Josephine the name she adopted from then on 9 The marriage was not well received by Napoleon s family who were shocked that he had married an older widow with two children His mother and sisters were especially resentful of Josephine as they felt clumsy and unsophisticated in her presence 10 Two days after the wedding Bonaparte left Paris to lead a French army into Italy During their separation he sent her many love letters In February 1797 he wrote You to whom nature has given spirit sweetness and beauty you who alone can move and rule my heart you who know all too well the absolute empire you exercise over it However Josephine rarely wrote back and when she did her letters were dry and often tepid citation needed It is known that Josephine did not love Napoleon as much as he loved her and that it took her years before she warmed to his affections citation needed nbsp Josephine at Malmaison in 1801 by Francois GerardJosephine left behind in Paris in 1796 began an affair with a handsome Hussar lieutenant Hippolyte Charles 11 Rumors of the affair reached Napoleon he was infuriated and his love for her changed entirely 12 In 1798 Napoleon led a French army to Egypt During this campaign Napoleon started an affair of his own with Pauline Foures the wife of a junior officer who became known as Napoleon s Cleopatra The relationship between Josephine and Napoleon was never the same after this 13 His letters became less loving No subsequent lovers of Josephine are recorded but Napoleon had sexual affairs with several other women In 1804 he said Power is my mistress 14 In December 1800 Josephine was nearly killed in the Plot of the rue Saint Nicaise an attempt on Napoleon s life with a bomb planted in a parked cart On 24 December she and Napoleon went to see a performance of Joseph Haydn s Creation at the Opera accompanied by several friends and family The party travelled in two carriages Josephine was in the second with her daughter Hortense her pregnant sister in law Caroline Murat and General Jean Rapp 15 Josephine had delayed the party while getting a new silk shawl draped correctly and Napoleon went ahead in the first carriage 16 The bomb exploded as her carriage was passing The bomb killed several bystanders and one of the carriage horses and blew out the carriage s windows Hortense was struck in the hand by flying glass There were no other injuries and the party proceeded to the Opera 17 Empress of the French Edit nbsp The Coronation of Napoleon by Jacques Louis David 1804 nbsp Empress Josephine in coronation costume in 1807 1808 by Francois GerardNapoleon was elected Emperor of the French in 1804 making Josephine empress The coronation ceremony officiated by Pope Pius VII took place at Notre Dame de Paris on December 2 Napoleon first crowned himself then put the crown on Josephine s head proclaiming her empress This showed his rejection of the clergy as the power of Europe In her role as empress Napoleon had a court appointed to her and reinstated the offices which composed the household of the queen before the French revolution with Adelaide de La Rochefoucauld as Premiere dame d honneur Emilie de Beauharnais as Dame d atour and the wives of his own officials and generals Jeanne Charlotte du Lucay Madame de Remusat Elisabeth Baude de Talhouet Lauriston d Arberg Marie Antoinette Duchatel Sophie de Segur Seran Colbert Savary and Aglae Louise Auguie Ney as Dame de Palais 5 Shortly before their coronation there was an incident at the Chateau de Saint Cloud that nearly sundered the marriage between the two Josephine caught Napoleon in the bedroom of her lady in waiting Elisabeth de Vaudey and Napoleon threatened to divorce her as she had not produced an heir Eventually however through the efforts of her daughter Hortense the two were reconciled 18 nbsp The Divorce of the Empress Josephine in 1809 by Henri Frederic SchopinWhen after a few years it became clear she could not have a child Napoleon while still loving Josephine began to think about the possibility of an annulment The final die was cast when Napoleon s nephew Napoleon Charles Bonaparte who had been declared his heir died of croup in 1807 Napoleon began to create lists of eligible princesses At dinner on 30 November 1809 he let Josephine know that in the interest of France he must find a wife who could produce an heir Josephine agreed to the divorce so the Emperor could remarry in the hope of having an heir The divorce ceremony took place on 10 January 1810 and was a grand but solemn social occasion and each read a statement of devotion to the other 19 On 11 March Napoleon married Marie Louise of Austria by proxy 20 the formal ceremony took place at the Louvre in April 21 Napoleon once remarked that