QUEEN MARIA TERESA (FRANCE) - AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED 04/26/1653 - HFSID 53068
Sale Price $1,695.00
Reg. $2,000.00
QUEEN MARIA TERESA (FRANCE)
The Spanish Infanta and Queen of France writes a letter to the
Countess of Salvatierra expressing her happiness for the good health of her
sister Margarita Teresa and her wish that the new wet-nurse helps her sister to
fully recover. The future Queen also sends regards to specific persons and
mentions a trip to Antigola
Autograph Letter Signed: "Maria Teresa" in iron gall ink.
8¼x11¾. One page. Fully Translated in English: "My Countess.
Your letter and to know that thank God my sister is doing better make me happy.
I pray God my sister's new wet-nurse works out satisfactorily. I am very happy
to hear you are doing well just as I am thank God. Give regards to Dona
Francisca Enriques, your granddaughter and to all the ladies of your room, and
also to Dona Isabel de Lesdesma and to Soplo. Today we will go to the sea of
Antigola, I will have so much fun and I shall fish. May God protect you,
Aranjuez, April 26, 1653. Maria Teresa." Queen Maria Teresa
(1638-1683). Maria Teresa was born to King Philip IV and Queen
Elisabeth of France as Infanta of Spain at the Royal Monastery of
El Escorial. Her mother died when she was only six years old. As a member of
the House of Habsburg, the Infanta was entitled to use the title of
Archduchess of Austria. Maria Teresa is still famed for her piety and
virtue. Dissimilar to France, the kingdom of Spain did not have Salic
Law, so it was possible for a female to assume the throne, so when Maria
Teresa's brother Balthasar Charles, Prince of Asturias, died in
1646, she became heiress presumptive to the immense Spanish Empire and
remained such until 1657, when Philip Prospero, Prince of Asturias, was
born. However, when he also died in November 1, 1661 Maria Teresa was again
heiress presumptive until November 6, 1661, when Prince Charles was
born, and who would later inherit the thrones of Spain as Charles II. In
1658 the war with France began to wind down and a union between the royal
families of those nations was proposed as a means to secure peace. Maria
Teresa and the French king were double first-cousins. So, King Philip IV
sent a special envoy to the French court to start negotiations for peace and
royal marriage, and they were intense. Eager to prevent a union of the
two countries or crowns, especially one in which Spain would be subservient to
France, the diplomats sought to include a renunciation clause that would
deprive Maria Theresa and her children of any rights to the Spanish
succession. This was eventually done but, by the skill of Mazarin and his
French diplomats, the renunciation and its validity were made conditional upon
the payment of a large dowry. As it turned out, Spain, impoverished and bankrupt
after decades of war, was unable to pay such a dowry, and France never received
the agreed sum of 500,000 ecus. A marriage by proxy to the French king was
held in Fuenterrabia. The bride was accompanied by her father and the
entire Spanish court to the Isle of Pheasants in the Bidassoa, where Louis
and his court met her. On June 7, 1660 Maria Teresa left Spain and two days
later the marriage took place in Saint-Jean-de-Luz at the then recently
rebuilt church of Saint Jean the Baptist. After the wedding, Louis
wanted to consummate the marriage as quickly as possible. The new queen's
mother-in-law (and aunt) arranged a private consummation instead of the public
one that was the custom. On 26 August 1660, the newlyweds made the traditional
Joyous Entry into Paris. Louis was faithful to his wife for the first
year of their marriage, commanding the Grand Maréchal du Logis that they
were never to be set apart, no matter how small the house in which they might be
lodging. Despite the King enjoyed the legitimate passion that Maria Teresa felt
for him, the couple would later have difficulty with compatibility. Queen Maria
Teresa stared gaining weight with the years and withdrew into her circle of
dwarfs, the traditional attendants to a Spanish Infanta, which she had
brought with her from Spain. The first time Maria Theresa ever saw the Palace
of Versailles was on 25 October 1660. At that time, it was just a small
royal residence that had been Louis XIII's hunting lodge not far from
Paris. Later, the first building campaign (1664-1668) commenced with the
Plaisirs de l'Île enchantée of 1664, a week-long celebration at
Versailles ostensibly held in honour of France's two queens, Louis XIV's mother
and wife, but exposed Louise de La Vallière's role as the king's
maîtresse-en-titre. The celebration of the Plaisirs de l'Île
enchantée is often regarded as a prelude to the War of Devolution,
which Louis waged against Spain. The first building campaign witnessed
alterations in the château and gardens in order to accommodate the 600 guests
invited to the celebration.The installment that King Louis made of Louise de
La Vallière as his official mistress caused so much pain to the Queen, for which
Louise would later tender a public apology. Maria Teresa was very lucky to
have found a friend at court in her mother-in-law, unlike many princesses
in foreign lands. As she did not have any interest in politics or literature,
she continued to spend much of her free time playing cards and gambling.
Consequently, she was viewed as not fully playing the part of queen
designated to her by her marriage. But more importantly, she became
pregnant in early 1661, and a long-awaited son was born on 1 November 1661.
As time passed, Queen Maria Teresa learned to tolerate her husband's prolonged
infidelity with Françoise-Athénaïs, marquise de Montespan. The king left
her to her own devices, yet reprimanded Madame de Montespan when her behavior at
court too flagrantly disrespected the queen's position. Later, the governess of
Montespan's illegitimate children by the king, Madame de Maintenon, came
to supplant her mistress in the king's affections. At first she resisted the
king's advances and encouraged him to bestow more attention on his
long-neglected wife, a thoughtfulness which Maria Teresa repaid with warmth
toward the new favorite. After the queen's death, Maintenon would become the
king's second, although officially secret, wife. So, Maria Teresa played
just a little part in political affairs except for the years 1667, 1672 and
1678, when she acted as regent while her husband was away on campaigns on the
frontier. During the last week of July 1683 Queen Maria
Theresa fell ill and, as her illness worsened, her husband ordered for the
sacraments to be kept nearby. She died a painful death on July 30, 1683 at
Versailles. Upon her death, King Louis XIV said: "This is the first trouble
which she has given me". Marie-Thérèse's (as she was known in France) burial
site at the Basilique Saint-Denis, where most of France's monarchs are
buried. Of her six children, only one survived her, Louis, le Grand
Dauphin, the oldest one, who died in 1711. One of the younger grandsons of
Maria Theresa's would eventually inherit her claim to the Spanish throne to
become King Philip V of Spain in 1700. Fragile. Normal mailing folds. Lightly toned and wrinkled. Small tears
along edges. Toned stains throughout. Otherwise, fine
condition.
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