Infanta Maria Francisca of Braganza (; 22 April 1800 â 4 September 1834) was a Portuguese infanta, the daughter of King John VI of Portugal and his consort Carlota Joaquina of Spain.
Born at the Queluz National Palace on 22 April 1800, Maria Francisca's childhood coincided with the peak of the Napoleonic Wars in the Iberian Peninsula. In 1807, at the age of seven, she joined the royal family in their historic flight to Rio de Janeiro to escape the invading French forces under General Junot.
She spent nearly a decade in South America, receiving a rigorous education centered on Catholic piety, classical languages, and courtly diplomacy within the tropical setting of the São Cristóvão Palace. This formative period ensured she remained a key figure in future Iberian dynastic alliances upon the court's eventual return to Europe.
In a strategic effort to solidify ties between the Portuguese and Spanish thrones during the post-Napoleonic restoration, Maria Francisca married her maternal uncle, Infante Carlos, Count of Molina, on 22 September 1816 in Madrid. This union was part of a prestigious double-marriage arrangement designed by her mother, Queen Carlota Joaquina; her sister, Maria Isabel of Portugal, was wed to King Ferdinand VII of Spain during the same lavish ceremony.
The marriage produced three sons, who would later become the standard-bearers of the Carlist cause:
Following the death of Ferdinand VII in 1833, Maria Francisca emerged as a staunch defender of her husband's claim to the Spanish throne against that of her niece, Isabella II of Spain. Refusing to acknowledge the suspension of Salic law via the Pragmatic Sanction, the family was compelled into exile as the First Carlist War erupted.
They initially sought refuge in Portugal under the protection of Miguel I of Portugal, before settling in Alverstoke, Hampshire, in the United Kingdom in June 1834. Her health, already fragile from years of political stress and the hardships of travel, deteriorated rapidly during their time in England.
Maria Francisca died on 4 September 1834 at the age of 34, likely from a combination of exhaustion and pulmonary illness. Her funeral at St Mary's in Gosport drew thousands of mourners, reflecting the deep local sympathy for the exiled infanta.
Though initially buried in England, her remains were eventually moved to Trieste Cathedral in Italy (San Giusto), where they rest among other members of the Carlist line in the Chapel of San Carlo Borromeo. Four years after her passing, her husband married her elder sister, Maria Teresa, Princess of Beira, who continued her legacy within the Carlist movement.
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