Infanta María del Pilar of Spain


Infanta María del Pilar of Spain, daughter of Queen Isabella II of Spain and sister of King Alfonso XII, was an Infanta of Spain.
At the age of seven, she accompanied her mother into exile in Paris, where she was educated at the College of the Sacred Heart. After the fall of Napoleon III, the royal family settled in Geneva. In 1875, with the restoration of the monarchy to her brother King Alfonso XII, she returned to Spain. Upon her mother's return to France, Pilar moved with her younger sisters Paz and Eulalia to the Royal Palace of Madrid. She completed her education under the supervision of her eldest sister Isabella, Princess of Asturias.
There was a project to marry Infanta Pilar to the son of Napoleon III, Napoléon, Prince Imperial. The Empress of France, Eugenie, and Queen Isabella II were in favor of this union, but the young Prince Napoleon was killed in the Anglo-Zulu War. Two months later Pilar, age eighteen, died suddenly in Eskoriatza. Empress Eugenie took a wreath from her son's grave and sent it to Pilar's gravesite in El Escorial.

Early life

Born on 4 June 1861 at the Royal Palace of Madrid, Infanta Pilar was the third among the five children who survived infancy in the marriage of Queen Isabella II of Spain and the King consort Francisco de Asis of Bourbon, Duke of Cadiz. The infanta was christened the day following her birth as María del Pilar Berenguela Isabel Francisca de Asís Cristina Sebastiana Gabriela Francisca Caracciolo Saturnina. Her godparents were, her paternal aunt, Infanta Maria Cristina of Spain with her husband Infante Sebastian of Portugal and Spain, a couple who had married the previous year.
Queen Isabella II, Pilar's mother, paid little attention to her effeminate husband, the King consort Don Francisco, to whom she had been forced to marry at age sixteen. However, during their dysfunctional marriage, the Queen was pregnant twelve times. Historians and biographers have come to believe that King Francsico de Asis was not the biological father of most, if not all, the queen's children. Their paternity has been attributed to Isabella II's various lovers. Between 1859 and 1865, the queen's romantic attentions centered in the diplomat and politician Miguel Tenorio de Castilla. Twelve years older than Isabella II, Tenorio arrived at the court of Madrid in April 1859 as secretary to the queen. He was a widower with a son and with an extensive political career. His relationship with the queen was placid and he served her with loyalty and efficiency. In August 1865, he was dismissed from his post as both Leopoldo O'Donnell, president of the government, and his successor, Ramón María Narváez, were weary of the influence Tenorio had over the queen. It is to Miguel Tenorio de Castilla that the paternity of Infanta Pilar, and her younger sisters, Paz and Infanta Eulalia are more frequently assigned. However, King Francisco recognized as his all of the children born during his troubled marriage. Four daughters and one son survived infancy. Infanta Pilar was his favorite and the one to whom he felt closer.
Infanta Pilar spent her early year in the formal atmosphere of the Spanish court. Until age four, she was raised by a wet nurse who had been carefully chosen. At the age of seven, her education was placed under the supervision of the Duchess of Berwick and Alba. By that time, the stability of Isabella's II reign was shaky. The queen lost, in quick succession, the two most prominent politician of her government. Leopold O'Donell died in November 1867 and Narvaez in April 1868, while still presiding the government. In the summer 1868, after spending some days in the Palace of la Granja, the Spanish royal family moved to the Cantabrian Coast. They went to Lekeitio to spend time sea bathing, which had been prescribed to the queen as she suffered from a skin condition. Pilar was then seven years old. Her constant companions were her sisters Paz, age six, and Eulalia age four. Their brother Alfonso, age ten, was educated separately as he was the heir to the throne. Pilar's eldest sister, Infanta Isabella had been married off to her cousin the Count of Girgenti in May and she was abroad on her wedding trip. While the royal family was in Lekeitio, a military upsiring broke out. On 28 September, the defeat of the royalist troops headed by general Novaliches in the battle of Alcolea sealed the end of the Queen's reign. Two days later, the Spanish royal family crossed the border by train to Biarritz.

