She had to take her lunch and diner in public, she hated that, so during those meals she hardly ate anything. Her breakfast was private (there were always members of the court present and her ladies in waiting, but at least no strangers), and therefore her favorite meal. She loved her coffee in the morning and Croissants. Madame Campan, her first lady in waiting wrote in her memoirs:
"Marie-Antoinette usually ate nothing but roast or boiled poultry and drank nothing but water. The only things of which she was particularly fond were her morning coffee and a sort of bread (croissants) to which she had grown accustomed during her childhood in Vienna."
She had to take her lunch and diner in public, she hated that, so during those meals she hardly ate anything. Her breakfast was private (there were always members of the court present and her ladies in waiting, but at least no strangers), and therefore her favorite meal. She loved her coffee in the morning and croissants. Madame Campan, her first lady in waiting wrote in her memoirs:
"Marie-Antoinette usually ate nothing but roast or boiled poultry and drank nothing but water. The only things of which she was particularly fond were her morning coffee and a sort of bread (croissants) to which she had grown accustomed during her childhood in Vienna."
Marie-Antoinette was born on this day in 1755, and in view of the new movie about her, it is timely to consider her again - this time to focus on the pesky "Let them eat cake" story.
The movie has been criticised for its historic inaccuracies and its focus on the trivia and excesses of her life, but in doing so it is surely only following the precedent of "history" itself, which - being written as is usual, by the victors and propagandists - has not been kind to her. Imagine any 14 year-old girl that you know. Imagine sending her off to Another Country (where she was not fluent in the language) and marrying her off within a few days to a man she had never met. Give her the huge dual responsibilities of facilitating the diplomatic relations between the two countries, and of providing an heir and preferably also a spare. Imagine this child's homesickness. Imagine her distress at the public ridicule she endured for not immediately producing an heir when the real reason was that her marriage was not able to be consummated until Louis submitted (years later) to minor surgery to correct a minor anatomical "glitch" that had made consummation impossible. This adolescent spent her first seven years as a virgin royal bride assuaging her homesickness and filling her time with all sorts of fun and games, as any teenager would. She does not seem to have been gratuitously unkind, and motherhood, when it finally happened, and maturity, when the years gave it, made her quite courageous.
Marie-Antoinette was accused of many things both during and after her life, for which there is no evidence. It is time to put to an end, once and for all, the malicious slander that she said of the hungry at the gate, when told they had no bread, "Let them eat Cake". The phrase was written when she was a child, in a fable by the philosopher Rousseau who attributed it to a "great princess" to indicate her insensitivity to the poor. It was appropriated by post-revolutionary publicists and re-attributed to her to support their Propaganda.
As far as the food depicted in the movie goes, the cakes at any rate are far from historically accurate. "Cakes" in Marie-Antoinette's time were leavened with beaten eggs, or yeast, and were baked in "hoops" supported by paper cuffs and set on flat baking trays - they were not airy, fluffy, butter-cream-frosted, highly decorated concoctions which require baking powders and shaped tins, both of which were developed after she was dead.
Marie Antoinette's mother died 1790
Marie Antoinette was a roman Catholic.
No Marie Antoinette did not cause the French Revolution.
The Production Budget for Marie Antoinette was $40,000,000.
Marie Antoinette Petersén died in 1855.
Marie Antoinette, an Austrian archduchess.Marie Antoinette.
Marie Antoinette played the harp, was a talented equestrian and never said "Let them eat cake".
Marie Antoinette
No, Marie Antoinette is not single.
Marie Antoinette's mother died 1790
Marie Antoinette was born on November 2, 1755
Marie Antoinette was a devout Roman Catholic
Marie Antoinette did not attend college.
The Production Budget for Marie Antoinette was $40,000,000.
Marie Antoinette was released on 10/20/2006.
Marie Antoinette was a roman Catholic.
Marie Antoinette did no such thing ever.