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Maria Euphrosyne of Zweibrücken

Maria Euphrosyne of Zweibrücken (14 February 1625 – 24 October 1687) was a countess palatine, a cousin and foster-sibling of Queen Christina of Sweden, and a sister of King Charles X of Sweden. She was also, after the accession of her brother Charles X on the throne (1654), a titular Royal Princess of Sweden.

Maria Euphrosyne
Countess Palatine Maria Euphrosyne of Zweibrücken
Born14 February 1625
Stegeborg Castle, Östergötland
Died24 October 1687(1687-10-24) (aged 62)
Höjentorp Castle, Västergötland
Noble familyWittelsbach
Spouse(s)Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie
IssueGustaf Adolf De la Gardie
Catharina Charlotta De la Gardie
Hedvig Ebba De la Gardie
FatherJohn Casimir, Count Palatine of Kleeburg
MotherCatherine of Sweden (1584-1638)
Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie with his spouse Maria Euphrosyne of Pfalz-Zweibrücken, the sister of King Charles X of Sweden. Painting from 1653 by Hendrik Munnichhoven. The picture is filled with symbolic details: Magnus Grabriel is standing lower than his wife because she is sister of the king; their holding hands symbolizes fidelity; the bean in Maria Euphrosyne's hand shows that she is pregnant. The painting is regarded as one of the finest from the early Swedish baroque era.
Countess Palatine Maria Euphrosyne of Zweibrücken.
Makalös Palace (Peerless) of the De la Gardie family, across the water from The Royal Castle in Stockholm.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Maria Euphrosyne was born at Stegeborg Castle, Östergötland, to Count Palatine John Casimir of Zweibrücken and Princess Catherine of Sweden. In 1622, her family fled from Germany during the Thirty Years War and settled in the birth country of her mother, Sweden, where Maria Euphrosyne herself was born three years later. She spent her first years at Stegeborg Castle, the fief of her mother. In 1632, her mother was given the responsibility of her cousin, Queen Christina, and Maria Euphrosyne was from that moment brought up with her cousin the Queen: she and her siblings stayed at their court also after the death of their mother in 1638, while their father remained at Stegeborg. Maria Euphrosyne was given a very good education, being brought up with Christina, but she was eventually tutored separately, because Christina as a monarch was considered to require an education otherwise unsuitable for her sex.

During the Reign of Christina edit

In 1643, she received a proposal from Count Henry of Nassau. According to a letter of Christina, Henry was a rich and beautiful Prince who was well liked by Maria Euphrosyne. She left the decision to her father, however: he was uncertain as to whether Henry could support her, and in 1645, after Christina stated that she was fully capable of arranging a marriage for the same status for her relative in Sweden, he denied Henry. On 15 March 1645, Maria Euphrosyne was engaged to the Queen's favorite Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie, and on 7 March 1647, she married him in the Royal Chapel of Tre Kronor (castle) in Stockholm. The marriage was arranged by Christina. Traditional myth has regarded this as a love triangle: Christina and Maria Euphrosyne were both believed to have been in love with Magnus Gabriel, and in the end, Christina gave up the plans of marrying him herself, and gave him to her cousin with the words: I give to you what I cannot have myself. A famous play has been written about this drama. It is not known how much of this legendary love triangle is true, however. According to Maria Euphrosyne herself, the purpose was to show them both her favor. Magnus Gabriel had, according to her own memoirs, fallen in love with her at the age of eighteen, and due to the love letters exchanged by them during their marriage, at least Maria Euphrosyne certainly had strong feelings of affection for him. The marriage has however not been described as happy. At the wedding, Christina granted her several estates, among them her grandmother's favorite residence Höjentorp, which was also to be her favorite, as well as a great personal allowance, which was later confirmed by her brother upon his succession. In 1653, Magnus Gabriel lost his favor with Christina and was expelled from court, and she tried to act as a mediator. Maria Euphrosyne had a close relationship with her brother Charles, and did what she could to support his planned marriage with Christina.

