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Victor Amadeus II

Victor Amadeus II (Vittorio Amedeo; 14 May 1666[1] – 31 October 1732) was the head of the House of Savoy and ruler of the Savoyard states from 1675 to 1730. He was the first of his house to acquire a royal crown, ruling first as King of Sicily (1713–1720) and then as King of Sardinia (1720–1730). Among his other titles were Duke of Savoy, Duke of Montferrat, Prince of Piedmont, Marquis of Saluzzo and Count of Aosta, Maurienne and Nice.

Victor Amadeus II
King of Sardinia
Reign17 February 1720 – 3 September 1730
PredecessorCharles VI, Holy Roman Emperor
SuccessorCharles Emmanuel III
King of Sicily
Reign22 September 1713 – 17 February 1720
Coronation24 December 1713
PredecessorPhilip IV
SuccessorCharles IV
Duke of Savoy
Reign12 June 1675 – 3 September 1730
PredecessorCharles Emmanuel II
SuccessorCharles Emmanuel III
RegentMarie Jeanne (until 1684)
Born(1666-05-14)14 May 1666
Royal Palace, Turin, Savoy
Died31 October 1732(1732-10-31) (aged 66)
Castle of Rivoli, Turin, Savoy
Burial
Basilica of Superga, Turin, Italy
Spouse
(m. 1684; died 1728)

(m. 1730)
Issue
Detail
Maria Adélaïde, Dauphine of France
Maria Luisa, Queen of Spain
Victor Amadeus, Prince of Piedmont
Charles Emmanuel III, King of Sardinia
illegitimate:
Maria Vittoria, Princess of Carignano
Vittorio Francesco, Marquis of Susa
Names
Italian: Vittorio Amedeo Sebastiano di Savoia
HouseSavoy
FatherCharles Emmanuel II, Duke of Savoy
MotherMarie Jeanne Baptiste of Nemours
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Louis XIV arranged his marriage in order to maintain French influence in Savoy, but Victor Amadeus soon broke away from the influence of France. At his father's death in 1675, his mother, Marie Jeanne Baptiste of Nemours, was regent in the name of her nine-year-old son and would remain in de facto power until 1684 when Victor Amadeus banished her further involvement in the state.[2] Having fought in the War of the Spanish Succession, he was rewarded with the Kingdom of Sicily in 1713, but he was forced to exchange this title for the poorer Kingdom of Sardinia in 1720.[3]

Victor Amadeus left a considerable cultural influence in Turin, remodeling the Royal Palace of Turin, Palace of Venaria, Palazzina di caccia of Stupinigi, as well as building the Basilica of Superga where he rests.[4]

Infancy and regency

Victor Amadeus was born in Turin to Charles Emmanuel II, Duke of Savoy and his second wife Marie Jeanne Baptiste of Nemours. Named after his paternal grandfather Victor Amadeus I he was their only child.[2] As an infant he was styled as the Prince of Piedmont, traditional title of the heir apparent to the duchy of Savoy. A weak child, his health was greatly monitored. As an infant he had a passion for soldiers and was noted as being very intelligent.[2]

His father died in June 1675 in Turin at the age of forty after a series of convulsive fevers.[5] His mother was declared Regent of Savoy and, known as Madame Royale at court, took power. In 1677, during her regency, she tried to arrange a marriage between Victor Amadeus and his first cousin Infanta Isabel Luísa of Portugal, the presumptive heiress of her father, Peter II and Victor Amadeus' aunt. His mother urged him to agree to the marriage, as this would have left Marie Jeanne permanently in control of the Duchy of Savoy as Regent because her son would have had to live in Portugal with his new wife. The duchy would then revert to the Kingdom of Portugal at her death. Victor Amadeus refused, and a party was even formed which refused to recognise his leaving Savoy. Despite a marriage contract being signed between Portugal and Savoy on 15 May 1679,[6] the marriage between Victor Amadeus and the Infanta came to nothing and was thus cancelled.

Other candidates included Maria Antonia of Austria, a Countess Palatine of Neuburg and Anna Maria Luisa de' Medici. Victor Amadeus was keen on the match with Tuscany and negotiations were kept secret from France even though the match never happened. Under the influence of Louis XIV and Marie Jeanne, Victor Amadeus was forced to marry a French princess Anne Marie d'Orléans. His mother was keen on the match and had always promoted French interests having been born in Paris a member of a cadet branch of the House of Savoy.[7] He asked for Anne Marie's hand in March 1684, Victor Amadeus, who had been using political allies to gain support to end his mother's grip on power, succeeded in 1684 when she was banished from further influence in the state.[8]

Salt wars

A significant event of his mother's regency was the Salt Wars of 1680. These rebellions were caused by the unpopular taxes on salt in all cities in Savoy. The system had been put in place by Emmanuel Philibert, Duke of Savoy in order to raise money for the crown. The annual payment of a tax which had been in place for over 100 years caused great discontent and rebellion finally broke out in Mondovì, where the people refused to pay taxes to the emissary of Savoy, Andrea Cantatore di Breo. The unrest caused an army to be sent to stop the unrest in the town, which was pacified quickly. However, in the town of Montaldo, the unrest began again and was more serious than before. 200 soldiers were killed in warfare which lasted for several days.

The news of these rebellions soon reached a wider scope and it became clear that soon the whole of Piedmont was on the verge of revolt. Power at this point still being with Victor Amadeus' mother, she ordered representatives of the town of Mondovì to go to Turin to conclude treaties and were cordially welcomed by the young Victor Amadeus, who agreed to the treaties. The event had allowed Victor Amadeus a chance to exert some power.

