Maria Antonia of Austria was born on 2 November 1755 at the
Hofburg Palace in Vienna, Austria; on the next day, she was baptised Maria
Antonia Josepha Johanna (also known as Maria Antonia Josephina Johanna). She
was the youngest daughter of Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor, and Maria Theresa,
Queen of Hungary and Bohemia, and ruler of the Habsburg dominions; her
godparents were the King of Portugal and his wife.
In her family, she was simply called Antonia. Described at her birth as "a small, but completely healthy Archduchess", she was also known at the Austrian court as Antonia, but more often as Madame Antoine, since French was commonly spoken in the Hofburg. After all, Viennese society itself was multilingual, with many able to speak German, French, Italian and/or Spanish.
In her family, she was simply called Antonia. Described at her birth as "a small, but completely healthy Archduchess", she was also known at the Austrian court as Antonia, but more often as Madame Antoine, since French was commonly spoken in the Hofburg. After all, Viennese society itself was multilingual, with many able to speak German, French, Italian and/or Spanish.
The relaxed ambience of court life in the Hofburg, where it
was possible to often deviate from protocol, was compounded by the private life
which was developed by the Habsburgs even before Maria Antonia was born. In
their private life, the family dressed in bourgeois attire, played games with
non-royal children (they were, in fact, encouraged to play with such 'common'
children by their parents), and were treated to gardens and menageries. She
later attempted to recreate this atmosphere through her renovation of the Petit
Trianon in France.
Maria Antonia had a simple and carefree childhood,
especially in comparison to that of Louis XVI.
She was never lonely, since she never had the chance to be alone. This was particularly evident in her
relationship with her older sister, Maria Carolina: they were the two youngest
girls, and shared the same governesses, first Countess Brandeis, then Countess
Lerchenfeld, until 1767; Carolina once described her sister as someone she
"loved extraordinarily".
The Imperial family was one that thoroughly enjoyed music.
Antonia herself learned to play the harpsichord, spinet and clavichord, as well
as the harp, taught by Gluck. During the
family's musical evenings, she would sing French songs and Italian arias. She also excelled at dancing – an
accomplishment often remarked by those who saw her, whether friendly or
hostile, having been carefully trained in it since her early youth. She had an "exquisite" poise and a
famously graceful deportment; Horace
Walpole once quoted Virgil as to her gait, saying, "vera incessu patuit
dea" (she was in truth revealed to be a goddess by her step). She also
loved dolls as a young girl, as captured by a family portrait in which
seven-year-old Antonia excitedly held up a fancy doll. Numerous dolls arrived at the Hofburg as soon
as Marie Antoinette turned 13, wearing miniature versions of the ball gowns,
afternoon dresses, and gold-trimmed gowns proposed for her.
Antonia's education was poor, or at least it lacked the
rigorous in training as Louis XVI's; her handwriting, for instance, was
sprawling and careless in form. It was
not so much the teachers themselves, though, that made her education sub-par,
but rather her lack of willingness to contribute intellectually to her lessons.
Often, her tutors would finish the work themselves, out of fear of losing their
positions. Under the guidance of Gluck, she excelled to some extent in her
musical endeavors. She drew often; at ten, for example, she had drawn a good
chalk likeness of her father. She
learned Italian, from Metastasio, on top of the necessary French and German, as
well as Austrian history and French history, though from an Austrian
perspective. But while she flourished in
her learning of Italian, her other languages proved to be a weak point.
Conversations with her were stilted, and her ability to read and write German
and French (the 'universal' language of Europe at this point in time) was
undeniably poor.
By many accounts, her childhood was somewhat complex. On the
one hand, her parents had instituted several innovations in court life which
made Austria one of the most progressive courts in Europe. While certain court
functions remained formal by necessity, the Emperor and Empress nevertheless
presided over many basic changes in court life. This included allowing
relaxations in the type of people who could come to court (a change which
allowed people of merit, as well as birth, to rise rapidly in the hierarchy of
imperial favor at court), relatively lax
dress etiquette, and the abolition of certain antiquated court rituals,
including one in which dozens of courtiers could be present in the Empress'
bedchamber while she gave birth. The Empress disliked the ritual, and would
eject courtiers from her rooms when she went into labor.
While she had an idyllic "private" life, her
initial role in the political arena – and in her mother's main aim of alliance
through marriage – was relatively small. Because there were so many other
children who could be married off, Maria Antonia was sometimes neglected by her
mother. As a result, she later described her relationship with her mother as
one of awe-inspired fear. She also
developed a mistrust of intelligent older women as a result of her mother's
close relationship with the Archduchess Maria Christina, Duchess of Teschen,
Marie Antoinette's older sister.
The events leading to her eventual betrothal to the Dauphin
of France began in 1765, when her father, Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor, died
of a stroke in August, leaving Maria Theresa to co-rule with her elder son and
heir, the Emperor Joseph II. By that
time, marriage arrangements for several of Maria Antonia's sisters had begun:
the Archduchess Maria Josepha was betrothed to King Ferdinand of Naples, and one
of the remaining eligible archduchesses was tentatively set to marry Don
Ferdinand of Parma. The purpose of these marriages was to cement the various
complex alliances that Maria Theresa had entered into in the 1750s due to the
Seven Years' War, which included Parma, Naples, Russia, and more importantly
Austria's traditional enemy, France.
Without the Seven Years' War to "unite" the two countries
briefly, the marriage of Maria Antonia and the Dauphin Louis-Auguste might not
have occurred.