During the Reign of Charles X and Charles XI edit

At the coronation of her brother King Charles X Gustavus in 1654, Maria Euphrosyne was granted the rank and status of a Royal Princess of Sweden. This was opposed by some parts of the nobility. Maria Euphrosyne did not use the title of Countess, but was generally referred to as Princess. Maria Euphrosyne visited both her spouse and her brother in warfare: she visited her spouse in Germany and, in 1656, in Riga in Swedish Livonia, from where she had to flee again with her courtiers after just two weeks when the Russians set fire to the city. During the Dano-Swedish War (1658-1660), she and her sister-in-law Queen Hedvig Eleonora lived at Kronborg in Denmark after it had been taken by the Swedish general Carl Gustaf Wrangel.[1] In 1658, her brother King Charles told her that he wished to make her spouse Lord High Chancellor of Sweden, but she convinced him not to by saying that Magnus Gabriel was more suited for military work. In 1660, she was present at the death bed of her brother in Gothenburg. He promised her great estates in Denmark, pensions for her children, and told her that he had named her consort Lord High Chancellor of Sweden in his will against her wish.

Maria Euphrosyne was very active as a mediator and a spokesperson for supplicants who wished to speak to her spouse or to her brother the King (and later her nephew the King) on their behalf. This matters were not only small things, they also concerned women asking her to use her contacts to acquire offices of great political importance for their male relatives. In the same fashion, she acted as a mediator between her consort and the royal house, especially when he was out of favor. At Karlberg Palace, she received her supplicants in a room with paintings of her royal brother and mother, with a door open to the room where her brother the King had slept when he was a guest in her house. Contemporary view was that her spouse had her to thank for his successful career.

In 1676, Lisbeth Carlsdotter, a witness in the Katarina witch trials inspired by the famous Gävle-Boy, tried to implicate Maria Euphrosyne and her sister-in-law Maria Sofia for sorcery. This accusations was not taken seriously, but instead discredited the credibility of Lisbeth Carlsdotter as a witness and eventually led to the whole trial being dissolved.

In 1680, her spouse fell in favor of her nephew, the monarch, after the death of Johan Göransson Gyllenstierna. She was denied an audience with her nephew without witnesses and had no success in getting her spouse in favor. After she, by using her contacts, managed to get an audience in private with the King, however, she told him that she hoped Gyllenstierna was now in Hell, and the result was that her spouse was appointed Seneschal. During the great reduction of her nephew King Charles XI in the 1680s, a lot of the property of the family was confiscated by the crown. Maria Euphrosyne was not above using her status as the aunt of the King to avoid confiscation, but she was only moderately successful: in 1685, she was allowed to keep her own personal allowance and her favorite residence, Höjentorp Castle, Västergötland, but the confiscation of her husband's property continued undisturbed. Maria Euphrosyne became a widow in 1686. This was in the middle of the reduction. The King refused to pay for the funeral of her spouse, and to stop the creditors from inventorying her own personal possessions and jewelry as well. She died at Höjentorp.

Maria Euphrosyne was described as religious. She had her German saying »Gott ist mir allés» carved at a wall at Läckö Castle, as well as at a medallion, and in 1681, she anonymously published the German language prayer book »Der geistlich-hungerigen seelen himmelisches manna». In 1682, she wrote her own autobiography.

Family edit

Maria Euphrosyne married Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie on 7 March 1647. Of their eleven children, only three survived childhood, and only one (Hedvig Ebba), had issue; but her only child himself died childless.

Issue edit

  1. Gustaf Adolf De la Gardie (1647–1695), unmarried, no issue.
  2. Catharina Charlotta De la Gardie (1655-1697), married Count Otto Wilhelm Königsmarck, no issue.
  3. Hedvig Ebba De la Gardie (1657–1700 ), married Count Carl Gustaf Eriksson Oxenstierna af Södermöre, and had one son, who died childless.