Duke of Savoy

 
Engraved by Pieter Stevens van Gunst after L. Bourdin, Portrait of Victor Amedée II, Duc de Savoye, early 18th century, engraving

Having succeeded in ending his mother's power in Savoy, Victor Amadeus looked to his oncoming marriage with the youngest child of Philippe I, Duke of Orléans (brother of Louis XIV) and Henrietta of England. The contract of marriage between Anne Marie and the Duke of Savoy was signed at Versailles on 9 April; On 10 April 1684, Anne Marie was married at Versailles, by proxy, to Victor Amadeus. The couple were married in person on 6 May 1684.

The Vaudois

At the urging of Louis, Victor Amadeus II began a large-scale persecution of the Vaudois (Piedmontese and Savoyard Protestants) in 1685. The state had been bankrupted due to various conflicts and a famine in 1679 which had used all last resources.[9] Due to his alliances with England and the Dutch Republic during the Nine Years' War, he was forced to cease this practice from 1688, and in 1694 granted an Edict of Toleration. However, in 1698 Louis XIV forced him to expel all Protestant immigrants from Savoy in accordance with a treaty of 1696.[10]

During this period he became anxious to free himself of domination by Louis, and his first sign of independence was his independent visit to Venice in 1687, where he conferred with Prince Eugene of Savoy and others. Louis discovered this and demanded that Victor Amadeus launch another expedition against the Vaudois; he grudgingly complied, but as described below soon chose the allies countering France.[11]

Internal reforms

 
Victor Amadeus II before 1728.

Victor Amadeus II undertook sweeping administrative reforms within Savoy. In 1696 he established a system of intendants, based on the French model, responsible for collecting taxes and law enforcement. In 1697 he began a land survey which was largely completed by 1711, the Perequazione, to examine the land holdings and privileges of the Church and nobility. In 1717 he reformed the secretariat system in Turin establishing individual secretaries for war, internal affairs and foreign affairs. From the 1670s he also had a new administrative zone built in Turin, around the ducal palace. This zone included a military academy, the ministry of war, a mint, and a customs house. This work was still ongoing upon his death.

Victor Amadeus also undertook a number of military reforms. Often when one of his key fortresses was under attack, he would replace its commanding officer with one of his most reliable and trusted leaders.[12] In 1690 he established a select militia within his territories, and he later overhauled the militia system in 1714 and strictly codified it. This included an obligation for each region under his rule to provide a number of men for the militia based on population.[13] From 1713 he also began to establish his own navy based on the limited Sicilian naval forces he had been granted.

Victor Amadeus was able to use the experienced armies he developed in foreign wars to establish more firm control within his own territories. Faced with rebellion by Mondovì at the end of the century, he brought a force of veterans from the Nine Years War there and re-established his authority. He employed a similar strategy against an anti-tax riot in Cigliano in 1724.[14]

Foreign affairs

Under his mother's regency Savoy, despite being a state of the Holy Roman Empire, was closely linked to and heavily dependent upon France, essentially becoming a French satellite. Victor Amadeus II broke this link by joining alliances against France in both the Nine Years War and the War of the Spanish Succession.[15] Savoy was considered a valuable ally in both wars due to its geographical position, enabling a second front to be opened against France in the south.[16] Savoy relied heavily on foreign subsidies, particularly from England and the Dutch Republic, in both wars to maintain its armies.

Nine Years War

At the start of the Nine Years War, Savoy had three regiments in the service of France in Flanders. Victor Amadeus struggled throughout the early part of the war to bring those troops back into his own use.[17] Part of the agreement he reached with the Grand Alliance against France was that they would enable him to recover Pinerolo,[15] which his predecessor and namesake had lost decades before. In 1692, he was the only member of the Grand Alliance to bring the war to French lands, invading the Dauphiné. In 1695 and 1696, he secretly negotiated a separate treaty with Louis XIV of France which included the return of Pinerolo to Savoy.[18] Throughout the war, he greatly increased the size of the army of Savoy from about 8500 to more than 24000.[19]

 
Map of Western Europe in 1713, the Duchy of Savoy can be seen yellow in the centre

War of the Spanish Succession

During the War of the Spanish Succession, foreign subsidies amounted for almost half of the revenue raised by Savoy to fight the war. The end of the Nine Years' War had helped to design a new balance on the continent: at the death of the childless Charles II of Spain he left his throne to Philip, grandson of Louis XIV. The will stated that should Philip not accept it would go to his brother Charles. Victor Amadeus was himself in line to succeed, as a great-grandson of Infanta Catherine Michaela of Spain.[20] As a result, Victor Amadeus expected compensation in the form of a territory which had been owned by the vast Spanish empire. Victor Amadeus had his eye on the Duchy of Milan which, having signed a treaty with Louis XIV, had support in conquering the duchy. With the Treaty of Vigevano in October 1696, however, Louis XIV's support waned.[20] Victor Amadeus subsequently allied himself with Emperor Leopold I.

England and Austria ignored his claim, the latter of which had a candidate in the person of Archduke Charles, who immediately proclaimed himself King of Spain. The Grand Duke of Tuscany also ignored his claims. In the meantime he pursued the expansion of Savoy and bought various fiefdoms of the Holy Roman Empire.

Victor Amadeus was in a position where on most sides of Savoy was a Bourbon ruler, the enemy of Philip V, and he was forced to let French troops enter his lands in order to get Milan which Victor Amadeus had wanted so greatly. Forced to ally himself again this time to Louis XIV and his grandson in Spain, his daughter Maria Luisa was used as a pawn to seal this alliance. His daughter subsequently married Philip V in 1701.[21] In 1701, he fought bravely at the Battle of Chiari, fought in the name of Bourbon control of Milan.[21] By 1702, Victor Amadeus was considering changing allegiance to the emperor again having entered secret correspondence with the emperor who promised him the Duchy of Montferrat. In order to appease him, the emperor increased his bribe, adding various territories in Lombardy, Victor Amadeus having ignored him.

