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Portrait by Franz Xavier Winterhalter of Sophie, Margravine of Baden (1831)
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Princess Sophie Wilhelmine of Sweden (Swedish: Sophie (Sofia) Vilhelmina Katherina Marie Louise (Lovisa) Charlotte (Charlotta) Anne (Anna) av (af) Sverige, German: Sophie Wilhelmine Katherine Marie Louise Charlotte Anne von Schweden, (21 May 1801 - 6 July 1865), was a Swedish princess and a consort Grand Duchess of Baden.
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Biography
Sophie was born in Stockholm, Sweden, on 21 May 1801. She was the daughter of King Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden and Queen consort Frederica of Baden.
Sophie was eight years old (1809) when her father was deposed and she left Sweden with her family. Between the time of the coup which deposed her father, and leaving Sweden, she and her mother were under house arrest. During this period, she was described in the famous diary of Hedwig Elizabeth Charlotte of Holstein-Gottorp as a stubborn girl who was much more haughty and possessed less self-control than her brother. An anecdote describes the contrast between the siblings. When Fredrika and her children were given permission to join the deposed king, famous Swedish nobleman Axel von Fersen came to discuss the arrangements. When he was about to leave, Sophie's older brother, Gustav, ran to the door to open it for Fersen. The former queen Fredrika is quoted as saying, Sophie would never in the world have done that, she thinks of herself too highly for that. [1].
On 25 July 1819 in Karlsruhe, Sophie married her half-grand-uncle Prince Leopold of Baden, the son of a morganatic marriage. The marriage with Leopold had been specifically arranged by her uncle, Grand Duke Karl I of Baden, to improve the chances that Leopold would one day succeed him as Grand Duke because of Sophie's royal lineage. In 1830, her husband ascended to the grand ducal throne as Leopold I, and Sophie became Grand Duchess of Baden.
During the tumult caused by the appearance of Kaspar Hauser, Sophie was rumoured to have ordered Hauser's assassination in 1833. This damaged the relationship between the couple and Sophie was said to have had an affair. During the revolution 1848-49, she was forced to flee from Karlsruhe. She became a widow in 1852.
Family
On 25 July 1819 in Karlsruhe, Sophie married her half-grand-uncle Leopoldo I of Baden. They became the paternal grandparents of the Swedish Queen consort Victoria of Baden.
Sophia and Leopold I had the following children:
- Alexandrine (1820-1904), married Duke Ernest II of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1818-93), childless marriage due to which Ernest's younger brother Albert's British issue succeeded in that duchy.
- Ludwig (1822-22)
- Louis II (1824-58), reigned as Grand Duke 1852-58, deemed mentally unfit to rule.
- Frederick I (1826-1907), Grand Duke 1858-1907, Regent 1852-58, father of Queen Victoria of Sweden.
- William (1829-97), Prussian General, married Marie of Leuchtenberg, became ancestor of the younger line of princes of Baden and father of Prince Max of Baden, German Chancellor, and later the heir of Grand Duchy.
- Charles (1832-1906), married Rosalie von Beust (morganatic)
- Marie (1834-99), married Prince Ernest of Leiningen (1830-1904)
- Cecilie (1839-91), known as Olga Feodorovna, married Grand Duke Michael Nicolaievich of Russia (1832-1902), Governor General in Tbilisi.
She died at Karlsruhe Palace on 6 July 1865.
Ancestry
External links
References
- ^ Cecilia af Klercker (1903) (in Swedish). Hedvig Elisabeth Charlottas dagbok IX 1807-1811 (The diaries of Hedvig Elizabeth Charlotte II). P.A. Norstedt & Söners förlag. ISBN 412070.
- Cecilia af Klercker (översättning och redigering) (1942). Hedvig Elisabeth Charlottas dagbok VIII. P.A. Norstedt & Söners förlag. ISBN 383107.
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- This article is partially based on its eqcuivalent on German wikipedia
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