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ Lundh-Eriksson, Nanna (1947). Hedvig Eleonora (in Swedish). Wahlström & Widstrand.
  2. ^ a b Kromnow, Åke (1975). "Johan Kasimir". Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (in Swedish). Vol. 20. p. 204.
  3. ^ a b Kromnow, Åke (1977). "Katarina". Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (in Swedish). Vol. 21. p. 1.
  4. ^ a b Press, Volker (1974), "Johann I.", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 10, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 513–514; (full text online)
  5. ^ a b c d Wurzbach, Constantin von, ed. (1861). "Habsburg, Maria (Herzogin zu Berg, Jülich und Cleve)" . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 7. p. 19 – via Wikisource.
  6. ^ a b Palme, Sven Ulric (1975). "Karl IX". Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (in Swedish). Vol. 20. p. 630.
  7. ^ a b Skoglund, Lars-Olof (1987). "Maria". Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (in Swedish). Vol. 25. p. 150.
  8. ^ a b Ney, Theodor Julius (1898), "Wolfgang (Pfalzgraf)", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), vol. 44, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 76–87
  9. ^ a b c d Wolff, Fritz (2001), "Philipp der Großmütige", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 20, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 376–379; (full text online)
  10. ^ a b Harleß, Woldemar (1898), "Wilhelm V. (Herzog von Jülich-Kleve-Berg)", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), vol. 43, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 106–113
  11. ^ a b Bain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "Gustavus I. Eriksson" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  12. ^ a b Dahlbäck, Göran (1987). "Margareta". Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (in Swedish). Vol. 25. p. 139.
  13. ^ a b Press, Volker (1987), "Ludwig VI.", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 15, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 414–415; (full text online)
  • Sven Axel Hallbäck - Läckö slott (Läckö palace)(in Swedish)
  • Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor, Wilhelmina Stålberg, P. G. Berg (Notes on Swedish women) (in Swedish)
  • Svenska Familj-Journalen (Swedish family journal) (in Swedish)
  • Norrhem, Svante (2007). Kvinnor vid maktens sida : 1632-1772. Lund: Nordic Academic Press. Libris 10428618. ISBN 978-91-89116-91-7 (in Swedish)
  • Svenska Familj-Journalen (in Swedish)
  • Riksarkivet SBL Maria Euphrosine De la Gardie (in Swedish)