In 1703, Victor Amadeus switched sides, joining the Grand Alliance as he had in the Nine Years War.[22] Savoy fared particularly badly against the larger French forces resulting in a siege of Turin in 1706.[23] Anne Marie's uncle, Louis XIV (along with Spanish forces from Anne Marie's second cousin Philip V of Spain), besieged Turin during the Battle of Turin. French troops were under the control of Anne Marie's half brother, the Duke of Orléans.[citation needed] She and her sons were forced to flee Turin with the grandmother for the safety of Genoa.[24] Turin was saved by the combined forces of Victor Amadeus and Prince Eugene of Savoy in September 1706.[23]

King of Sicily

As a result of his aid in the War of the Spanish Succession, Victor Amadeus II gained the Kingdom of Sicily in 1713 under the Treaty of Utrecht which ended the war. Being crowned King of Sicily in Palermo on 24 December 1713, he returned to Turin in September 1714. 

As ruler of an independent kingdom and a key player in the recent war, Victor Amadeus significantly expanded his foreign relations. As a duke, he had envoys and embassies in France, the Empire, and Rome. In 1717, he established his own foreign office.[25]

King of Sardinia

 
Martin van Mytens, Portrait of Victor Amedeus II (1728/29), Reggia di Venaria

Victor Amadeus in 1720 was forced to exchange Sicily for the less important kingdom of Sardinia after objections from an alliance of four nations, including several of his former allies.[26] The duke was a marquis and prince and perpetual vicar in the Holy Roman Empire.

Abdication and later years

Having done much to improve the state of his inheritance in 1684, Victor Amadeus took the decision to abdicate in September 1730. The previous month the lonely king had lost most of his family, including his favourite and eldest son the Prince of Piedmont, and sought the security of a previous mistress Anna Canalis di Cumiana. The couple were married in a private ceremony on 12 August 1730 in the Royal Chapel in Turin having obtained permission from Pope Clement XII. Still attractive in her forties, Victor Amadeus had long been in love with her and as a wedding gift, created her the Marchioness of Spigno.[27] The couple made their marriage public on 3 September 1730 much to the dismay of the court. A month later, Victor Amadeus announced his wish to abdicate the throne and did so in a ceremony at the Castle of Rivoli on the day of his marriage. His son succeeded him as Charles Emmanuel III.

Taking the style of King Victor Amadeus, he and Anna moved into the château de Chambéry outside the capital. The couple took a small retinue of servants and Victor Amadeus was kept informed of matters of state. He insisted on having a Louis XIV-style wig with him at all times as his only luxury.

Under the influence of Anna, in 1731 having suffered a stroke, Victor Amadeus decided he wanted to resume his tenure on the throne and informed his son of his decision.[28] Arrested by his son, he was transported to the Castle of Moncalieri and Anna was taken to a house for reformed prostitutes at the Castle of Ceva but was later allowed to return to the Castle of Rivoli where her husband was moved. She was returned to him on 12 April. The stroke seemed to have affected Victor Amadeus in a way which caused him to later turn violent towards his wife, blaming her for his misfortunes.[26]

King Victor Amadeus died in September 1732 and was buried in the Convent of San Giuseppe di Carignano. His son decided not to bury him in the Basilica of Superga which Victor Amadeus had built and where he asked to be buried, as his son did not want to remind the public of the scandal which his abdication had caused. Anna was moved to the Convent of the Visitation in Pinerolo where she died aged 88.[26]

Cultural legacy

Despite his political reforms and his passion for trying to increase the importance of Savoy in Europe, Victor Amadeus left a considerable cultural legacy in the city of his birth. In 1697 Victor Amadeus commissioned Le Notre to lay out large gardens at the Palace of Turin where he had previously commissioned the Viennese Daniel Seiter to paint a famous gallery which exists to this day. Victor Amadeus subsequently had Seiter knighted. He also encouraged musical patronage in Savoy and the court became a centre for various musicians of the period.

Being crowned King of Sicily in Palermo on 24 December 1713, he returned to Turin in September 1714. From Palermo he brought back Filippo Juvarra, an Italian architect who had spent many years in Rome.[29] Juvarra was patronised by Victor Amadeus and was the mind behind the remodelling of the Royal Palace of Turin, Palace of Venaria, Palazzina di caccia of Stupinigi as well as building the Basilica of Superga. The architect was also responsible for various roads and piazza's in Turin. Victor Amadeus' mother also used Juvarra for the famous staircase within the Palazzo Madama where she lived after being banished.[29]

In 1997 the UNESCO added a group of buildings which were connected to Victor Amadeus and his family to be added to have World Heritage status. These buildings including the Royal Palace, the Palazzo Madama, the Palazzina di caccia of Stupinigi and his wife's Villa della Regina were grouped as the Residences of the Royal House of Savoy.[30]

Family and issue

 

His distant relationship with his mother was always strained and has been blamed on her ambition to keep power to herself.[31] Marie Jeanne spent most of her time relegated to state business which she enjoyed and had little time for her only child whom she kept under close supervision in order to make sure he would not try to assume power.[31] Anne Marie gave her husband six children but also had two stillbirths of each gender, one in 1691 and again in 1697. Three of these children would go on to have further progeny, including the eldest Maria Adelaide, who was the mother of Louis XV of France. His second daughter Maria Luisa, known in the family as Louison, would marry Philip V of Spain in 1701 and was also regent of Spain for various periods. These two marriages were tactics used by Louis XIV to keep Victor Amadeus close to France prior to the War of the Spanish Succession.[32]