Exile

The first home of the Spanish royal family in exile was the Château de Pau, a renaissance castle that had been the birthplace of Pilar's ancestor Henry IV of France. The Château de Pau was conveniently located close to the Spanish border and it was given to them as temporary residence by Napoleon III. As the castle was very uncomfortable, the deposed Spanish royals lived there no more than a month. Isabella II decided to settle in Paris where she bought the Palace Basilweski in the avenue du Roi-de-Rome. Located near the Arc de Triomphe, the Palace Basilweski was renamed the Palace of Castille and became the home in exile for Infanta Pilar and her family.
Away from the formality of the Spanish court, life in exile allowed more freedom to Infanta Pilar and her sisters. They became the first Spanish princesses no to be educated under the confines of a palace. Infantas Pilar, Paz and Eulalia were enrolled at the Sacré-Coeur, a Catholic school run by nuns in la rue de Varnnes. Although the Sacre couer was a boarding school, the three infantas went to class there daily while remaining living at the Palace of Castile. French soon became their first language. Isabella II, who resented that her own mother had neglected her, was devoted to her children. The reduced household and the proximity brought by the exile made the relationship between the queen and her three younger daughters closer. Pilar's brother was sent to study in Vienna while their eldest sister lived in Switzerland with her husband.
On the second anniversary of their arrival in France, the fall of the monarchy of Napoleon III and the disturbances in Paris forced Queen Isabella II and her children to leave the city on September 29, 1871. They spent the next year living at the Hotel de la paix in Geneva, Switzerland. On November 26, 1871 Pilar's brother in law, the Count of Girgenti committed suicide. In August 1872, a month after the commune was dissolved, the queen decided to return to Paris. Their residence, the Palace of Castille, had survived the disturbances. However, used as a hospital, its interiors and decorations had been destroyed requiring extensive renovations. Back in Paris, Pilar, who was eleven year old, returned to take classes at the Sacré-Coeur for two more years, leading a quiet family life. During a visit to Rome in 1873, Infanta Pilar and her sisters received their first communion from the hands of Pope Pius IX.
On December 29, 1874, Infanta Pilar's brother, Alfonso XII, was called to the Spanish throne after a pronunciamiento by Martinez Campos established him a king, ending the First Spanish Republic. The Spanish royal family was then reunited in Paris to celebrate New Year's Eve. On 14 January 1875, Alphonso XII arrived in Spain, he was followed in March by Infanta Isabella, who was proclaimed Princess of Asturia. Pilar, then thirteen years old, remained living in France with her mother and younger sisters while all waited to be called back to Spain by the new government.

Return to Spain

, President of the Council of minister, finally authorized the return to the deposed Queen of Spain in the summer 1876. After almost eight years living in exile, Infanta Pilar arrived from France by sea, landing in Santander on 30 July 1876. She had turned fifteen years old the previous month. Her eldest siblings, King Alfonso XII and Isabella, Princess of Asturias welcomed them, but they left the city the same night. Pilar, with her mother and younger sisters, remained in Santander. They made a trip to Ontaneda to go sea bathing and later traveled from Santander to El Escorial by train. On 13 October, they visited Madrid for seven hours. Isabella II was no allowed by the government to live in Madrid so Pilar her mother and sisters stayed at El Escorial until Isabella II decided to settle with her younger daughters in Seville.
For almost a year, between November 1876 and September 1877 Pilar lived with her mother and sisters at the Alcázar of Seville. Shortly after they arrived in Andalusia, Pilar's uncle, the Duke of Montpesier also came to live in the city with his family. Pilar and her sisters frequented their cousins, the sons and daughters of their aunt Infanta Luisa Fernanda of Spain and the Duke of Montpesier who had arrived from exile in France almost at the same time settling at the palace of San Telmo in Seville. Pilar's eldest sibling King Alfonso XII and Isabella, Princess of Asturias came to Seville on a visit, spending eastern 1877 with them. Alfonso XII, in love with their cousin Mercedes of Orleans, asked her hand in marriage. Isabella II opposed this union as she hated her brother-in-law who had spent a large fortune to help depose her. Upset with her son's choice of a bride and feeling neglected in Seville, in August, Isabella II decided to return to Paris and lived there permanently. On September 28, 1877 Infantas Pilar, Paz and Eulalia moved to Madrid living at the Royal Palace of Madrid with their eldest siblings. In November, Isabella left Spain for Paris. Pilar never saw her mother again.
In the fall 1877, a new life began for Infanta Pilar at the royal palace of Madrid where she had been born sixteen years earlier. Her education continued there under the supervision of her sister Isabella, Princess of Asturias. The three young Infantas lived in a wing of the royal palace separated from their two eldest siblings. This arrangement gave them some independence. Their care was supervised by the Marchioness of Santa Cruz. Pilar and her sister Paz, only one year her junior, were particularly close.