maria, euphrosyne, zweibrücken, february, 1625, october, 1687, countess, palatine, cousin, foster, sibling, queen, christina, sweden, sister, king, charles, sweden, also, after, accession, brother, charles, throne, 1654, titular, royal, princess, sweden, maria. Maria Euphrosyne of Zweibrucken 14 February 1625 24 October 1687 was a countess palatine a cousin and foster sibling of Queen Christina of Sweden and a sister of King Charles X of Sweden She was also after the accession of her brother Charles X on the throne 1654 a titular Royal Princess of Sweden Maria EuphrosyneCountess Palatine Maria Euphrosyne of ZweibruckenBorn14 February 1625Stegeborg Castle OstergotlandDied24 October 1687 1687 10 24 aged 62 Hojentorp Castle VastergotlandNoble familyWittelsbachSpouse s Magnus Gabriel De la GardieIssueGustaf Adolf De la GardieCatharina Charlotta De la GardieHedvig Ebba De la GardieFatherJohn Casimir Count Palatine of KleeburgMotherCatherine of Sweden 1584 1638 Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie with his spouse Maria Euphrosyne of Pfalz Zweibrucken the sister of King Charles X of Sweden Painting from 1653 by Hendrik Munnichhoven The picture is filled with symbolic details Magnus Grabriel is standing lower than his wife because she is sister of the king their holding hands symbolizes fidelity the bean in Maria Euphrosyne s hand shows that she is pregnant The painting is regarded as one of the finest from the early Swedish baroque era Countess Palatine Maria Euphrosyne of Zweibrucken Makalos Palace Peerless of the De la Gardie family across the water from The Royal Castle in Stockholm Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 During the Reign of Christina 1 3 During the Reign of Charles X and Charles XI 2 Family 2 1 Issue 3 Ancestry 4 ReferencesBiography editEarly life edit Maria Euphrosyne was born at Stegeborg Castle Ostergotland to Count Palatine John Casimir of Zweibrucken and Princess Catherine of Sweden In 1622 her family fled from Germany during the Thirty Years War and settled in the birth country of her mother Sweden where Maria Euphrosyne herself was born three years later She spent her first years at Stegeborg Castle the fief of her mother In 1632 her mother was given the responsibility of her cousin Queen Christina and Maria Euphrosyne was from that moment brought up with her cousin the Queen she and her siblings stayed at their court also after the death of their mother in 1638 while their father remained at Stegeborg Maria Euphrosyne was given a very good education being brought up with Christina but she was eventually tutored separately because Christina as a monarch was considered to require an education otherwise unsuitable for her sex During the Reign of Christina edit In 1643 she received a proposal from Count Henry of Nassau According to a letter of Christina Henry was a rich and beautiful Prince who was well liked by Maria Euphrosyne She left the decision to her father however he was uncertain as to whether Henry could support her and in 1645 after Christina stated that she was fully capable of arranging a marriage for the same status for her relative in Sweden he denied Henry On 15 March 1645 Maria Euphrosyne was engaged to the Queen s favorite Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie and on 7 March 1647 she married him in the Royal Chapel of Tre Kronor castle in Stockholm The marriage was arranged by Christina Traditional myth has regarded this as a love triangle Christina and Maria Euphrosyne were both believed to have been in love with Magnus Gabriel and in the end Christina gave up the plans of marrying him herself and gave him to her cousin with the words I give to you what I cannot have myself A famous play has been written about this drama It is not known how much of this legendary love triangle is true however According to Maria Euphrosyne herself the purpose was to show them both her favor Magnus Gabriel had according to her own memoirs fallen in love with her at the age of eighteen and due to the love letters exchanged by them during their marriage at least Maria Euphrosyne certainly had strong feelings of affection for him The marriage has however not been described as happy At the wedding Christina granted her several estates among them her grandmother s favorite residence Hojentorp which was also to be her favorite as well as a great personal allowance which was later confirmed by her brother upon his succession In 1653 Magnus Gabriel lost his favor with Christina and was expelled from court and she tried to act as a mediator Maria Euphrosyne had a close relationship with her brother Charles and did what she could to support his planned marriage with Christina During the Reign of Charles X and Charles XI edit At the coronation of her brother King Charles X Gustavus in 1654 Maria Euphrosyne was granted the rank and status of a Royal Princess of Sweden This was opposed by some parts of the nobility Maria Euphrosyne did not use the title of Countess but was generally referred to as Princess Maria Euphrosyne visited both her spouse and her brother in warfare she visited her spouse in Germany and in 1656 in Riga in Swedish Livonia from where she had to flee again with her courtiers after just two weeks when the Russians set fire to the city During the Dano Swedish War 1658 1660 she and her sister in law Queen Hedvig Eleonora lived at Kronborg in Denmark after it had been taken by the Swedish general Carl Gustaf Wrangel 1 In 1658 her brother King Charles told her that he wished to make her spouse Lord High Chancellor of Sweden but she convinced him not to by saying that Magnus Gabriel was more suited for military work In 1660 she was present at the death bed of her brother in Gothenburg He promised her great estates in Denmark pensions for her children and told her that he had named her consort Lord High Chancellor of Sweden in his will against her wish Maria Euphrosyne was very active as a mediator and a spokesperson for supplicants who wished to speak to her spouse or to her brother the King and later her nephew the King on their behalf This matters were not only small things they also concerned women asking her to use her contacts