Anne Marie would remain a devoted wife. She quietly accepted his extramarital affairs; the longest one being with the famed beauty Jeanne Baptiste d'Albert de Luynes by whom he had two children. Jeanne Baptiste was his mistress for eleven years and eventually fled Savoy due to Victor Amadeus' obsession with her. Victor Amadeus subsequently had his daughter with Jeanne Baptiste, Maria Vittoria, marry the Prince of Carignano from which the present Vittorio Emanuele, Prince of Naples is a direct descendant.[33] His favourite child was Victor Amadeus born in 1699 and given the title Prince of Piedmont as heir apparent. The Prince of Piedmont later died in 1715 from smallpox.[34] Anne Marie died in 1728 after a series of heart attacks.[35]

His relationship with his younger son and eventual successor Charles Emmanuel was a cold one and the two were never close.[36] Victor Amadeus organised the first two marriages of Charles Emmanuel, the first one being to Anne Christine of Sulzbach, daughter of the Count Palatine of Sulzbach, which produced a son who died in infancy.[37] The second marriage was to Polyxena of Hesse-Rotenburg, a first cousin of Anne Christine and mother of six children, including the future Victor Amadeus III of Sardinia.[27]

Legitimate issue

Illegitimate issue

Ancestors

References and notes

  1. ^ Oresko 2004, p. 23.
  2. ^ a b c Symcox 1983, p. 69.
  3. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 160.
  4. ^ Symcox 1983, p. 78.
  5. ^ Frézet 1827, p. 594.
  6. ^ Oresko 2004, p. 35.
  7. ^ Ragnhild 1997, p. 334.
  8. ^ Oresko 2004, p. 37.
  9. ^ Symcox 1983, p. 92.
  10. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 147.
  11. ^ Chisholm 1911.
  12. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 29.
  13. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 36-37.
  14. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 21.
  15. ^ a b Storrs 1999, p. 1.
  16. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 6.
  17. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 32.
  18. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 2.
  19. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 24.
  20. ^ a b Storrs 1999, p. 134.
  21. ^ a b Symcox 1983, p. 139.
  22. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 128.
  23. ^ a b Storrs 1999, p. 27.
  24. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 3-4.
  25. ^ Storrs 1999, p. 122-126.
  26. ^ a b c Symcox 1983, p. 232.
  27. ^ a b Symcox 1983, p. 229.
  28. ^ Symcox 1983, p. 231.
  29. ^ a b Oresko 2004, p. 43-44.
  30. ^ . Archived from the original on 1 December 2010. Retrieved 21 September 2010.
  31. ^ a b Symcox 1983, p. 70.
  32. ^ Vitelleschi 1905b, p. 390.
  33. ^ Oresko 2004, p. 44.
  34. ^ Oresko 2004, p. 40.
  35. ^ Vitelleschi 1905b, p. 495.
  36. ^ Symcox 1983, p. 74.
  37. ^ Vitelleschi 1905b, p. 482.
  38. ^ Genealogie ascendante jusqu'au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l'Europe actuellement vivans [Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living] (in French). Bourdeaux: Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel. 1768. p. 24. (for ancestors up to #15)

Sources

  • The Gentleman's and London magazine: or monthly chronologer, 1741–1794, J. Exshaw., 1741
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Victor Amedeus II." . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 28.
  • Anselme de Sainte-Marie, Père (1726). Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France [Genealogical and chronological history of the royal house of France] (in French). Vol. 1 (3rd ed.). Paris: La compagnie des libraires.
  • Frézet, Jean (1827). Histoire de la Maison de Savoie. Vol. 2. Alliana et Paravia.
  • Oresko, Robert (2004). "Maria Giovanna Battista of Savoy-Nemours (1644–1724): daughter, consort, and Regent of Savoy". In Campbell Orr, Clarissa (ed.). Queenship in Europe 1660–1815: The Role of the Consort. Cambridge University Press. pp. 16–55. ISBN 0-521-81422-7.
  • Ragnhild, Marie Hatton (1997). Royal and republican sovereignty in early modern Europe. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-41910-7.
  • Storrs, Christopher (1999). War, diplomacy and the rise of Savoy, 1690-1720. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-55146-3.
  • Symcox, Geoffrey (1983). Victor Amadeus II: absolutism in the Savoyard State, 1675–1730. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-04974-1.
  • Vitelleschi, The Marchese (1905a). The romance of Savoy, Victor Amadeus II. and his Stuart bride. Vol. I. New York: Harvard College Library.
  • Vitelleschi, The Marchese (1905b). The romance of Savoy, Victor Amadeus II. and his Stuart bride. Vol. II. New York: Harvard College Library.

External links

  •   Media related to Victor Amadeus II of Sardinia at Wikimedia Commons
Victor Amadeus II
Born: 14 May 1666 Died: 31 October 1732
Regnal titles
Preceded by Duke of Savoy
1675–1730
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Sardinia
1720–1730
Preceded by King of Sicily
1713–1720
Succeeded by