despite her quick infatuation with him It is a womb that I am marrying 22 Even after their separation Napoleon insisted Josephine retain the title of empress It is my will that she retain the rank and title of empress and especially that she never doubt my sentiments and that she ever hold me as her best and dearest friend citation needed Later life and death Edit nbsp Portrait of Josephine later in life by Andrea AppianiDuchess of Navarre Edit After the divorce Josephine lived at the Chateau de Malmaison near Paris She remained on good terms with Napoleon who once said that the only thing to come between them was her debts Josephine remarked privately The only thing that ever came between us was my debts certainly not his manhood Andrew Roberts Napoleon In April 1810 by letters patent Napoleon created her Duchess of Navarre Some claim Napoleon and Josephine were still secretly in love though it is impossible to verify this 23 In March 1811 Marie Louise was delivered of a long awaited heir Napoleon II to whom Napoleon gave the title King of Rome Two years later Napoleon arranged for Josephine to meet the young prince who had cost her so many tears nbsp Chateau de Malmaison near ParisDeath Edit Josephine died of pneumonia in Rueil Malmaison on 29 May 1814 soon after walking with Emperor Alexander I of Russia in the gardens of Malmaison where she allegedly begged to join Napoleon in exile She was buried in the nearby church of Saint Pierre Saint Paul 24 in Rueil Her daughter Hortense is interred near her Napoleon learned of her death via a French journal while in exile on Elba and stayed locked in his room for two days refusing to see anyone He claimed to a friend while in exile on Saint Helena that I truly loved my Josephine but I did not respect her 25 Despite numerous affairs eventual marriage annulment and his remarriage the Emperor s last words on his death bed at St Helena were France the Army the Head of the Army Josephine France l armee tete d armee Josephine 26 Descendants Edit nbsp Josephine s eldest granddaughter Josephine Queen consort of Sweden and Norway Portrait by Axel NordgrenHortense s son Napoleon III became Emperor of the French Eugene s son Maximilian de Beauharnais 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg married into the Russian Imperial family was granted the style of Imperial Highness and founded the Russian line of the Beauharnais family while Eugene s daughter Josephine married King Oscar I of Sweden the son of Napoleon s one time fiancee Desiree Clary Through her Josephine is a direct ancestor of the present heads of the royal houses of Belgium Denmark Luxembourg Norway and Sweden and of the grandducal house of Baden citation needed A number of jewels worn by modern day royals are often said to have been worn by Josephine Through the Leuchtenberg inheritance the Norwegian royal family possesses an emerald and diamond parure said to have been Josephine s citation needed The Swedish royal family owns several pieces of jewelry frequently linked to Josephine including the Leuchtenberg Sapphire Parure citation needed a suite of amethyst jewels citation needed and the Cameo Parure worn by Sweden s royal brides citation needed However a number of these jewels were probably never a part of Josephine s collection at all but instead belonged to other members of her family citation needed Another of Eugene s daughters Amelie of Leuchtenberg married Emperor Pedro I of Brazil in Rio de Janeiro and became Empress of Brazil and they had one surviving daughter Princess Maria Amelia of Brazil who was briefly engaged to Archduke Maximilian of Austria before he became Maximilian I of Mexico before her early death citation needed Personality and appearance Edit nbsp Josephine in 1805 by Pierre Paul Prud honHer biographer Carolly Erickson wrote In choosing her lovers Josephine followed her head first then her heart 7 meaning that she was adept in terms of identifying the men who were most capable of fulfilling her financial and social needs She was not unaware of Napoleon s potential Josephine was a renowned spendthrift and Barras may have encouraged the relationship with General Bonaparte in order to get her off his hands Josephine was naturally full of kindness generosity and charm and was praised as an engaging hostess Josephine was described as being of average height svelte shapely with silky long chestnut brown hair hazel eyes and a rather sallow complexion Her nose was small and straight and her mouth was well formed however she kept it closed most of the time so as not to reveal her bad teeth 27 She was praised for her elegance style and low silvery beautifully modulated voice 28 Patroness of roses Edit nbsp Souvenir de la