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  1. Maria Clementina Sobieska (1702-1735) is one of three women honored with monuments in the basilica. She was niece to the King of Poland and married to the Pretender of the English throne, James III Stuart . She looks down from her monument to that of her husband and sons. At the age of 33, she died of tuberculosis and was buried in St. Peter's.

  2. 10 de oct. de 2021 · María Clementina Sobieska, murió con solo 32 años. Clemente XII le organizó un entierro estatal y decidió que fuera sepultada en San Pedro, encargando a Pietro Bracci su mausoleo.

  3. 15 de nov. de 2021 · Maria Clementina Sobieska in a Web of Court Intrigues. November 2021. DOI: 10.7788/9783412523923.99. In book: Queens within Networks of Family and Court Connections (pp.99-112) Authors: Aleksandra ...

  4. Maria Clementina Sobieska (1702-1735), the granddaughter of King John III of Poland, married James Francis Edward Stuart, the "Old Pretender" to the British throne when she was sixteen years old and lived mostly in Italy. She died very young, but had two sons, one of whom, Charles Edward Stuart (Bonnie Prince Charlie), was the "Young Pretender." The subject's royal status is indicated by the ...

  5. 5 de ene. de 2024 · Maria Clementina Sobieska was the last widely recognised Stuart queen, albeit in exile, and mother to the final generation of the Stuart dynasty. Examining the material and visual culture surrounding her funeral and afterlife, this chapter reinstates Clementina in Jacobite and Stuart history.

  6. Carlos Eduardo Estuardo. Carlos Eduardo Estuardo (en inglés: Charles Edward Louis John Casimir Silvester Maria Stuart; Roma, 31 de diciembre de 1720-Roma, 31 de enero de 1788) fue un aristócrata escocés perteneciente a la dinastía de los Estuardo y pretendiente jacobita al trono de Gran Bretaña como Carlos III de Inglaterra y Escocia. 1 .

  7. 'The Irish to the Rescue: the Tercentenary of the Polish Princess Clementina's Escape' was a seminar organised on the occasion of the tercentenary of the rescue of the Polish Princess Maria Clementina Sobieska from captivity in Innsbruck in April 1719 by a small group of Irish and French people in a most dramatic fashion. The podcasts from the event are now available.