victor, amadeus, prince, carignano, prince, carignano, vittorio, amedeo, 1666, october, 1732, head, house, savoy, ruler, savoyard, states, from, 1675, 1730, first, house, acquire, royal, crown, ruling, first, king, sicily, 1713, 1720, then, king, sardinia, 172. For the Prince of Carignano see Victor Amadeus II Prince of Carignano Victor Amadeus II Vittorio Amedeo 14 May 1666 1 31 October 1732 was the head of the House of Savoy and ruler of the Savoyard states from 1675 to 1730 He was the first of his house to acquire a royal crown ruling first as King of Sicily 1713 1720 and then as King of Sardinia 1720 1730 Among his other titles were Duke of Savoy Duke of Montferrat Prince of Piedmont Marquis of Saluzzo and Count of Aosta Maurienne and Nice Victor Amadeus IIPortrait by Martin van Meytens 1728 Palace of Venaria King of SardiniaReign17 February 1720 3 September 1730PredecessorCharles VI Holy Roman EmperorSuccessorCharles Emmanuel IIIKing of SicilyReign22 September 1713 17 February 1720Coronation24 December 1713PredecessorPhilip IVSuccessorCharles IVDuke of SavoyReign12 June 1675 3 September 1730PredecessorCharles Emmanuel IISuccessorCharles Emmanuel IIIRegentMarie Jeanne until 1684 Born 1666 05 14 14 May 1666Royal Palace Turin SavoyDied31 October 1732 1732 10 31 aged 66 Castle of Rivoli Turin SavoyBurialBasilica of Superga Turin ItalySpouseAnne Marie d Orleans m 1684 died 1728 wbr Anna Canalis di Cumiana m 1730 wbr IssueDetailMaria Adelaide Dauphine of FranceMaria Luisa Queen of SpainVictor Amadeus Prince of PiedmontCharles Emmanuel III King of Sardinia illegitimate Maria Vittoria Princess of CarignanoVittorio Francesco Marquis of SusaNamesItalian Vittorio Amedeo Sebastiano di SavoiaHouseSavoyFatherCharles Emmanuel II Duke of SavoyMotherMarie Jeanne Baptiste of NemoursReligionRoman CatholicismLouis XIV arranged his marriage in order to maintain French influence in Savoy but Victor Amadeus soon broke away from the influence of France At his father s death in 1675 his mother Marie Jeanne Baptiste of Nemours was regent in the name of her nine year old son and would remain in de facto power until 1684 when Victor Amadeus banished her further involvement in the state 2 Having fought in the War of the Spanish Succession he was rewarded with the Kingdom of Sicily in 1713 but he was forced to exchange this title for the poorer Kingdom of Sardinia in 1720 3 Victor Amadeus left a considerable cultural influence in Turin remodeling the Royal Palace of Turin Palace of Venaria Palazzina di caccia of Stupinigi as well as building the Basilica of Superga where he rests 4 Contents 1 Infancy and regency 1 1 Salt wars 2 Duke of Savoy 2 1 The Vaudois 2 2 Internal reforms 3 Foreign affairs 3 1 Nine Years War 3 2 War of the Spanish Succession 4 King of Sicily 5 King of Sardinia 5 1 Abdication and later years 6 Cultural legacy 7 Family and issue 7 1 Legitimate issue 7 2 Illegitimate issue 8 Ancestors 9 References and notes 10 Sources 11 External linksInfancy and regency EditVictor Amadeus was born in Turin to Charles Emmanuel II Duke of Savoy and his second wife Marie Jeanne Baptiste of Nemours Named after his paternal grandfather Victor Amadeus I he was their only child 2 As an infant he was styled as the Prince of Piedmont traditional title of the heir apparent to the duchy of Savoy A weak child his health was greatly monitored As an infant he had a passion for soldiers and was noted as being very intelligent 2 His father died in June 1675 in Turin at the age of forty after a series of convulsive fevers 5 His mother was declared Regent of Savoy and known as Madame Royale at court took power In 1677 during her regency she tried to arrange a marriage between Victor Amadeus and his first cousin Infanta Isabel Luisa of Portugal the presumptive heiress of her father Peter II and Victor Amadeus aunt His mother urged him to agree to the marriage as this would have left Marie Jeanne permanently in control of the Duchy of Savoy as Regent because her son would have had to live in Portugal with his new wife The duchy would then revert to the Kingdom of Portugal at her death Victor Amadeus refused and a party was even formed which refused to recognise his leaving Savoy Despite a marriage contract being signed between Portugal and Savoy on 15 May 1679 6 the marriage between Victor Amadeus and the Infanta came to nothing and was thus cancelled Other candidates included Maria Antonia of Austria a Countess Palatine of Neuburg and Anna Maria Luisa de Medici Victor Amadeus was keen on the match with Tuscany and negotiations were kept secret from France even though the match never happened Under the influence of Louis XIV and Marie Jeanne Victor Amadeus was forced to marry a French princess Anne Marie d Orleans His mother was keen on the match and had always promoted French interests having been born in Paris a member of a cadet branch of the House of Savoy 7 He asked for Anne Marie s hand in March 1684 Victor Amadeus who had been using political allies to gain support to end his mother s grip on power succeeded in 1684 when she was banished from further influence in the state 8 Salt wars Edit A significant event of his mother s regency was the Salt Wars of 1680 These rebellions were caused by the unpopular taxes on salt in all cities in Savoy The system had been put in place by Emmanuel Philibert Duke of Savoy in order to raise money for the crown The annual payment of a tax which had been in place for over 100 years caused great discontent and rebellion finally broke out in Mondovi where the people refused to pay taxes to the emissary of Savoy Andrea Cantatore di Breo The unrest caused an army to be sent to stop the unrest in the town which was pacified quickly However in the town of Montaldo the unrest began again and was more serious than before 200 soldiers were killed in warfare which lasted for several days The news of these rebellions soon reached a wider scope and it became clear that soon the whole of Piedmont was on the verge of revolt Power at this point still being with Victor Amadeus mother she ordered representatives of the town of Mondovi to go to Turin to conclude treaties and were cordially welcomed by the young Victor