In 1767, a smallpox outbreak hit the family. Maria Antonia
was one of the few who were immune to the disease because she already had had
it at a young age. Her sister, Maria Josepha, came down with it after visiting
the improperly sealed tomb of her sister-in-law (of the same name), and died
quickly afterwards. This was not, however, due to her visit to the tomb; she
must have been infected sometime before visiting the tomb, because the rash
appeared only two days after her visit. Her mother, Maria Theresa, caught it
and, though she survived, she suffered from the effects of the disease for the
rest of her life. Her sister, Maria Elisabeth, caught it but survived. Her
brother, Charles Joseph, and sister Maria Johanna, had already died of smallpox
in 1761 and 1762 respectively.
This ultimately left 12-year-old Maria Antonia as the only
potential bride left in the family for the 14-year-old Louis Auguste, who was
also her second cousin once removed, through Leopold I. During the marriage
negotiations, they lamented the crookedness of her teeth. Straightaway, a French
doctor was called to perform some painful oral surgeries. Performed without anesthesia and requiring
three long months to take, at last Marie Antoinette's smile, "very
beautiful and straight", satisfied France.
After painstaking work between the governments of France and Austria,
the dowry was set at 200,000 crowns; as was the custom, portraits and rings
were exchanged. Finally, Antonia was
married by proxy on 19 April in the Church of the Augustine Friars, Vienna; her
brother Ferdinand stood in as the bridegroom. She was also officially restyled
as Marie Antoinette, Dauphine of France.
Through her father, Marie Antoinette became the second (after Margaret
of Valois, the renowned Queen Margot) French queen ever to descend from Henry
II of France and Catherine de' Medici.
Marie Antoinette was officially handed over to her French
relations on 7 May 1770, on an island on the Rhine River near Kehl. Chief among
them were the comte de Noailles and his wife, the comtesse de Noailles, who had
been appointed the Dauphine's Mistress of the Household by Louis XV. She met
the King, the Dauphin Louis-Auguste, and the royal aunts (Louis XV's daughters,
known as Mesdames), one week later. Before reaching Versailles, she also met
her future brothers-in-law, Louis Stanislas Xavier, comte de Provence; and
Charles Philippe, comte d'Artois, who came to play important roles during and
after her life. Later, she met the rest
of the family, including her husband's youngest sister, Madame Élisabeth, who
at the end of Marie Antoinette's life would become her closest and most loyal
friend.
The ceremonial wedding of the Dauphin and Dauphine took
place on 16 May 1770, in the Palace of Versailles, after which was the ritual
bedding. It was assumed by custom that
consummation of the marriage would take place on the wedding night. However,
this did not occur, and the lack of consummation plagued the reputation of both
Louis-Auguste and Marie Antoinette for seven years to come.
The initial reaction to the marriage between Marie Antoinette
and Louis-Auguste was decidedly mixed. On the one hand, the Dauphine herself
was popular among the people. Her first official appearance in Paris on 8 June
1773 at the Tuileries was considered by many royal watchers a resounding
success, with a reported 50,000 people crying out to see her. People were
easily charmed by her personality and beauty. She had fair skin, straw-blond
hair, and deep blue eyes.
However, at Court the match was not so popular among the
elder members of court due to the long-standing tensions between Austria and
France, which had only recently been mollified. Many courtiers had actively
promoted a marriage between the dauphin and various Saxon princesses instead.
Behind her back, Mesdames called Marie Antoinette "l'Autrichienne", the
"Austrian woman." (Later, on the eve of the Revolution, and as Marie
Antoinette's unpopularity grew, l'Autrichienne was easily transformed into
l'Autruchienne, a pun making use of the words autruche "ostrich" and
chienne "bitch".) Others
accused her of trying to sway the king to Austria's thrall, destroying
long-standing traditions (such as appointing people to posts due to friendship
and not to peerage), and of laughing at the influence of older women at the
royal court. Many other courtiers, such
as the comtesse du Barry, had tenuous relationships with the Dauphine.
Her relationship with the comtesse du Barry was one which
was important to rectify, at least on the surface, because Madame du Barry was
the mistress of Louis XV, and thus had considerable political influence over
the king. In fact, she had been instrumental ousting from power the duc de
Choiseul, who had helped orchestrate the Franco-Austrian alliance as well as
Marie Antoinette's own marriage. Louis XV's daughters, Mesdames, hated Mme du Barry
due to her unsavory relationship with their father. With manipulative coaching,
the aunts encouraged the Dauphine to refuse to acknowledge the favourite, which
was considered by some to be a political blunder. After months of continued
pressure from her mother and the Austrian minister, the comte de
Mercy-Argenteau, Marie Antoinette grudgingly agreed to speak to Mme du Barry on
New Year's Day 1772. Although the limit of their conversation was Marie
Antoinette's banal comment to the royal mistress that, "there are a lot of
people at Versailles today", Mme du Barry was satisfied and the crisis,
for the most part, dissipated. There was, however, a further level of animosity
from the view of the Mesdames raised by this situation – they felt somewhat
'betrayed' in their stance against du Barry.
Later, Marie Antoinette became more polite to the comtesse, pleasing
Louis XV, but also particularly her mother.
From the beginning, the Dauphine had to contend with
constant letters from her mother, who wrote to her daughter regularly and who
received secret reports from Mercy d'Argenteau on her daughter's behaviour.