Prospects of a marriage

On 23 January 1878, at the Basilica of Nuestra Señora de Atocha in Madrid, Alfonso XII married his first cousin, Princess Maria de las Mercedes. Pilar, Paz and Eulalia were close to their cousin and sister-in-law, but Mercedes's marriage was brief. She had a miscarriage and died six months into her marriage of gastric fever on 26 June 1878. Pilar and her sister went to Seville to visit their uncle. At this time there was a project to marriage Pilar to Prince Pierre, Duke of Penthièvre, a nephew of the Duke of Montpensier. He was a distant cousin. Isabella II opposed the idea, and the project did not go very far.
Infanta Pilar was third in the line of succession as neither King Alfonso XII nor Isabella, Princess of Asturias had children by then. With no direct heir to the throne of Spain, it was a matter of urgency to find a husband for Pilar. Since the years of exile in Paris, it had been a cherished project between Queen Isabella II and her friend the Empress Eugenie to arrange a marriage between their children Pilar and the Prince Imperial. As the project had been on the back burner due to the fall of the French Empire and the exile in England. Isabella II conceived the idea of an even more illustrious match for her daughter. Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria, heir to the Austria-Hungary Empire, was in search of a wife. Isabella II had her son Alfonso XII extended an invitation to Rudolf to come to Spain. The archduke arrived on hunting expedition with his brother in-law Prince Leopold of Bavaria. Rudolph met Infanta Pilar, and he was surprised to find that she was blond with clear with eyes as he had thought that all Spanish women were brunettes, but he showed no particular interest in her, concentrating in game hunting.
Pilar was hoping to marry Louis Napoelon, the French Imperial Prince. They had met as children when Pilar and her sister were sometimes invited to play with him at the Tuileries Palace. The prince was then living in exile in England. He was due to pay an official visit to Madrid on his return from South Africa, where he was fighting with the British troops in the Anglo-Zulu War. Before his return, he was killed in South Africa on 1 June 1879. Pilar was deeply distraught by his death. She outlived him by only two months.

Death

In the early summer 1879 it was organized that Pilar, Paz and Eulalia would spend some time in Eskoriatza, a small town known for its hot springs of mineral waters. On July 10 they arrived in Eskoriatza in the province of Gipuzkoa after a long and tiresome journey. In the following weeks, the sisters rested, leading a peaceful life dedicating their time to walks around the country side and reading. Infanta Paz noticed that Pilar looked pale and tired but since the sisters read each other's letters, Paz did not write about it to their eldest siblings to avoid alerting Pilar.
On August 1 the local people arranged a little fiesta in the Infanta's honor. Wearing a white dress, and with a red beret on her head, Pilar attended the rustic fete and enjoyed its simple pleasures: donkey rides, bullocks and open-air dancing. That night, she complained of feeling tired. On August 3, Pilar did not feel well and she stayed in bed all day. At night while she was reading Graziella by Alphonse de Lamartine, she had an acute attack of convulsions, lost consciousness, and never woke up again. She died, probably of tuberculous meningitis. However, the official medical report was diagnosed with serious effusion. She was buried a few days later in El Escorial.
King Alfonso XII and his sister Isabella arrived too late to see her alive. "Everyone", wrote the Infanta Paz afterwards, "loved Pilar best of all". Pilar herself was hoping to marry the Prince Imperial of France, nicknamed Loulou. On the day of his death, June 1, 1879 a pressed violet - the flower of the Bonapartes - is said to have fallen out of Pilar's prayer book and to have broken at the stalk. According to that legend, when Pilar learned of his death some weeks later, she pined way and died of a broken heart.
The Empress Eugénie wrote from Camden on August 9, 1879 to her mother the Countess of Montijo "I have received a terrible blow with the death of Infanta Pilar who was so close to my son. You tell me that she felt sick after a dance in Eskoriatza. Could God have truly decided to take these two souls destined one to another." The Empress Eugénie took one of the wreaths from his son's burial and sent it to Pilar's in El Escorial.
Infanta Paz, who was seventeen at the time, was deeply affected by her sister's death. Years later, the Infanta Paz married Prince Ludwig Ferdinand of Bavaria, and decided to call her only daughter Pilar, in memory of her beloved sister. Thus, she introduced a Spanish name in the house of Wittelsbach.

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