Amadeus who agreed to the treaties The event had allowed Victor Amadeus a chance to exert some power Duke of Savoy Edit Engraved by Pieter Stevens van Gunst after L Bourdin Portrait of Victor Amedee II Duc de Savoye early 18th century engraving Having succeeded in ending his mother s power in Savoy Victor Amadeus looked to his oncoming marriage with the youngest child of Philippe I Duke of Orleans brother of Louis XIV and Henrietta of England The contract of marriage between Anne Marie and the Duke of Savoy was signed at Versailles on 9 April On 10 April 1684 Anne Marie was married at Versailles by proxy to Victor Amadeus The couple were married in person on 6 May 1684 The Vaudois Edit Main article Savoyard Waldensian wars At the urging of Louis Victor Amadeus II began a large scale persecution of the Vaudois Piedmontese and Savoyard Protestants in 1685 The state had been bankrupted due to various conflicts and a famine in 1679 which had used all last resources 9 Due to his alliances with England and the Dutch Republic during the Nine Years War he was forced to cease this practice from 1688 and in 1694 granted an Edict of Toleration However in 1698 Louis XIV forced him to expel all Protestant immigrants from Savoy in accordance with a treaty of 1696 10 During this period he became anxious to free himself of domination by Louis and his first sign of independence was his independent visit to Venice in 1687 where he conferred with Prince Eugene of Savoy and others Louis discovered this and demanded that Victor Amadeus launch another expedition against the Vaudois he grudgingly complied but as described below soon chose the allies countering France 11 Internal reforms Edit Victor Amadeus II before 1728 Victor Amadeus II undertook sweeping administrative reforms within Savoy In 1696 he established a system of intendants based on the French model responsible for collecting taxes and law enforcement In 1697 he began a land survey which was largely completed by 1711 the Perequazione to examine the land holdings and privileges of the Church and nobility In 1717 he reformed the secretariat system in Turin establishing individual secretaries for war internal affairs and foreign affairs From the 1670s he also had a new administrative zone built in Turin around the ducal palace This zone included a military academy the ministry of war a mint and a customs house This work was still ongoing upon his death Victor Amadeus also undertook a number of military reforms Often when one of his key fortresses was under attack he would replace its commanding officer with one of his most reliable and trusted leaders 12 In 1690 he established a select militia within his territories and he later overhauled the militia system in 1714 and strictly codified it This included an obligation for each region under his rule to provide a number of men for the militia based on population 13 From 1713 he also began to establish his own navy based on the limited Sicilian naval forces he had been granted Victor Amadeus was able to use the experienced armies he developed in foreign wars to establish more firm control within his own territories Faced with rebellion by Mondovi at the end of the century he brought a force of veterans from the Nine Years War there and re established his authority He employed a similar strategy against an anti tax riot in Cigliano in 1724 14 Foreign affairs EditUnder his mother s regency Savoy despite being a state of the Holy Roman Empire was closely linked to and heavily dependent upon France essentially becoming a French satellite Victor Amadeus II broke this link by joining alliances against France in both the Nine Years War and the War of the Spanish Succession 15 Savoy was considered a valuable ally in both wars due to its geographical position enabling a second front to be opened against France in the south 16 Savoy relied heavily on foreign subsidies particularly from England and the Dutch Republic in both wars to maintain its armies Nine Years War Edit At the start of the Nine Years War Savoy had three regiments in the service of France in Flanders Victor Amadeus struggled throughout the early part of the war to bring those troops back into his own use 17 Part of the agreement he reached with the Grand Alliance against France was that they would enable him to recover Pinerolo 15 which his predecessor and namesake had lost decades before In 1692 he was the only member of the Grand Alliance to bring the war to French lands invading the Dauphine In 1695 and 1696 he secretly negotiated a separate treaty with Louis XIV of France which included the return of Pinerolo to Savoy 18 Throughout the war he greatly increased the size of the army of Savoy from about 8500 to more than 24000 19 Map of Western Europe in 1713 the Duchy of Savoy can be seen yellow in the centre War of the Spanish Succession Edit During the War of the Spanish Succession foreign subsidies amounted for almost half of the revenue raised by Savoy to fight the war The end of the Nine Years War had helped to design a new balance on the continent at the death of the childless Charles II of Spain he left his throne to Philip grandson of Louis XIV The will stated that should Philip not accept it would go to his brother Charles Victor Amadeus was himself in line to succeed as a great grandson of Infanta Catherine Michaela of Spain 20 As a result Victor Amadeus expected compensation in the form of a territory which had been owned by the vast Spanish empire Victor Amadeus had his eye on the Duchy of Milan which having signed a treaty with Louis XIV had support in conquering the duchy With the Treaty of Vigevano in October 1696 however Louis XIV s support waned 20 Victor Amadeus subsequently allied himself with Emperor Leopold I England and Austria ignored his claim the latter of which had a candidate in the person of Archduke Charles who immediately proclaimed himself King of Spain The Grand Duke of Tuscany also ignored his claims In the meantime he pursued the expansion of Savoy and bought various fiefdoms of the Holy Roman Empire Victor Amadeus was in a position where on most sides of Savoy was a Bourbon ruler the enemy of Philip V and he was forced to let