Marie Antoinette would write home in the early days saying that she missed her
dear home. Though the letters were touching, in later years Marie Antoinette
said she feared her mother more than she loved her. Her mother constantly criticized her for her
inability to "inspire passion" in her husband, who rarely slept with
her and had no interest in doing so, being more interested in his hobbies such
as lock-making and hunting. The Empress went so far as saying directly to Marie
Antoinette that she was no longer pretty, and had lost all her grace.
To make up for the lack of affection from her husband and
the endless criticism of her mother, Marie Antoinette began to spend more on
gambling and clothing, with cards and horse-betting, as well as trips to the
city and new clothing, shoes, pomade and rouge.
She was expected by tradition to spend money on her attire, so as to
outshine other women at Court, being the leading example of fashion in
Versailles (the previous queen, Maria Leszczyńska, had died in 1768, two years
prior to Marie Antoinette's arrival).
Marie Antoinette also began to form deep friendships with
various ladies in her retinue. Most noted were the sensitive and
"pure" widow, the princesse de Lamballe, whom she appointed as
Superintendent of her Household, and the fun-loving, down-to-earth Yolande de
Polastron, duchesse de Polignac, who eventually formed the cornerstone of the
Queen's inner circle of friends (Société Particulière de la Reine). The duchesse de Polignac later became the
Governess of the royal children (Gouvernante des Enfants de France), and was a
friend of both Marie Antoinette and Louis. The closeness of the Dauphine's
friendship with these ladies, influenced by various popular publications which
promoted such friendships, later caused accusations of lesbianism to be lodged
against these women. Others taken into
her confidence at this time included her husband's brother, the comte d'Artois;
their youngest sister, Madame Élisabeth; her sister-in-law, the comtesse de
Provence; and Christoph Willibald Gluck, her former music teacher, whom she
took under her patronage upon his arrival in France.
On 27 April 1774, a week after the première of Gluck's
opera, Iphigénie en Aulide, which had secured the Dauphine's position as a
patron of the arts, Louis XV fell ill with smallpox. On 4 May, the dying king
was pressured to send the comtesse du Barry away from Versailles; on 10 May, at
3 pm, he died at the age of 64.
Louis-Auguste was crowned King Louis XVI of France on 11 June 1775 at
the cathedral of Rheims. Marie Antoinette was not crowned alongside him, merely
accompanying him during the coronation ceremony.
From the outset, despite how she was portrayed in
contemporary libelles, the new queen had very little political influence with
her husband. Louis, who had been influenced as a child by anti-Austrian
sentiments in the court, blocked many of her candidates, including Choiseul, from taking important positions, aided and
abetted by his two most important ministers, Chief Minister Maurepas and
Foreign Minister Vergennes. All three were anti-Austrian, and were wary of the
potential repercussions of allowing the queen – and, through her, the Austrian
empire – to have any say in French policy.
Marie Antoinette's situation became more precarious when, on
6 August 1775, her sister-in-law, the comtesse d'Artois, gave birth to a son,
the duc d'Angoulême (who later became the presumptive heir to the French throne
when his father, the comte d'Artois, became King Charles X of France in 1824).
This resulted in release of a plethora of graphic satirical pamphlets, which
mainly centered on the king's impotence and the queen's searching for sexual relief
elsewhere, with men and women alike. Among her rumored lovers were her close
friend, the princesse de Lamballe, and her handsome brother-in-law, the comte
d'Artois, with whom the queen had a good rapport.
This caused the queen to plunge further into the costly
diversions of buying her dresses from Rose Bertin and gambling, simply to enjoy
herself. On one famed occasion, she played for three days straight with players
from Paris, straight up until her 21st birthday. She also began to attract
various male admirers whom she accepted into her inner circles, including the
baron de Besenval, the duc de Coigny, and Count Valentin Esterházy.
She was given free rein to renovate the Petit Trianon, a
small château on the grounds of Versailles, which was given to her as a gift by
Louis XVI on 15 August 1774; she concentrated mainly on horticulture,
redesigning in the English mode the garden, which in the previous reign had
been an arboretum of introduced species. Although the Petit Trianon had been
built for Louis XV's mistress, Madame de Pompadour, it became associated with
Marie Antoinette's perceived extravagance. Rumors circulated that she plastered
the walls with gold and diamonds.
"...the innovativeness of Marie Antoinette's country
retreat would attract her subjects’ fierce disapproval, even as it aimed to
bolster her autonomy and enhance her prestige," (Weber 132).
An even bigger problem, however, was the debt incurred by
France during the Seven Years' War, still unpaid. It was further exacerbated by
Vergennes' prodding Louis XVI to get involved in Great Britain's war with its
North American colonies, due to France's traditional rivalry with Great
Britain.
In the midst of preparations for sending help to France, and
in the atmosphere of the first wave of libelles, Holy Roman Emperor Joseph came
to call on his sister and brother-in-law on 18 April 1777, the subsequent
six-week visit in Versailles a part of the attempt to figure out why their
marriage had not been consummated.
It was due to Joseph's intervention that, on 30 August 1777,
the marriage was officially consummated. Eight months later, in April, it was
suspected that the queen was finally pregnant with her first child. This was
confirmed on 16 May 1778.
In the middle of her pregnancy, two events occurred which
had a profound impact on the queen's later life. First, there was the return of
the handsome Swede, Count Axel von Fersen – whom she had met previously on New
Year's Day, 1774, while she was still Dauphine – to Versailles for two years.