Malmaison In 1799 while Napoleon was in Egypt Josephine purchased the Chateau de Malmaison 29 She had it landscaped in an English style hiring landscapers and horticulturalists from the United Kingdom These included Thomas Blaikie a Scottish horticultural expert another Scottish gardener Alexander Howatson the botanist Ventenat and the horticulturist Andre Dupont The rose garden was begun soon after purchase inspired by Dupont s love of roses Josephine took a personal interest in the gardens and the roses and learned a great deal about botany and horticulture from her staff Josephine wanted to collect all known roses so Napoleon ordered his warship commanders to search all seized vessels for plants to be forwarded to Malmaison Pierre Joseph Redoute was commissioned by her to paint the flowers from her gardens Les Roses was published 1817 20 with 168 plates of roses 75 80 of the roses grew at Malmaison The English nurseryman Kennedy was a major supplier despite England and France being at war his shipments were allowed to cross blockades Specifically when Hume s Blush Tea Scented China was imported to England from China the British and French Admiralties made arrangements in 1810 for specimens to cross naval blockades for Josephine s garden 30 Sir Joseph Banks Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew also sent her roses The general assumption is that she had about 250 roses in her garden when she died in 1814 Unfortunately the roses were not catalogued during her tenure There may have been only 197 rose varieties in existence in 1814 according to calculations by Jules Gravereaux of Roseraie de l Haye There were 12 species about 40 centifolias mosses and damasks 20 Bengals and about 100 gallicas The botanist Claude Antoine Thory who wrote the descriptions for Redoute s paintings in Les Roses noted that Josephine s Bengal rose R indica had black spots on it 31 She produced the first written history of the cultivation of roses and is believed to have hosted the first rose exhibition in 1810 32 nbsp Rosa Josephine de BeauharnaisModern hybridization of roses through artificial controlled pollination began with Josephine s horticulturalist Andre Dupont 29 Prior to this most new rose cultivars were spontaneous mutations or accidental bee induced hybrids and appeared rarely With controlled pollination the appearance of new cultivars grew exponentially Of the roughly 200 types of roses known to Josephine Dupont had created 25 while in her employ Subsequent French hybridizers created over 1000 new rose cultivars in the 30 years following Josephine s death In 1910 less than 100 years after her death there were about 8000 rose types in Gravereaux s garden Bechtel also feels that the popularity of roses as garden plants was boosted by Josephine s patronage She was a popular ruler and fashionable people copied her Brenner and Scanniello call her the Godmother of modern rosomaniacs and attribute her with our modern style of vernacular cultivar names as opposed to Latinized pseudo scientific cultivar names For instance R alba incarnata became Cuisse de Nymphe Emue in her garden After Josephine s death in 1814 the house was vacant at times the garden and house ransacked and vandalised and the garden s remains were destroyed in a battle in 1870 nbsp Imperatrice JosephineJacques Louis Descemet dedicated Imperatrice Josephine to her sometime before 1815 Similarly Jean Pierre Vibert dedicated Josephine Beauharnais in her honor in 1823 The rose Souvenir de la Malmaison appeared in 1844 30 years after her death named in her honor by a Russian Grand Duke planting one of the first specimens in the Imperial Garden in St Petersburg 31 Art patronage EditEmpress Josephine was a great lover of all art Her great interest in horticulture is well known but she also liked all things artistic She surrounded herself with creative people whose work ranged from paintings and sculpture to furniture and the architecture all around her Josephine always had an interest in art but it was with her marriage to her first husband that she would gain more access to art and artists Due to her husband s high position in society she was often able to frequent many influential people s homes and learned from the works that were in their houses 1 After marrying Napoleon and becoming Empress she was surrounded by the works of the time however Josephine also appreciated the works of old masters She was also drawn to artists and styles that were not widely used in her time searching for artists that challenged the accepted standards She visited the Salon to build relationships with contemporary artists Josephine became a patron to several different artists helping to build their careers though their