Maria Belgica of Portugal

Maria Belgica of Portugal
Born Before 12 October 1598
Delft
Died 28 July 1647(1647-07-28)
Geneva
Spouse Theodor Croll
Issue Bern Theodore Croll
Emilia Catharina Croll
Anna Rosine Croll
Mauritius Sabine Croll
Helene Beatrix Croll
Susanne Sidonia Croll
House Aviz
Father Manuel, Hereditary Prince of Portugal
Mother Countess Emilia of Nassau

Maria Belgica of Portugal, also known as Maria Belgica of Crato (born before 12 October 1598;[1] died 28 July 1647), was the daughter of Manuel of Portugal, son of the self-proclaimed Portuguese king António of Crato, and Countess Emilia of Nassau (1569–1629), the youngest daughter of William of Orange.[2]

Life

Maria Belgica was born and raised in Delft. She must have been approximately 27-years-old when she moved to Geneva, Switzerland, with her mother and sisters. Soon after she arrived in Geneva she decided to return to The Hague to negotiate a stipend she was entitled to with her uncle Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, and to request her inheritance from her aunt, Maria of Nassau, the Countess of Hohenlohe.[3] She negotiated a deal with her uncle and soon afterwards she returned to Geneva. Her mother died soon after Maria Belgica returned to her.[3]

Maria Belgica married a colonel, Baron Croll, who originally came from Heidelberg, Germany, but had come to Geneva in the service of the Margrave of Baden-Durlach. The match was deemed unworthy of her, and her husband was seen as an opportunist. Croll was later given the title of Baron of Prangrins. The marriage was not a happy one, and a divorce was first approved and later rescinded by the government of Bern. Croll, however, was murdered in 1640 in Venice before any further decisions had been made. Maria Belgica died in Geneva in 1647. She was buried in the same chapel as her mother.[3]

Marriage and issue

Maria Belgica married Colonel Theodor Croll (died 1640 in Venice - stabbed to death), Quartermaster general of Odoardo Farnese, Duke of Parma, in June 1629. They had six children:[3]

References

  1. Dek: De afstammelingen..., p. 243 et seq.
  2. Anne Commire, Women in World History, Volume 5, Gale, 2000, p 211
  3. 1 2 3 4 G.J.A. Beijerinck, De Gids, Volume 50, Part 3 (Google eBook), 1886
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.