Secondly, the king's wealthy but spiteful cousin, the duc de Chartres, was
disgraced due to his questionable conduct during the Battle of Ouessant against
the British. In addition, Marie Antoinette's brother, the Emperor Joseph, began
making claims on the throne of Bavaria based upon his second marriage to the
princess Maria Josepha of Bavaria. Marie Antoinette pleaded with her husband
for the French to help intercede on behalf of Austria but was rebuffed by the
king and his ministers. The Peace of Teschen, signed on 13 May 1779, ended the
brief conflict, but the incident once more showed the limited influence that
the queen had in politics.
Marie Antoinette's daughter, Marie-Thérèse Charlotte, given
the honorific title at birth of Madame Royale, was finally born at Versailles,
after a particularly difficult labour, on 19 December 1778, following an ordeal
where the queen literally collapsed from suffocation and hemorrhaging. The
queen's bedroom was packed with courtiers watching the birth, and the doctor
aiding her supposedly caused the excessive bleeding by accident. The windows
had to be torn out to revive her. This incident has a variant: some sources
purport that it was the Princesse de Lamballe who lost consciousness, and to
prevent the queen from doing the same, the king himself – rather unusually –
let in some air by tearing off the tapes that sealed the windows. In any case, as a result of this harrowing
experience, the queen and the king banned most courtiers from entering her
bedchamber for subsequent labours.
The baby's paternity was contested in the libelles but not
by the king himself, who was close to his daughter.
The birth of a daughter meant that pressure to have a male
heir continued, and Marie Antoinette wrote about her worrisome health, which
might have contributed to a miscarriage in July 1779. Antonia Fraser expresses
doubts as to whether there was a pregnancy in 1779, ascribing the queen's
belief that she had a miscarriage to Antoinette's irregular menstrual cycle.
The memoirs of the queen's lady-in-waiting, Madame Campan, state explicitly
that the miscarriage came about after the queen exerted herself too strenuously
in closing a window in her carriage, felt that she had hurt herself, and lost
the child eight days later. Campan adds that the king spent a morning consoling
the queen at her bedside, and swore to secrecy all those who were aware of the
accident.
Meanwhile, the queen began to institute changes in the
customs practised at court, with the approval of the king. Some changes, such
as the abolition of segregated dining spaces, had already been instituted for
some time and had been met with disapproval from the older generation. More
importantly was the abandonment of heavy make-up and the popular wide-hooped
panniers for a more simple feminine look, typified first by the rustic robe à
la polonaise and later by the 'gaulle,' a simple muslin dress that she wore in
a 1783 Vigée-Le Brun portrait. She also began to participate in amateur plays
and musicals, starting in 1780, in a theatre built for her and other courtiers
who wished to indulge in the delights of acting and singing.
In 1780, two candidates who had been supported by Marie
Antoinette for positions, the marquis de Castries, and the comte de Ségur, were
appointed Minister of the Navy and Minister of War, respectively. Though many
believed it was entirely the support of the queen that enabled them to secure
their positions, in truth it was mostly that of Finance Minister Jacques
Necker.
Later that year, Empress Maria Theresa began to fall ill
with dropsy and an unnamed respiratory problem. She died on 29 November 1780,
in Vienna, at the age of 63, and was mourned throughout Europe. Marie
Antoinette was worried that the death of her mother would jeopardise the
Franco-Austrian alliance (as well as, ultimately, herself), but Emperor Joseph
reassured her through his own letters (as the empress had not stopped writing
to Marie Antoinette until shortly before her death) that he had no intention of
breaking the alliance.
Three months after the empress' death, it was rumoured that
Marie Antoinette was pregnant again, which was confirmed in March 1781. Another
royal visit from Joseph II in July, partially to reaffirm the Franco-Austrian
alliance and also a means of seeing his sister again, was tainted with false
rumours that Marie Antoinette was siphoning treasury money to him.
On 22 October 1781, the queen gave birth to Louis Joseph
Xavier François, who bore the title Dauphin of France, as was customary for the
eldest son of the King of France. The reaction to the birth of an heir was best
summed up by the words of Louis XVI himself, as he wrote them down in his
hunting journal: "Madame, you have fulfilled our wishes and those of
France, you are the mother of Dauphin". He would, according to courtiers,
try to frame sentences to put in the phrase "my son the Dauphin" in
the weeks to come. It also helped that, three days before the birth, the
majority of the fighting in the conflict in America had been concluded with the
surrender of General Lord Cornwallis at Yorktown.
Despite the general celebration over the birth of the
Dauphin, Marie Antoinette's political influence, such as it was, did not
benefit Austria. Instead, after the death of the comte de Maurepas, the
influence of Vergennes was strengthened, and she was again left out of
political affairs. The same happened during the so-called Kettle War, in which
her brother Joseph attempted to open up the Scheldt River for naval passage.
Later, another attempt by him to claim Bavaria was rebuffed as being against
French interests.
When accused of being a "dupe" by her brother for
her political inaction, Marie Antoinette responded that she had little power.
The king rarely talked to her about policy, and his anti-Austrian education as
a child fortified his refusals in allowing his wife any participation in his
decisions. As a result, she had to pretend to his ministers that she was in his
full confidence in order to get the information she wanted. This led the court
to believe she had more power than she did. As she wrote, "Would it be
wise of me to have scenes with his (Louis XVI's) ministers over matters on which
it is practically certain the King would not support me?"