connection to her After buying the Chateau de Malmaison Josephine had a blank canvas to showpiece her art and style and used it to create salons galleries a theater and her famous garden The Malmaison and Tuileries Palace became centers for Napoleon s government but was recognized as an important place for the arts in any forms Josephine s court became the leading court in Europe for the arts She became the first French female royal collector of this scale leading in the Consular and Empire Style 33 nbsp Antoine Jean Gros Bonaparte at the Pont d Arcole 1796Paintings Edit Josephine worked with and sought out the works of many artists throughout her lifetime In the area of painters she mainly was a collector of paintings but she was painted by and worked with several artists such as Jacques Louis David and Francois Gerard However there was one painter whom Josephine favored and commissioned more often than others Antoine Jean Gros Gros upon hearing that Josephine would be visiting Genoa worked to get an introduction knowing that the association with Josephine would help him become more well known Upon meeting with Gros and seeing his work Josephine asked him to come back to Milan with her and to live in her residences Josephine then commissioned him to create a portrait of her husband the then General Napoleon The work took several sittings between Gros and Napoleon and would be named General Bonaparte at the Bridge of Arcole November 17th 1796 This painting would become a big part of Napoleon s propaganda and iconography Gros would go on to paint other portraits of Napoleon which always portrayed him as a fierce conqueror propagating the image of Napoleon as powerful and unstoppable Josephine as a supporter and patron of Gros aided him in becoming a central conduit for the message that the government was trying to disseminate about the rule of the Emperor in that time Sculpture Edit nbsp Antonio Canova Dancer with Her Hands on her Hips 1812Over her lifetime Josephine commissioned four major pieces from the Italian Neoclassical sculptor Antonio Canova The Empress was given a copy of Canova s work Psyche and Cupid which was originally promised to Colonel John Campbell but because of unforeseen circumstances it was gifted to Josephine She would commission Canova to create a sculpture and the result would be Dancer with Hands on Hips The work commissioned in 1802 but was not finished until 1812 Josephine allowed him to create on his own terms which were based on the classics but with a more relaxed and joyful appearance He would create several sculptures based on dancing Dancer with Hands on Hips was praised by the art community because it was not based on any specific ancient sculpture but with a classical spin making it a completely original sculpture Josephine would commission Canova again for another sculpture called Paris The work s plaster cast was completed in 1807 but the marble statue was not finished until 1812 arriving in Malmaison in 1813 a year before Josephine s death The final sculpture that the Empress would commission was The Three Graces This work would not be completed until after Josephine s death in 1816 All four works were eventually sold to Tsar Alexander of Russia 34 Furniture Design Edit The architects Charles Percier and Pierre Fontaine essentially became the decorators for Josephine and Napoleon Many of Josephine s most well known furnishings were created especially for her by Percier and or Fontaine The two architects worked within many of the Empire s residences creating spaces for the Empress to feel at home in Percier and Fontaine had their own unique style and created pieces for both the Emperor and his Empress which can be easily identified as their work even when they were not stamped as created by Percier or Fontaine Percier and Fontaine are known for their use of cheval glass and the use of a feminine softer feel for the pieces used in the boudoir of the Empress These pieces were unique for the time and appreciated for their creativity The architects Percier and Fontaine are connected to the Empire style associated with the time period 35 Arms Edit nbsp Empress of the French 1804 1809 nbsp Monogram of the Empress of the French 1804 1809 nbsp Duchess of Navarre 1810 1814 In popular culture EditStatue Edit In 1859 French emperor Napoleon III commissioned a statue of Josephine which was installed in the La Savane Park in downtown Fort de France In 1991 the statue was symbolically decapitated and spattered with red paint The acts of vandalism were done on the belief that Josephine had influenced her husband to issue the Law of 20 May 1802 which reinstated slavery in the French colonial empire including Martinique 36 The statue