Maria Isabel of Braganza
Maria Isabel of Braganza was a Portuguese infanta who became Queen of Spain as the second wife of King Ferdinand VII.
Early years
Infanta Maria Isabel of Portugal was born on 19 May 1797 as the third child and second daughter of King John VI of Portugal and his wife Queen Carlota Joaquina. The marriage between her father and mother was unhappy, Carlota Joaquina attempting to have King John VI deemed insane.In 1807 Napoleon invaded Portugal, and the royal family unwillingly fled to Brazil. Maria Isabel's mother Carlota sent her eldest surviving son, Pedro, to join his father and grandmother on board the ship Principe Real whilst Carlota and the rest of her children would board the Affonso d'Albuquerque.
Upon their arrival, Carlota and her children were forced to shave their heads and wear white muslin hats.
Upbringing
Maria Isabel and her siblings were carefully educated by her mother liberally. Maria Isabel was noted to be kind, balanced and shy, and was much like her father within her personality.Marriage
On 20 March 1816, Queen Maria I of Portugal died. Due to this, Maria Isabel's father John became the King of Portugal and Brazil. On 22 February 1816, marriage contracts between Ferdinand VII of Spain and Maria Isabel were officially signed; they would soon marry on 29 September. At the same time, another marriage between her sister Infanta Maria Francisca and Ferdinand's brother Carlos, Count of Molina, was facilitated. At the end of the year the two princesses were received in Cádiz with great pomp and ceremony.Towards the end of the year, Maria Isabel and Ferdinand settled in Madrid. There, she quickly became pregnant. Maria Isabel gave birth to a daughter, whom they named María Luisa Isabel, on 21 August 1817. Her daughter died less than five months later.
Death
Maria Isabel was pregnant soon after the birth of María Luisa Isabel, but the birth was indeed a difficult one: the baby was in breech and the physicians soon found that the child had died. Maria Isabel stopped breathing soon thereafter and the doctors thought she was dead.Maria Isabel's sister protested against the doctors' thoughts on presuming her dead. The king, however, ordered a fatal caesarean. When they started cutting her stomach to extract the dead fetus, she suddenly shouted in pain and collapsed on her bed, bleeding heavily. She died soon afterwards on 26 December 1818 in the Palace of Aranjuez, and was buried at the Escorial—the royal site of San Lorenzo de El Escorial.