Her temperament was more suited to personally directing the
education of her children. This was against the traditions of Versailles, where
the queen usually had little say over the Enfants de France, as the royal
children were called, and they were instead handed over to various courtiers
who fought over the privilege. In particular, after the royal governess at the
time of the Dauphin's birth, the princesse de Guéméné, went bankrupt and was forced
to resign, there was a controversy over who should replace her. Marie
Antoinette appointed her favourite, the duchesse de Polignac, to the position.
This met with disapproval from the court, as the duchess was considered to be
of too "immodest" a birth to occupy such an exalted position. On the
other hand, both the king and queen trusted Mme de Polignac completely, and the
duchess had children of her own to whom the queen had become attached.
In June 1783, Marie Antoinette was pregnant again. That same
month, Count Axel von Fersen returned from America, in order to secure a
military appointment, and he was accepted into her private society. He left in
September to become a captain of the bodyguard for his sovereign, Gustavus III,
the king of Sweden, who was conducting a tour of Europe. Marie Antoinette
suffered a miscarriage on the night of 1–2 November 1783, prompting more fears
for her health.
Trying to calm her mind, during Fersen's first visit, and
later after his return on 7 June 1784, the queen occupied herself with the
creation of the Hameau de la reine, a model hamlet in the garden of the Petit
Trianon with a mill and 12 cottages, 9 of which are still standing. The Hameau
was one of Marie Antoinette's contributions to augmenting the chateau at Versailles
and it can to this day be viewed by the public. Its creation, however,
unexpectedly caused another uproar when the actual price of the Hameau was
inflated by her critics. In truth, it was copied from another, far grander
"model village" built in 1774 for the prince de Condé on his estate
at Chantilly. The comtesse de Provence's version included windmills and a
marble dairyhouse. Started in 1783 and finished in 1787, to designs of the
Queen's favoured architect, Richard Mique, the hamlet was complete with
farmhouse, dairy, and mill. Public records indicate that in 1781 the Comtesse
de Provence's bought land for her Hameau which was completed in 1783, just
before work started on the Queen's Hameau. Also, the "Temple of Love"
(a physical structure built as a part of the Queen's Hameau) bears a marked and
striking resemblance to the rotunda of the Pavillon de Musique, which was the
folie built by the Comtesse de Provence situated in her Hameau.
In addition to the creation of the Hameau, Marie Antoinette had
other notable interests and activities. She became an avid reader of historical
novels, and her scientific interest was piqued enough to become a witness to
the launching of hot air balloons. She was fascinated by Rousseau's "back
to nature" philosophy, as well as the culture of the Incas of Peru and
their worship of the sun, about which she had books in her library. Briefly,
she even sought out important British personages such as the Prime Minister,
William Pitt the Younger, and the British ambassador to France, the Duke of
Dorset. She also developed an interest in learning English, and while she never
became fluent, she was able to write in broken English to her friend, the
Duchess of Devonshire, whose life was very similar to her own.
Despite the many things which she did in her spare time, her
primary concern became the health of the Dauphin, which was beginning to fail.
By the time Fersen returned to Versailles in 1784, it was widely thought that
the sickly Dauphin would not live to be an adult. As a consequence, it was
rumored that the king and queen were attempting to have another child. During
this time, Beaumarchais' play The Marriage of Figaro premiered in Paris. After
initially having been banned by the king due to its negative portrayal of the
nobility, the play was ironically finally allowed to be publicly performed
because of its overwhelming popularity at court, where secret readings of it
had been given.
In August 1784, the queen reported that she was pregnant
again. With the future enlargement of her family in mind, she bought the
Château de Saint-Cloud, a place she had always loved, from the duc d'Orléans,
the father of the previously disgraced duc de Chartres. She intended to leave
it as an inheritance to her younger children without stipulation, but later
realized that her children would not appreciate it. This was a hugely unpopular
acquisition, particularly with some factions of the nobility who already
disliked her, but also with a growing percentage of the population who felt
shocked that a French queen might own her own residence, independent of the
king. Despite having the baron de Breteuil working on her behalf, the purchase
did not help improve the public's frivolous image of the queen. The château's
expensive price, almost 6 million livres, plus the substantial extra cost of
redecorating it, ensured that there was less money going towards repaying
France's substantial debt.
On 27 March 1785, Marie Antoinette gave birth to a second
son, Louis Charles, who was created the duc de Normandie. Louis Charles was
visibly stronger than the sickly Dauphin, and the new baby was affectionately
nicknamed by the queen, chou d'amour. The fact that this delivery occurred
exactly nine months following Fersen's visit did not escape the attention of
many, and though there is much doubt and historical speculation about the
parentage of this child, public opinion towards her decreased noticeably. These
suspicions of illegitimacy, along with the continued publication of the
libelles, a never-ending cavalcade of court intrigues, the actions of Joseph II
in the Kettle War, and her purchase of Saint-Cloud combined to sharply turn
popular opinion against the queen, and the image of a licentious, spendthrift,
empty-headed foreign queen was quickly taking root in the French psyche.
A second daughter, Sophie Hélène Béatrice de France, was
born on 9 July 1786, but died on 19 June 1787.
The continuing deterioration of the financial situation in
France – despite the fact that cutbacks in the royal retinue had been made –
ultimately forced the king, in collaboration with his current Minister of
Finance, Calonne, to call the Assembly of Notables, after a hiatus of 160
years. The assembly was held to try to pass some of the reforms needed to
alleviate the financial situation when the Parlements refused to cooperate. The
first meeting of the assembly took place on 22 February 1787, at which Marie
Antoinette was not present. Later, her absence resulted in her being accused of
trying to undermine the purpose of the assembly.