was never repaired by the city administration and every year more red paint was added to it 37 In July 2020 the statue was torn down and destroyed by rioters in the wake of the George Floyd protests 38 Fiction books Edit Conan Doyle Sir Arthur 1897 Uncle Bernac Fields Bertram 2015 Destiny A Novel Of Napoleon amp Josephine Gulland Sandra 1995 The Many Lives amp Secret Sorrows of Josephine B 1998 Tales of Passion Tales of Woe 2000 The Last Great Dance on Earth Kenyon F W 1952 The Emperor s Lady Mossiker Frances 1965 Napoleon and Josephine 1971 More Than a Queen The Story of Josephine Bonaparte Pataki Allison 2020 The Queen s Fortune Desiree Napoleon and the Dynasty That Outlasted the Empire Selinko Annemarie 1958 Desiree Webb Heather 2013 Becoming Josephine Winterson Jeanette 1987 The Passion Parkyn Stephanie 2019 Josephine s GardenTelevision Edit Napoleon and Josephine A Love Story 1987 is a miniseries with Napoleon portrayed by Armand Assante and Josephine by Jacqueline Bisset Napoleon 2002 is a historical DVD TV miniseries of Napoleon s life in which Josephine features prominently portrayed by Isabella Rossellini In 2015 and 2017 an episode of Horrible Histories called Naughty Napoleon and Ridiculous Romantics featured Natalie Walter and Gemma Whelan portraying Josephine de Beauharnais Film Edit Ridley Scott s upcoming 2023 film Napoleon in which Vanessa Kirby will play Josephine Jodie Comer was originally cast but had to drop out due to scheduling conflicts and the COVID 19 pandemic 39 Music Edit The love song Josephine from The Magnetic Fields 1991 album Distant Plastic Trees If I were Napoleon you could be my Josephine The song Josephine from Frank Turner s 2015 album Positive Songs for Negative People references Josephine as well as Josephine Brunsvik to portray Turner s wish that he has his own muse to influence him The song Josephine from Tori Amos 1999 partially live album To Venus and Back references the pop culture expression supposedly spoken by Napoleon Not tonight Josephine Fashion Edit Galliano said that his inspiration was dressing the pregnant rock star Madonna and then thinking Empress Josephine 40 See also Edit nbsp Biography portalAimee du Buc de Rivery Jean Chanorier Notre Dame de Paris The Swedish Royal Family s jewelry Tuileries PalaceReferences Edit a b Delorme Eleanor P Josephine and the Arts of the Empire Los Angeles The J PaulGetty museum 2005 1 Branda Pierre 2016 Josephine Le Paradoxe du Cygne Paris Perrin p 9 Sights in Trois Ilets Lonely Planet a b c d e f g h Knapton Ernest John 1963 Chapter 2 Bird of the Islands Empress Josephine New York Harvard University Press pp 15 16 18 20 22 23 doi 10 4159 harvard 9780674188761 ISBN 978 0674252011 OCLC 1740591 a b c d Andrea Stuart Josephine The Rose of Martinique Knapton Ernest John 1963 Chapter 3 A Marriage is Arranged Empress Josephine New York Harvard University Press pp 26 29 30 31 doi 10 4159 harvard 9780674188761 ISBN 978 0674252011 OCLC 1740591 a b Erickson Carolly 2000 Josephine A Life of the Empress New York St Martin s Griffin p 82 ISBN 0 312 26346 5 Stuart Andrea 2005 The Rose of Martinique A Life of Napoleon s Josephine Grove Press p 489 ISBN 978 0802117700 Williams Kate 2014 Ambition and Desire The Dangerous Life of Josephine Bonaparte New York Random House Epton Nina 1975 Josephine the Empress and Her Children New York W W Norton amp Company Inc pp 54 66 67 Hippolyte Charles Archived 27 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Theo Aronson Napoleon and Josephine A Love Story Madame Pauline Foures Napoleon s Cleopatra Archived from the original on 30 May 2012 Retrieved 15 March 2012 抖音歌曲 抖音排行歌曲 抖音英文音乐 抖音闽南音乐 573音乐网 www emmetlabs com Epton p 94 Epton pp 94 95 Epton p 95 Tschudi Clara 1900 The great Napoleon s mother Cornell University Library New York E P Dutton E Bruce Napoleon and Josphine London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1995 pg 445 Napoleon Napoleon and Josephine PBS Retrieved 29 December 2018 Esdaile Charles 27 October 2009 Napoleon s Wars An International History Penguin ISBN 9781101464373 Arnold James R 1995 Napoleon Conquers Austria The 1809 Campaign for Vienna Greenwood Publishing Group p 194 ISBN 9780275946944 Recueil general des lois et des arrets volume 38 Bureaux de l Administration du recueil 1859 p 76 Empress Josephine s short biography in Napoleon amp Empire website displaying photographs of the castle of Malmaison and the grave of Josephine Napoleon empire com 11 June 2011 Retrieved 6 June 2012 Markham Felix Napoleon p 245 Notes and Queries Vol V Number 123 March 6 1852 A Medium of Inter communication for Literary Men Artists Antiquaries Genealogists etc Page 220 Project Gutenberg Retrieved 3 March 2021 Epton Nina 