Maria Carolina of Austria - Issue

Issue

Children of Ferdinand I
Name Birth Death Notes
By Maria Carolina of Austria (Vienna, 13 August 1752 – Vienna, 8 September 1814)
Princess Maria Teresa Carolina Giuseppina of Naples and Sicily 6 June 1772 13 April 1807 Named after her maternal grand mother Maria Theresa of Austria, she married her first cousin Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor in 1790; had issue;
Princess Maria Luisa Amelia Teresa of Naples and Sicily Royal Palace of Naples, 27 July 1773 Hofburg Imperial Palace, 19 September 1802 Married her first cousin Ferdinand III, Grand Duke of Tuscany and had issue;
Prince Carlo Tito Francesco Giuseppe of Naples and Sicily, Duke of Calabria, Hereditary Prince of Naples Naples, 6 January 1775 17 December 1778 Died of smallpox;
Princess Maria Anna Giuseppa Antonietta Francesca Gaetana Teresa of Naples and Sicily 23 November 1775 22 February 1780 Died in childhood;
Prince Francesco Gennaro Giuseppe Saverio Giovanni Battista of Naples and Sicily Naples, 14 August 1777 Naples, 8 November 1830 Married his cousin Archduchess Maria Clementina of Austria in 1797 and had issue; married another cousin Infanta Maria Isabella of Spain in 1802 and had issue; was King of the Two Sicilies from 1825 to 1830.
Princess Maria Cristina Teresa of Naples and Sicily Caserta Palace, 17 January 1779 Savona, 11 March 1849 Married Charles Felix of Sardinia in 1807; had no issue; it was she who ordered the excavations of Tusculum;
Princess Maria Cristina Amelia of Naples and Sicily Caserta Palace, 17 January 1779 Caserta Palace, 26 February 1783 Twin of the above; died of smallpox
Prince Gennaro Carlo Francesco of Naples and Sicily Naples 12 April 1780 2 January 1789 Died in childhood;
Prince Giuseppe Carlo Gennaro of Naples and Sicily Naples, 18 June 1781 19 February 1783 Died in smallpox;
Princess Maria Amelia Teresa of Naples and Sicily Caserta Palace, 26 April 1782 Claremont House, 24 March 1866 Married Louis Philippe d'Orléans, Duke of Orléans in 1809 and had issue; later ruled France; died in exile in England;
Princess Maria Cristina of Naples and Sicily Caserta Palace, 19 July 1783 Caserta Palace, 19 July 1783 stillborn;
Princess Maria Antonietta Teresa Amelia Giovanna Battista Francesca Gaetana Maria Anna Lucia of Naples and Sicily Caserta Palace, 14 December 1784 Royal Palace of Aranjuez, 21 May 1806 Married her cousin Infante Ferdinand, Prince of Asturias; died from tuberculosis; had no issue;
Princess Maria Clotilde Teresa Amelia Antonietta Giovanna Battista Anna Gaetana Polcheria of Naples and Sicily Caserta Palace, 18 February 1786 10 September 1792 Died in childhood;
Princess Maria Enricheta Carmela of Naples and Sicily Naples, 31 July 1787 Naples, 20 September 1792 Died in childhood;
Prince Carlo Gennaro of Naples and Sicily Naples, 26 August 1788 Caserta Palace, 1 February 1789 Died in infancy;
Prince Leopoldo Giovanni Giuseppe Michele of Naples and Sicily Naples, 2 July 1790 Naples, 10 March 1851 Married his niece Archduchess Clementina of Austria and had issue;
Prince Alberto Lodovico Maria Filipo Gaetano of Naples and Sicily 2 May 1792 Died on board the HMS Vanguard, 25 December 1798 Died in childhood;
Princess Maria Isabella of Naples and Sicily Naples, 2 December 1793 23 April 1801 Died in childhood;

Read more about this topic:  Maria Carolina Of Austria

Famous quotes containing the word issue:

    I don’t have any problem with a reporter or a news person who says the President is uninformed on this issue or that issue. I don’t think any of us would challenge that. I do have a problem with the singular focus on this, as if that’s the only standard by which we ought to judge a president. What we learned in the last administration was how little having an encyclopedic grasp of all the facts has to do with governing.
    David R. Gergen (b. 1942)

    We find it easy to set limits when the issue is safety.... But 99 percent of the time there isn’t imminent danger; most of life takes place on more ambiguous ground, and children are experts at detecting ambivalence.
    Cathy Rindner Tempelsman (20th century)

    I did never know so full a voice issue from so empty a heart.
    But the saying is true: “The empty vessel makes the greatest
    sound.”
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)