However, the Assembly was a failure with or without the
queen, as it did not pass any reforms and instead fell into a pattern of
defying the king, demanding other reforms and for the acquiescence of the
Parlements. As a result, the king dismissed Calonne on 8 April 1787; Vergennes
died on 13 February. The king, once more ignoring the queen's pro-Austrian
candidate, appointed a childhood friend, the comte de Montmorin, to replace
Vergennes as Foreign Minister.
During this time, even as her candidate was rejected, the
queen began to abandon her more carefree activities to become more involved in
politics than ever before, and mostly against the interests of Austria. This
was for a variety of reasons. First, her children were Enfants de France, and
thus their future as leaders of France needed to be assured. Second, by
concentrating on her children, the queen sought to improve the dissolute image
she had acquired from the "Diamond Necklace Affair", in which she had
been accused of participating in a crime to defraud the crown jewelers of the
cost of a very expensive diamond necklace. Third, the king had begun to
withdraw from a decision-making role in government due to the onset of an acute
case of depression from all the pressures he was under. The symptoms of this
depression were passed off as drunkenness by the libelles. As a result, Marie
Antoinette finally emerged as a politically viable entity, although that was
never her actual intention. In her new capacity as a politician with a degree
of power, the queen tried her best to help the situation brewing between the
assembly and the king.
This change in her political role signalled the beginning of
the end of the influence of the duchesse de Polignac, as Marie Antoinette began
to dislike the duchesse's huge expenditures and their impact on the finances of
the Crown. The duchesse left for England in May, leaving her children behind in
Versailles. Also in May, Étienne Charles de Loménie de Brienne, the archbishop
of Toulouse and one of the queen's political allies, was appointed by the king
to replace Calonne as the Finance Minister. He began instituting more cutbacks
at court.
Brienne, though, was not able to improve the financial
situation. Since he was her ally, this failure adversely affected the queen's
political position. The continued poor financial climate of the country
resulted in the 25 May dissolution of the Assembly of Notables because of its
inability to get things done. This lack of solutions was unfairly blamed on the
queen. In reality, the blame should have been placed on a combination of
several other factors. There had been too many expensive wars, a too-large
royal family whose large frivolous expenditures far exceeded those of the
queen, and an unwillingness on the part of many of the aristocrats in charge to
help defray the costs of the government out of their own pockets with higher
taxes. Marie Antoinette earned the nickname of "Madame Déficit" in
the summer of 1787 as a result of the public perception that she had singlehandedly
ruined the finances of the nation.
The queen attempted to fight back with her own propaganda
that portrayed her as a caring mother, most notably with the portrait of her
and her children done by Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun, which premiered at the Royal
Académie Salon de Paris in August 1787. This attack strategy was eventually
dropped, however, because of the death of the queen's youngest child, Sophie.
Around the same time, Jeanne de Lamotte-Valois escaped from prison in France
and fled to London, where she published more damaging lies concerning her
supposed "affair" with the queen.
The political situation in 1787 began to worsen when the
Parlement was exiled, and culminated on 11 November, when the king tried to use
a lit de justice to force through legislation. He was unexpectedly challenged
by his formerly disgraced cousin, the duc de Chartres, who had inherited the
title of duc d'Orléans at the death of his father in 1785. The new duc
d'Orléans publicly protested the king's actions, and was subsequently exiled. The
May Edicts issued on 8 May 1788 were also opposed by the public. Finally, on 8
July and 8 August, the king announced his intention to bring back the Estates
General, the traditional elected legislature of the country which had not been
convened since 1614.
Marie Antoinette was not directly involved with the exile of
the Parlement, the May Edicts or with the announcement regarding the Estates
General. Her primary concern in late 1787 and 1788 was instead the improved
health of the Dauphin. He was suffering from tuberculosis, which in his case
had twisted and curved his spinal column severely. He was brought to the
château at Meudon in the hope that its country air would help the young boy
recover. Unfortunately, the move did little to alleviate the Dauphin's
condition, which gradually continued to deteriorate.
The queen, however, was present with her daughter,
Marie-Therese, when Tippu Sahib of Mysore visited Versailles seeking help
against the British. More importantly she was instrumental in the recall of
Jacques Necker as Finance Minister on 26 August, a popular move, even though
she herself was worried that the recall would again go against her if Necker
was unsuccessful in reforming the country's finances.
Her prediction began to come true when bread prices started
to rise due to the severe 1788–1789 winter. The Dauphin's condition worsened
even more, riots broke out in Paris in April, and on 26 March, Louis XVI
himself almost died from a fall off the roof.
"Come, Léonard, dress my hair, I must go like an
actress, exhibit myself to a public that may hiss me", the queen quipped
to her hairdresser, who was one of her "ministers of fashion", as she
prepared for the Mass celebrating the return of the Estates General on 4 May
1789. She knew that her rival, the duc d'Orléans, who had given money and bread
to the people during the winter, would be popularly acclaimed by the crowd much
to her detriment. The Estates General convened the next day. During the month
of May, the Estates General began to fracture between the democratic Third
Estate (consisting of the bourgeoisie and radical nobility), and the royalist
nobility of the Second Estate, while the king's brothers began to become more
hardline.