to acquire offices of great political importance for their male relatives In the same fashion she acted as a mediator between her consort and the royal house especially when he was out of favor At Karlberg Palace she received her supplicants in a room with paintings of her royal brother and mother with a door open to the room where her brother the King had slept when he was a guest in her house Contemporary view was that her spouse had her to thank for his successful career In 1676 Lisbeth Carlsdotter a witness in the Katarina witch trials inspired by the famous Gavle Boy tried to implicate Maria Euphrosyne and her sister in law Maria Sofia for sorcery This accusations was not taken seriously but instead discredited the credibility of Lisbeth Carlsdotter as a witness and eventually led to the whole trial being dissolved In 1680 her spouse fell in favor of her nephew the monarch after the death of Johan Goransson Gyllenstierna She was denied an audience with her nephew without witnesses and had no success in getting her spouse in favor After she by using her contacts managed to get an audience in private with the King however she told him that she hoped Gyllenstierna was now in Hell and the result was that her spouse was appointed Seneschal During the great reduction of her nephew King Charles XI in the 1680s a lot of the property of the family was confiscated by the crown Maria Euphrosyne was not above using her status as the aunt of the King to avoid confiscation but she was only moderately successful in 1685 she was allowed to keep her own personal allowance and her favorite residence Hojentorp Castle Vastergotland but the confiscation of her husband s property continued undisturbed Maria Euphrosyne became a widow in 1686 This was in the middle of the reduction The King refused to pay for the funeral of her spouse and to stop the creditors from inventorying her own personal possessions and jewelry as well She died at Hojentorp Maria Euphrosyne was described as religious She had her German saying Gott ist mir alles carved at a wall at Lacko Castle as well as at a medallion and in 1681 she anonymously published the German language prayer book Der geistlich hungerigen seelen himmelisches manna In 1682 she wrote her own autobiography Family editMaria Euphrosyne married Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie on 7 March 1647 Of their eleven children only three survived childhood and only one Hedvig Ebba had issue but her only child himself died childless Issue edit Gustaf Adolf De la Gardie 1647 1695 unmarried no issue Catharina Charlotta De la Gardie 1655 1697 married Count Otto Wilhelm Konigsmarck no issue Hedvig Ebba De la Gardie 1657 1700 married Count Carl Gustaf Eriksson Oxenstierna af Sodermore and had one son who died childless Ancestry editAncestors of Maria Euphrosyne of Zweibrucken16 Louis II Count Palatine of Zweibrucken 8 8 Wolfgang Count Palatine of Zweibrucken 4 17 Elisabeth of Hesse 8 4 John I Count Palatine of Zweibrucken 2 18 Philip I Landgrave of Hesse 9 30 9 Anna of Hesse 4 19 Christine of Saxony 9 31 2 John Casimir Count Palatine of Kleeburg20 John III Duke of Cleves 10 10 William Duke of Julich Cleves Berg 5 21 Maria of Julich Berg 10 5 Magdalene of Julich Cleves Berg 2 22 Ferdinand I Holy Roman Emperor 5 11 Maria of Austria 5 23 Anne of Bohemia and Hungary 5 1 Maria Euphrosyne of the Palatinate Zweibrucken24 Erik Johansson Vasa 11 12 Gustav I of Sweden 6 25 Cecilia Mansdotter 11 6 Charles IX of Sweden 3 26 Erik Abrahamsson Leijonhufvud 12 13 Margaret Leijonhufvud 6 27 Ebba Eriksdotter Vasa 12 3 Catherine of Sweden28 Frederick III Elector Palatine 13 14 Louis VI Elector Palatine 7 29 Marie of Brandenburg Kulmbach 13 7 Maria of the Palatinate Simmern 3 30 Philip I Landgrave of Hesse 9 18 15 Elisabeth of Hesse 7 31 Christine of Saxony 9 19 References edit Lundh Eriksson Nanna 1947 Hedvig Eleonora in Swedish Wahlstrom amp Widstrand a b Kromnow Ake 1975 Johan Kasimir Svenskt biografiskt lexikon in Swedish Vol 20 p 204 a b Kromnow Ake 1977 Katarina Svenskt biografiskt lexikon in Swedish Vol 21 p 1 a b Press Volker 1974 Johann I Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 10 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 513 514 full text online a b c d Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1861 Habsburg Maria Herzogin zu Berg Julich und Cleve Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 7 p 19 via Wikisource a b Palme Sven Ulric 1975 Karl IX Svenskt biografiskt lexikon in Swedish Vol 20 p 630 a b Skoglund Lars Olof 1987 Maria Svenskt biografiskt lexikon in Swedish Vol 25 p 150 a b Ney Theodor Julius 1898 Wolfgang Pfalzgraf Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie ADB in German vol 44 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot pp 76 87 a b c d Wolff Fritz 2001 Philipp der Grossmutige Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 20 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 376 379 full text online a b Harless Woldemar 1898 Wilhelm V Herzog von Julich Kleve Berg Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie ADB in German vol 43 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot pp 106 113 a b Bain Robert Nisbet 1911 Gustavus I Eriksson In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press a b Dahlback Goran 1987 Margareta Svenskt biografiskt lexikon in Swedish Vol 25 p 139 a b Press Volker 1987 Ludwig VI Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 15 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 414 415 full text online Sven Axel Hallback Lacko slott Lacko palace in Swedish Anteckningar om svenska qvinnor Wilhelmina Stalberg P G Berg Notes on Swedish women in Swedish Svenska Familj Journalen Swedish family journal in Swedish Norrhem Svante 2007 Kvinnor vid maktens sida 1632 1772 Lund Nordic Academic Press Libris 10428618 ISBN 978 91 89116 91 7 in Swedish Svenska Familj Journalen in Swedish Riksarkivet SBL Maria Euphrosine De la Gardie in Swedish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maria Euphrosyne of Zweibrucken amp oldid 1178621560, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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