1975 Josephine The Empress and Her Children New York W W Norton amp Company Inc p 3 Mossiker Frances Napoleon and Josephine p 48 a b Bechtel Edwin de Turk 1949 reprinted 2010 Our Rose Varieties and their Malmaison Heritage The OGR and Shrub Journal The American Rose Society 7 3 Thomas Graham Stuart 2004 The Graham Stuart Thomas Rose Book London England Frances Lincoln Limited ISBN 0 7112 2397 1 a b Brenner Douglas and Scanniello Stephen 2009 A Rose by Any Name Chapel Hill North Carolina Algonquin Books Bowermaster Russ 1993 Judging From Whence to Hence The American Rose Annual 72 73 Delorme Eleanor P Josephine and the Arts of the Empire Los Angeles The J PaulGetty museum 2005 3 4 Empress Josephine s Collection of Sculpture by Canova at Malmaison Journal of the History of Collections 16 no 1 May 2004 19 33 Samoyault Jean Pierre Furniture and Objects Designed by Percier for the Palace of Saint Cloud The Burlington Magazine 117 no 868 1975 457 65 Bennett Steve 4 October 2012 Beheaded Statue of Empress Josephine Uncommon Attraction Uncommon Caribbean The Headless Empress Atlas Obscura Anti Racism Activists Destroy Statue Of Napoleon s First Wife Josephine In Martinique NDTV Retrieved 5 August 2020 Yossman K J 3 September 2021 Killing Eve Star Jodie Comer Confirmed for Ridley Scott s Kitbag Opposite Joaquin Phoenix Variety Menkes Suzy 8 July 1996 Galliano s Empire Line Shines for Givenchy The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 8 September 2016 Aronson Theo 1990 Napoleon and Josephine A Love Story St Martins Pr ISBN 0 312 05135 2 Brent Harrison 1946 Pauline Bonaparte A Woman of Affairs NY and Toronto Rinehart Bruce Evangeline 1995 Napoleon and Josephine An Improbable Marriage NY Scribner ISBN 0 02 517810 5 Castelot Andre 2009 Josephine Ishi Press ISBN 978 4 87187 853 1 Chevallier Bernard Pincemaille Christophe Douce et incomparable Josephine ed Payot amp Rivages coll Petite bibliotheque Payot Paris 2001 ISBN 2 228 90029 X Chevallier Bernard Pincemaille Christophe L imperatrice Josephine Presses de la Renaissance Paris 1988 466 p ISBN 978 2 85616 485 3 Delorme Eleanor P 2002 Josephine Napoleon s Incomparable Empress Harry N Abrams ISBN 978 0 8109 1229 8 Epton Nina 1975 Josephine the Empress and Her Children Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 393 07500 7 Erickson Carolly 1998 Josephine A Life of the Empress St Martin s Press ISBN 1 86105 637 0 Fauveau Jean Claude Josephine l imperatrice creole L esclavage aux Antilles et la traite pendant la Revolution francaise Editions L Harmattan 2010 390 p ISBN 978 2 296 11293 3 Knapton Ernest John 1963 Empress Josephine Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 671 51346 7 de Montjouven Philippe Josephine Une imperatrice de legendes Timee editions 2010 141 p ISBN 978 2 35401 233 5 Mossiker Frances 1964 Napoleon and Josephine the Biography of a Marriage Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 00 000000 2 Schiffer Liesel Femmes remarquables au XIX siecle Vuibert ed Vuibert Paris 2008 305 p ISBN 978 2711744428 Sergeant Philip 1909 The Empress Josephine Napoleon s Enchantress NY Hutchinson s Library of Standard Lives Stuart Andrea 2005 The Rose of Martinique A Life of Napoleon s Josephine Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 4202 3 Wagener Francoise L Imperatrice Josephine 1763 1814 Flammarion Paris 1999 504 p External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Josephine de Beauharnais nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Josephine de Beauharnais nbsp The Heroines of History public domain audiobook at LibriVox Empress Josephine by Ernest John Knapton Complete transcription of the 1963 biography Josephine de Beauharnais de Tascher de la Pagerie in French Site published by the current members of the family Tascher de la Pagerie Chateau de Malmaison in French Josephine s residence from 1799 to 1814 the site of her death Memoirs of the Empress Josephine Volume 1 at archive org Memoirs of the Empress Josephine Volume 2 at archive orgJosephine de BeauharnaisTascher de La PagerieBorn 23 June 1763 Died 29 May 1814Royal titlesVacantMonarchy abolishedTitle last held byMarie Antoinetteas Queen consort of the French Empress consort of the French18 May 1804 10 January 1810 VacantTitle next held byMarie Louise of AustriaPreceded byIsabella of Portugalas consort to the last crowned monarch 1530 Queen consort of Italy26 May 1805 10 January 1810French nobilityNew title Duchess of Navarre9 April 1810 29 May 1814 Succeeded byAuguste de Beauharnais Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Josephine de Beauharnais amp oldid 1180902844, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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