Despite these developments, the queen was strongly focused
on thoughts for her son, the dying Dauphin. With his mother at his side, the
seven-year old boy passed away at Meudon on 4 June, succumbing to tuberculosis,
and leaving the title of Dauphin to his younger brother, Louis Charles. His
death, which would have normally been nationally mourned, was virtually ignored
by the French people, who were instead preparing for the next meeting of the
Estates General, and hoping for a resolution to the bread crisis. As the Third
Estate declared itself a National Assembly and took the Tennis Court Oath, and
as others listened to rumors that the queen wished to bathe in their blood,
Marie Antoinette went into mourning for her eldest son.
The situation began to escalate violently in June as the
National Assembly began to demand more rights, and Louis XVI began to push back
with efforts to suppress the Third Estate. However, the king's ineffectiveness
and the queen's unpopularity undermined the monarchy as an institution, and so
these attempts failed. Then, on 11 July, Necker was dismissed. Paris was
besieged by riots at the news, which culminated in the storming of the Bastille
on 14 July.
In the days and weeks that followed, many of the most
conservative, reactionary royalists, including the comte d'Artois and the
duchesse de Polignac, fled France for fear of assassination. Marie Antoinette,
whose life was the most in danger, stayed behind in order to help the king
promote stability, even as his power was gradually being taken away by the
National Constituent Assembly, which was now ruling Paris and conscripting men
to serve in the Garde Nationale.
By the end of August, the Declaration of the Rights of Man
and of the Citizen (La Déclaration des Droits de l'Homme et du Citoyen) was
adopted, which officially created the beginning of a constitutional monarchy in
France. Despite this, the king was still required to perform certain court
ceremonies, even as the situation in Paris became worse due to a bread shortage
in September. On 5 October, a mob from Paris descended upon Versailles and
forced the royal family, along with the comte de Provence, his wife and Madame
Elisabeth, to move to Paris under the watchful eye of the Garde Nationale. The
king and queen were installed in the Tuileries Palace under surveillance.
During this limited house arrest, Marie Antoinette conveyed to her friends that
she did not intend to involve herself any further in French politics, as
everything, whether or not she was involved, would inevitably be attributed to her
anyway and she feared the repercussions of further involvement.
Despite the situation, Marie Antoinette was still required
to perform charitable functions and to attend certain religious ceremonies,
which she did. Most of her time, however, was dedicated to her children.
Despite her attempts to remain out of the public eye, she
was falsely accused in the libelles of having an affair with the commander of
the Garde Nationale, the marquis de La Fayette. In reality, she loathed the
marquis for his liberal tendencies and for being partially responsible for the
royal family's forced departure from Versailles. This was not the only
accusation Marie Antoinette faced from such "libelles." In such
pamphlets as "Le Godmiché Royal", (translated, "The Royal
Dildo"), it was suggested that she routinely engaged in deviant sexual
acts of various sorts, most famously with the English Baroness 'Lady Sophie
Farrell' of Bournemouth, a renowned lesbian of the time.
From acting as a
tribade, (in her case in the lesbian sense), to sleeping with her son, Marie
Antoinette was constantly an object of rumor and false accusations of
committing sexual acts with partners other than the king. Later, allegations of
this sort (from incest to orgiastic excesses) were used to justify her
execution. Ultimately, none of the charges of sexual depravity have any
credible evidentiary support. Marie Antoinette was simply an easy target for
rumor and criticism.
Constantly monitored by revolutionary spies within her own
household, the queen played little or no part in the writing of the French
Constitution of 1791, which greatly weakened the king's authority. She,
nevertheless, hoped for a future where her son would still be able to rule,
convinced that the violence would soon pass.
During this time, there were many plots designed to help
members of the royal family escape. The queen rejected several because she
would not leave without the king. Other opportunities to rescue the family were
ultimately frittered away by the indecisive king. Once the king finally did
commit to a plan, his indecision played an important role in its poor execution
and ultimate failure. In an elaborate attempt to escape from Paris to the
royalist stronghold of Montmédy planned by Count Axel von Fersen and the baron
de Breteuil, some members of the royal family were to pose as the servants of a
wealthy Russian baroness. Initially, the queen rejected the plan because it
required her to leave with only her son. She wished instead for the rest of the
royal family to accompany her. The king wasted time deciding upon which members
of the family should be included in the venture, what the departure date should
be, and the exact path of the route to be used. After many delays, the escape
ultimately occurred on 21 June 1791, and was a failure. The entire family was
captured twenty-four hours later at Varennes and taken back to Paris within a
week.
The result of the fiasco was a further decline in the
popularity of both the king and queen. The Jacobin Party successfully exploited
the failed escape to advance its radical agenda. Its members called for the end
to any type of monarchy in France.
Though the new constitution was adopted on 3 September,
Marie Antoinette hoped through the end of 1791 that the political drift she saw
occurring toward representative democracy could be stopped and rolled back. She
fervently hoped that the constitution would prove unworkable, and also that her
brother, the new Holy Roman emperor, Leopold II, would find some way to defeat
the revolutionaries. However, she was unaware that Leopold was more interested
in taking advantage of France's state of chaos for the benefit of Austria than
in helping his sister and her family, despite many demands from both citizens
and even soldiers to have the Austrian Army invade France and rescue Marie.
The result of Leopold's aggressive tendencies, and those of
his son Francis II, who succeeded him in March, was that France declared war on
Austria on 20 April 1792. This caused the queen to be viewed as an enemy, even
though she was personally against Austrian claims on French lands. The
situation became compounded in the summer when French armies were continually
being defeated by the Austrians and the king vetoed several measures that would
have restricted his power even further. During this time, due to his political
activities, Louis received the nickname "Monsieur Veto" – and the
name "Madame Veto" was likewise subsequently bequeathed on Marie
Antoinette. These names were then prominently featured in different contexts,
including La Carmagnole
On 20 June, "a mob of terrifying aspect" broke
into the Tuileries and made the king wear the bonnet rouge (red Phrygian cap)
to show his loyalty to France.
The vulnerability of the king was exposed on 10 August when
an armed mob, on the verge of forcing its way into the Tuileries Palace, forced
the king and the royal family to seek refuge at the Legislative Assembly. An
hour and a half later, the palace was invaded by the mob who massacred the
Swiss Guards. On 13 August, the royal family was imprisoned in the tower of the
Temple in the Marais under conditions considerably harsher than their previous
confinement in the Tuileries.
A week later, many of the royal family's attendants, among
them the princesse de Lamballe, were taken in for interrogation by the Paris
Commune. Transferred to the La Force prison, she was one of the victims of the
September Massacres, killed on 3 September. Her head was affixed on a pike and
marched through the city. Although Marie Antoinette did not see the head of her
friend as it was paraded outside her prison window, she fainted upon learning
about the gruesome end that had befallen her faithful companion.
On 21 September, the
fall of the monarchy was officially declared, and the National Convention became
the legal authority of France. The royal family was re-styled as the non-royal
"Capets". Preparations for the trial of the king in a court of law
began. Charged with undermining the First French Republic, Louis was separated
from his family and tried in December. He was found guilty by the Convention,
led by the Jacobins who rejected the idea of keeping him as a hostage. However,
the sentence did not come until one month later, when he was condemned to
execution by guillotine. Louis was executed on 21 January 1793, at the age of
thirty-eight. The result was that the "Widow Capet", as the former
queen was called after the death of her husband, plunged into deep mourning;
she refused to eat or do any exercise. There is no knowledge of her proclaiming
her son as Louis XVII; however, the comte de Provence, in exile, recognised his
nephew as the new king of France and took the title of Regent.
Marie-Antoinette's health rapidly deteriorated in the following months. By this
time she suffered from tuberculosis and possibly uterine cancer, which caused
her to hemorrhage frequently.
Despite her condition, the debate as to her fate was the
central question of the National Convention after Louis's death. There were
those who had been advocating her death for some time, while some had the idea
of exchanging her for French prisoners of war or for a ransom from the Holy
Roman Emperor. Thomas Paine advocated exile to America. Starting in April, however, a Committee of
Public Safety was formed, and men such as Jacques Hébert were beginning to call
for Antoinette's trial; by the end of May, the Girondins had been chased out of
power and arrested. Other calls were
made to "retrain" the Dauphin, to make him more pliant to revolutionary
ideas. This was carried out when the eight year old boy Louis Charles was
separated from Antoinette on 3 July, and given to the care of a cobbler. On 1 August, she herself was taken out of the
Tower and entered into the Conciergerie as Prisoner No. 280. Despite various attempts to get her out, such
as the Carnation Plot in September, Marie Antoinette refused when the plots for
her escape were brought to her attention.
While in the Conciergerie, she was attended by her last servant, Rosalie
Lamorlière.
She was finally tried by the Revolutionary Tribunal on 14
October. Unlike the king, who had been given time to prepare a defence, the
queen's trial was far more of a sham, considering the time she was given (less
than one day). Among the things she was accused of (most, if not all, of the accusations
were untrue and probably lifted from rumours begun by libelles) were
orchestrating orgies in Versailles, sending millions of livres of treasury
money to Austria, plotting to kill the Duke of Orléans, incest with her son,
declaring her son to be the new king of France and orchestrating the massacre
of the Swiss Guards in 1792.
The most infamous charge was that she sexually abused her
son. This was according to Louis Charles, who, through his coaching by Hébert
and his guardian, accused his mother. After being reminded that she had not
answered the charge of incest, Marie Antoinette protested emotionally to the
accusation, and the women present in the courtroom – the market women who had
stormed the palace for her entrails in 1789 – ironically began to support
her. She had been composed throughout
the trial until this accusation was made, to which she finally answered,
"If I have not replied it is because Nature itself refuses to respond to
such a charge laid against a mother."
However, in reality the outcome of the trial had already
been decided by the Committee of Public Safety around the time the Carnation
Plot was uncovered, and she was declared guilty of treason in the early morning
of 16 October, after two days of proceedings.
Back in her cell, she composed a moving letter to her sister-in-law
Madame Élisabeth, affirming her clear conscience, her Catholic faith and her
feelings for her children. The letter did not reach Élisabeth.
On the same day, her hair was cut off and she was driven
through Paris in an open cart, wearing a simple white dress. At 12:15 pm, two
and a half weeks before her thirty-eighth birthday, she was executed at the
Place de la Révolution (present-day Place de la Concorde). Her last words were "Pardon me sir, I
meant not to do it", to Henri Sanson the executioner, whose foot she had
accidentally stepped on after climbing the scaffold. Her body was thrown into
an unmarked grave in the Madeleine cemetery, rue d'Anjou, (which was closed the
following year).
Her sister-in-law Élisabeth was executed in 1794 and her son
died in prison in 1795. Her daughter returned to Austria in a prisoner
exchange, married and died childless in 1851.
Both her body and that of Louis XVI were exhumed on 18
January 1815, during the Bourbon Restoration, when the comte de Provence had
become King Louis XVIII. Christian burial of the royal remains took place three
days later, on 21 January, in the necropolis of French Kings at the Basilica of
St Denis.
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