French troops enter his lands in order to get Milan which Victor Amadeus had wanted so greatly Forced to ally himself again this time to Louis XIV and his grandson in Spain his daughter Maria Luisa was used as a pawn to seal this alliance His daughter subsequently married Philip V in 1701 21 In 1701 he fought bravely at the Battle of Chiari fought in the name of Bourbon control of Milan 21 By 1702 Victor Amadeus was considering changing allegiance to the emperor again having entered secret correspondence with the emperor who promised him the Duchy of Montferrat In order to appease him the emperor increased his bribe adding various territories in Lombardy Victor Amadeus having ignored him In 1703 Victor Amadeus switched sides joining the Grand Alliance as he had in the Nine Years War 22 Savoy fared particularly badly against the larger French forces resulting in a siege of Turin in 1706 23 Anne Marie s uncle Louis XIV along with Spanish forces from Anne Marie s second cousin Philip V of Spain besieged Turin during the Battle of Turin French troops were under the control of Anne Marie s half brother the Duke of Orleans citation needed She and her sons were forced to flee Turin with the grandmother for the safety of Genoa 24 Turin was saved by the combined forces of Victor Amadeus and Prince Eugene of Savoy in September 1706 23 King of Sicily EditAs a result of his aid in the War of the Spanish Succession Victor Amadeus II gained the Kingdom of Sicily in 1713 under the Treaty of Utrecht which ended the war Being crowned King of Sicily in Palermo on 24 December 1713 he returned to Turin in September 1714 As ruler of an independent kingdom and a key player in the recent war Victor Amadeus significantly expanded his foreign relations As a duke he had envoys and embassies in France the Empire and Rome In 1717 he established his own foreign office 25 King of Sardinia Edit Martin van Mytens Portrait of Victor Amedeus II 1728 29 Reggia di Venaria Victor Amadeus in 1720 was forced to exchange Sicily for the less important kingdom of Sardinia after objections from an alliance of four nations including several of his former allies 26 The duke was a marquis and prince and perpetual vicar in the Holy Roman Empire Abdication and later years Edit Having done much to improve the state of his inheritance in 1684 Victor Amadeus took the decision to abdicate in September 1730 The previous month the lonely king had lost most of his family including his favourite and eldest son the Prince of Piedmont and sought the security of a previous mistress Anna Canalis di Cumiana The couple were married in a private ceremony on 12 August 1730 in the Royal Chapel in Turin having obtained permission from Pope Clement XII Still attractive in her forties Victor Amadeus had long been in love with her and as a wedding gift created her the Marchioness of Spigno 27 The couple made their marriage public on 3 September 1730 much to the dismay of the court A month later Victor Amadeus announced his wish to abdicate the throne and did so in a ceremony at the Castle of Rivoli on the day of his marriage His son succeeded him as Charles Emmanuel III Taking the style of King Victor Amadeus he and Anna moved into the chateau de Chambery outside the capital The couple took a small retinue of servants and Victor Amadeus was kept informed of matters of state He insisted on having a Louis XIV style wig with him at all times as his only luxury Under the influence of Anna in 1731 having suffered a stroke Victor Amadeus decided he wanted to resume his tenure on the throne and informed his son of his decision 28 Arrested by his son he was transported to the Castle of Moncalieri and Anna was taken to a house for reformed prostitutes at the Castle of Ceva but was later allowed to return to the Castle of Rivoli where her husband was moved She was returned to him on 12 April The stroke seemed to have affected Victor Amadeus in a way which caused him to later turn violent towards his wife blaming her for his misfortunes 26 King Victor Amadeus died in September 1732 and was buried in the Convent of San Giuseppe di Carignano His son decided not to bury him in the Basilica of Superga which Victor Amadeus had built and where he asked to be buried as his son did not want to remind the public of the scandal which his abdication had caused Anna was moved to the Convent of the Visitation in Pinerolo where she died aged 88 26 Cultural legacy EditDespite his political reforms and his passion for trying to increase the importance of Savoy in Europe Victor Amadeus left a considerable cultural legacy in the city of his birth In 1697 Victor Amadeus commissioned Le Notre to lay out large gardens at the Palace of Turin where he had previously commissioned the Viennese Daniel Seiter to paint a famous gallery which exists to this day Victor Amadeus subsequently had Seiter knighted He also encouraged musical patronage in Savoy and the court became a centre for various musicians of the period Being crowned King of Sicily in Palermo on 24 December 1713 he returned to Turin in September 1714 From Palermo he brought back Filippo Juvarra an Italian architect who had spent many years in Rome 29 Juvarra was patronised by Victor Amadeus and was the mind behind the remodelling of the Royal Palace of Turin Palace of Venaria Palazzina di caccia of Stupinigi as well as building the Basilica of Superga The architect was also responsible for various roads and piazza s in Turin Victor Amadeus mother also used Juvarra for the famous staircase within the Palazzo Madama where she lived after being banished 29 In 1997 the UNESCO added a group of buildings which were connected to Victor Amadeus and his family to be added to have World Heritage status These buildings including the Royal Palace the Palazzo Madama the Palazzina di caccia of Stupinigi and his wife s Villa della Regina were grouped as the Residences of the Royal House of Savoy 30 Family and issue Edit His wife Anne Marie d Orleans His distant relationship with his mother was always strained and has been blamed on her ambition to keep power to herself 31 Marie Jeanne spent most of her time relegated to state business which she enjoyed and had