Quem se casou com Maximilian I of Mexico?

  • Carlota do México se casou com Maximilian I of Mexico em . Maximiliano do México tinha 25 anos no dia do casamento (25 anos, 0 meses e 21 dias). Carlota do México tinha 17 anos no dia do casamento (17 anos, 1 meses e 20 dias). A diferença de idade foi de 7 anos, 11 meses e 1 dias.

    O casamento terminou em ?.

Maximilian I of Mexico: Cronograma do Status do Casamento

Maximilian I of Mexico

Maximilian I of Mexico

Maximilian I (Spanish: Fernando Maximiliano José María de Habsburgo-Lorena; German: Ferdinand Maximilian Josef Maria von Habsburg-Lothringen; 6 July 1832 – 19 June 1867) was an Austrian archduke who became emperor of the Second Mexican Empire from 10 April 1864 until his execution by the Mexican Republic on 19 June 1867.

A member of the House of Habsburg-Lorraine, Maximilian was the younger brother of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria. Before becoming Emperor of Mexico, he was commander-in-chief of the small Imperial Austrian Navy and briefly the Austrian viceroy of Lombardy–Venetia, but was removed by the emperor. Two years before his dismissal, he briefly met with French emperor Napoleon III in Paris, where he was approached by conservative Mexican monarchists seeking a European royal to rule Mexico. Initially Maximilian was not interested, but following his dismissal as viceroy, the Mexican monarchists' plan was far more appealing to him.

Since Maximilian was a descendant of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, King of Spain when the Spaniards conquered the Aztecs (1519–21) and first brought Mexico into the Spanish Empire, a status it held until the Mexican independence in 1821, Maximilian seemed a perfect candidate for the conservatives' plans for monarchy in Mexico. Maximilian was interested in assuming the throne, but only with guarantees of French support. Mexican conservatives did not take sufficient account of Maximilian's embrace of liberalism, and Maximilian failed to understand he would be viewed as a foreign outsider. When Maximilian was first mentioned as a possible emperor of Mexico, the idea seemed farfetched, but circumstances changed and made it viable. His tenure as emperor was just three years, ending with his execution by firing squad by forces of the Restored Republic on 19 June 1867.

Political conflicts in Mexico in the 1850s between conservative and liberal factions were domestic disputes initially, but the conservatives' loss on the battlefield to the liberal regime during a three-year civil war (1858–61) meant conservatives sought ways to return to power with outside allies, opening a path for France under Napoleon III to intervene in Mexico and set up a puppet regime with conservative Mexican support. When the liberal government of Mexican President Benito Juárez suspended payment on foreign debts in 1861, there was an opening for European powers to intervene militarily in Mexico. The intention of the French and Mexican conservatives was for regime change to oust the liberals, backed by the power of the French army. Mexican monarchists sought a European head of state and, with the brokering of Napoleon III, Maximilian was invited to establish what would come to be known as the Second Mexican Empire. With a pledge of French military support and at the formal invitation of a Mexican delegation, Maximilian accepted the crown of Mexico on 10 April 1864 following a bogus referendum in Mexico that purportedly showed the Mexican people backed him.

Maximilian's hold on power in Mexico was shaky from the beginning. Rather than enacting policies that would return power to Mexican conservatives, Maximilian instead sought to implement liberal policies, losing him his domestic conservative backers. Internationally, his legitimacy as ruler was in doubt since the United States continued to recognize Benito Juárez as the legal head of state rather than Emperor Maximilian. The U.S. saw the French invasion as a violation of the Monroe Doctrine, but the U.S. was unable to intervene politically due to the American Civil War (1861–1865). With the end of the American Civil War in 1865, the United States began providing material aid to Juárez's republican forces. In the face of a renewed U.S. interest in enforcing the Monroe Doctrine, under orders by Napoleon III, the French armies that had propped up Maximilian's regime began withdrawing from Mexico in 1866. With no popular support and republican forces in the ascendant, Maximilian's monarchy collapsed. Maximilian was captured in Querétaro. He was tried and executed by the restored Republican government alongside his generals Miguel Miramón, a former President of Mexico, and Tomás Mejía Camacho in June 1867. His death marked the end of monarchism as a major force in Mexico. In reassessments of his brief rule, he is portrayed in Mexican history less as the villain of nationalist, republican history and more as a liberal in Mexico, along with Presidents of the Republic Juárez, Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada, and Porfirio Díaz.

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Wedding Rings

Carlota do México

Carlota do México

Maria Carlota Amélia Augustina Vitória Clementina Leopoldina de Saxe-Coburgo (Bruxelas, 7 de junho de 1840 – Meise, 19 de janeiro de 1927) foi a esposa do imperador Maximiliano e Imperatriz Consorte do México de 1864 até 1867. Era filha, a única menina, do rei Leopoldo I da Bélgica e de sua segunda esposa, a princesa francesa Luísa Maria de Orleães.

Carlota casou-se aos dezessete anos com o arquiduque Maximiliano, irmão do imperador Francisco José I da Áustria. Eles viveram como regentes austríacos em Milão até 1859, quando a Áustria perdeu o controle da Lombardia. Em maio de 1864, ela acompanhou Maximiliano ao México na sequência do aceite da coroa mexicana oferecida a ele por Napoleão III de França. A ambiciosa Carlota acolheu sua autoridade no México, aprendeu espanhol e se interessou genuinamente pela história, arte e cultura mexicanas. Em 1866 Napoleão retirou suas tropas diante da resistência mexicana e da oposição dos Estados Unidos, ela buscou assistência para o regime de seu marido em Paris e Viena e finalmente em Roma com o Papa Pio IX. Após o fracasso de seus esforços, ela exibiu paranoia e outros sinais de doença mental. Ela nunca retornou ao México. Depois que os mexicanos executaram seu marido no ano seguinte, sua doença mental piorou e ela passou o resto de sua vida em reclusão em castelos em Laeken, Bélgica, e perto de Trieste, Itália.

Reconhecida como regente e chefe do governo na ausência do imperador Maximiliano e, considerando que, de fato, essa regência ocorreu (durante as viagens do monarca ao interior do país), exercendo várias funções executivas, a imperatriz foi a primeira mulher governante na história do México.

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Pai de Maximilian I of Mexico e suas esposas:

Mãe de Maximilian I of Mexico e seus cônjuges: