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picture: 1756 Madame Adelaide
published by: gogm1
By Nattier. She wears a bow and floral decorations instead of jewelry. Her bodice looks something like armor. According to Rebeiro in "Dress in Eighteenth Century Europe,"p. 34 (2002), the stomacher was stiffened and sometimes boned down the center front. This shows ribs of reinforcing material at the edges of the stomacher as well as embroidered material. A pair of lappets are draped over her shoulders.***
The fourth spinster daughter of Louis XV. Marie Adelaide (1732 - 1800) was a French princess. She was the fourth daughter and sixth child of King Louis XV of France and his Queen consort, Maria Leszczynska. Originally known as "Madame Quatrieme" ("Madame the Fourth"), until the death of her older sister Marie-Louise in 1733. She was then known as "Madame Troisieme", "Madame the Third", and finally, Madame Adelaide. She outlived all nine of her siblings.
In the shadow of her brother, the Dauphin Louis, Adelaide was born and raised in Versailles, with her older sister Henriette-Anne. Her younger sisters were sent to live at the Abbey of Fontevraud.
She, as well as her brother and sisters, attempted to prevent their father's liaison with Madame de Pompadour, which began in 1750, but they were all unsuccessful. She was deeply affected by the death of her sister Henriette-Anne at the age of twenty-five in 1752, and the later death of her brother, Louis, in 1765. Adelaide became the leader of the group of three unmarried, younger sisters who survived into adulthood, the others being Madame Victoire and Madame Sophie. They all found solace in music.
Adelaide despised her father's last official mistress, Madame du Barry as well. When Marie-Antoinette of Austria became Dauphine in 1770, Adelaide tried to win her support against Madame du Barry, but the empress Maria Theresa opposed that arrangement.
After her brother, the dauphin, died in 1765, followed by that of his second wife, Marie-Josephe, in 1767, Adelaide took custody of the late Dauphine's papers, and the instructions that their son, Louis, should he become king. The papers were opened on 12 May 1774, after the death of Louis XV, leading to the accession of Louis as Louis XVI. Three people were suggested for the position of Prime Minister Maurepas, the duc d'Aiguillon, or Machault.
Madame Adelaide was forced to leave Versailles with Madame Victoire on 6 October 1789, and they took up residence at the Chateau de Bellevue.
Revolutionary laws against the church caused them to leave for Italy on 20 February 1791, although they were arrested and detained for several days at Arnay-le-Duc before they were allowed to depart. They visited their niece Clotilde, sister of Louis XVI, in Turin, and arrived in Rome on 16 April 1791. As a result of the increasing influence of Revolutionary France, they traveled farther afield, moving to Naples in 1796, where Marie Caroline, sister of Marie Antoinette, was queen. They moved to Corfu in 1799, and finally settled in Trieste, where Victoire died of breast cancer. Adelaide died one year later, in exile, in the French emigre society at Rome. Their bodies were later returned to France by Louis XVIII and buried at the Abbey of Saint-Denis.
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