little time for her only child whom she kept under close supervision in order to make sure he would not try to assume power 31 Anne Marie gave her husband six children but also had two stillbirths of each gender one in 1691 and again in 1697 Three of these children would go on to have further progeny including the eldest Maria Adelaide who was the mother of Louis XV of France His second daughter Maria Luisa known in the family as Louison would marry Philip V of Spain in 1701 and was also regent of Spain for various periods These two marriages were tactics used by Louis XIV to keep Victor Amadeus close to France prior to the War of the Spanish Succession 32 Anne Marie would remain a devoted wife She quietly accepted his extramarital affairs the longest one being with the famed beauty Jeanne Baptiste d Albert de Luynes by whom he had two children Jeanne Baptiste was his mistress for eleven years and eventually fled Savoy due to Victor Amadeus obsession with her Victor Amadeus subsequently had his daughter with Jeanne Baptiste Maria Vittoria marry the Prince of Carignano from which the present Vittorio Emanuele Prince of Naples is a direct descendant 33 His favourite child was Victor Amadeus born in 1699 and given the title Prince of Piedmont as heir apparent The Prince of Piedmont later died in 1715 from smallpox 34 Anne Marie died in 1728 after a series of heart attacks 35 His relationship with his younger son and eventual successor Charles Emmanuel was a cold one and the two were never close 36 Victor Amadeus organised the first two marriages of Charles Emmanuel the first one being to Anne Christine of Sulzbach daughter of the Count Palatine of Sulzbach which produced a son who died in infancy 37 The second marriage was to Polyxena of Hesse Rotenburg a first cousin of Anne Christine and mother of six children including the future Victor Amadeus III of Sardinia 27 Legitimate issue Edit Maria Adelaide of Savoy 1685 1712 married Louis Duke of Burgundy eldest son of Louis Grand Dauphin and had issue including Louis XV of France Maria Anna of Savoy 1687 1690 Maria Luisa of Savoy 1688 1714 married Philip V of Spain second son of Louis Grand Dauphin and had issue including two kings of Spain Victor Amadeus of Savoy 1699 1715 died unmarried Charles Emmanuel of Savoy 1701 1773 Duke of Savoy then later King of Sardinia Emanuele Philibert of Savoy 1705 1705 died in infancy Illegitimate issue Edit Maria Vittoria of Savoy 1690 1766 married Victor Amadeus I Prince of Carignano and had issue Vittorio Francesco of Savoy 1694 1762 married Maria Lucrezia Franchi di Pont had no issue Ancestors EditAncestors of Victor Amadeus II 38 8 Charles Emmanuel I Duke of Savoy4 Victor Amadeus I Duke of Savoy9 Catherine Michelle of Austria2 Charles Emmanuel II Duke of Savoy10 Henry IV of France5 Christine of France11 Marie de Medici1 Victor Amadeus II of Sardinia12 Henri I Duke of Nemours6 Charles Amadeus Duke of Nemours13 Anne Duchess of Aumale3 Marie Jeanne Baptiste of Savoy14 Cesar Duke of Vendome7 Elisabeth de Bourbon15 Francoise of LorraineReferences and notes Edit Oresko 2004 p 23 a b c Symcox 1983 p 69 Storrs 1999 p 160 Symcox 1983 p 78 Frezet 1827 p 594 Oresko 2004 p 35 Ragnhild 1997 p 334 Oresko 2004 p 37 Symcox 1983 p 92 Storrs 1999 p 147 Chisholm 1911 Storrs 1999 p 29 Storrs 1999 p 36 37 Storrs 1999 p 21 a b Storrs 1999 p 1 Storrs 1999 p 6 Storrs 1999 p 32 Storrs 1999 p 2 Storrs 1999 p 24 a b Storrs 1999 p 134 a b Symcox 1983 p 139 Storrs 1999 p 128 a b Storrs 1999 p 27 Storrs 1999 p 3 4 Storrs 1999 p 122 126 a b c Symcox 1983 p 232 a b Symcox 1983 p 229 Symcox 1983 p 231 a b Oresko 2004 p 43 44 Residences of the Royal House of Savoy Archived from the original on 1 December 2010 Retrieved 21 September 2010 a b Symcox 1983 p 70 Vitelleschi 1905b p 390 Oresko 2004 p 44 Oresko 2004 p 40 Vitelleschi 1905b p 495 Symcox 1983 p 74 Vitelleschi 1905b p 482 Genealogie ascendante jusqu au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l Europe actuellement vivans Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living in French Bourdeaux Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel 1768 p 24 for ancestors up to 15 Sources EditThe Gentleman s and London magazine or monthly chronologer 1741 1794 J Exshaw 1741 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Victor Amedeus II Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 28 Anselme de Sainte Marie Pere 1726 Histoire genealogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France Genealogical and chronological history of the royal house of France in French Vol 1 3rd ed Paris La compagnie des libraires Frezet Jean 1827 Histoire de la Maison de Savoie Vol 2 Alliana et Paravia Oresko Robert 2004 Maria Giovanna Battista of Savoy Nemours 1644 1724 daughter consort and Regent of Savoy In Campbell Orr Clarissa ed Queenship in Europe 1660 1815 The Role of the Consort Cambridge University Press pp 16 55 ISBN 0 521 81422 7 Ragnhild Marie Hatton 1997 Royal and republican sovereignty in early modern Europe Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 41910 7 Storrs Christopher 1999 War diplomacy and the rise of Savoy 1690 1720 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 55146 3 Symcox Geoffrey 1983 Victor Amadeus II absolutism in the Savoyard State 1675 1730 Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04974 1 Vitelleschi The Marchese 1905a The romance of Savoy Victor Amadeus II and his Stuart bride Vol I New York Harvard College Library Vitelleschi The Marchese 1905b The romance of Savoy Victor Amadeus II and his Stuart bride Vol II New York Harvard College Library External links Edit Media related to Victor Amadeus II of Sardinia at Wikimedia CommonsVictor Amadeus IIHouse of SavoyBorn 14 May 1666 Died 31 October 1732Regnal titlesPreceded byCharles Emmanuel II Duke of Savoy1675 1730 Succeeded byCharles Emmanuel IIIPreceded byEmperor Charles VI King of Sardinia1720 1730Preceded byPhilip V of Spain King of Sicily1713 1720 Succeeded byEmperor Charles VI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Victor Amadeus II amp oldid 1134657092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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