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  1. Elisa Napoleona Baciocchi Levoy ( Luca, 3 de junio de 1806 - Castillo de Korn-er-Hoüet, 3 de febrero de 1869) fue la segunda hija de Félix Baciocchi y de Elisa Bonaparte, princesa de Lucca y Piombino y hermana de Napoleón Bonaparte. Fue la única hija del matrimonio que sobrevivió a la adolescencia.

  2. Elisa Bonaparte. Elisa Napoléone Baciocchi Levoy (3 June 1806 – 3 February 1869) was the daughter of Felice Baciocchi and Elisa Bonaparte, who was Princess of Lucca and Piombino and a sister of Napoleon I. She was their only child to live beyond their teenage years.

    • Early Life
    • Princess of Piombino and Lucca
    • Grand Duchess of Tuscany
    • Fall and Exile
    • Marriage and Issue
    • Bibliography

    Élisa was born in Ajaccio, Corsica. She was christened Maria-Anna, but later officially adopted the nickname "Élisa" (her brother Lucien, to whom she was very close in childhood, nicknamed her Elisa). In June 1784, a bursary allowed her to attend the Maison royale de Saint-Louis at Saint-Cyr, where she was frequently visited by her brother Napoleon...

    Her separation from her husband in 1805 was seen favorably by Napoleon (though he soon rejoined her after her promotion to Lucca). On 19 March 1805, Napoleon awarded her the Principality of Piombino, which had been French property for some years and was of major strategic interest to Napoleon due to its proximity to Elba and Corsica. Felice and Éli...

    On 21 March 1801, Lucien Bonaparte and the King of Spain signed the Third Treaty of San Ildefonso, which restored Louisiana to France and in exchange established the Kingdom of Etruria by dividing Tuscany. The new kingdom was initially put in the charge of the infante Maria Louisa and her husband, Louis of Etruria, but he soon proved to be a poor r...

    In 1813, with Napoleon facing the allied coalition after his Russian campaign, Caroline Bonaparte's husband Joachim Murat, King of Naples, abandoned his brother-in-law and joined the Austrian cause by leading the Neapolitan to Rome, reaching Florence in January 1814. Élisa was forced to leave Tuscany for Lucca. The Neapolitans captured Massa and Ca...

    She married Felice Pasquale Baciocchi Levoy, a member of Corsican nobility, on 1 May 1797, created Prince Français, Duke of Lucca and Prince of Piombino and Prince of Massa-Carrara and La Garfagnana. They were parents of five children: 1. Felix Napoléon Baciocchi Levoy (1798–1799). 2. Napoléon Baciocchi (1803–1803). 3. Elisa Napoléone Baciocchi Lev...

    (in French) Florence Vidal, Élisa Bonaparte, éd. Pygmalion, 2005. 310 p. (ISBN 2857049692)
    (in French) Emmanuel de Beaufond, Élisa Bonaparte, princesse de Lucques et de Piombino, Paris : L'Univers (brochure hors-série du quotidien catholique), 1895. 32 p.
    (in French) Paul Marmottan, Élisa Bonaparte, Paris : H. Champion, 1898. 317 p.
    (in French) Jean d'Hertault, comte de Beaufort (under the pseudonym Jean de Beaufort), Élisa Bonaparte, princesse de Lucques et Piombino, grande-duchesse de Toscane (1777–1820), 1904 (brochure de 1...
  3. Elisa Napoleona Baciocchi Levoy (Luca, 3 de junio de 1806 - Castillo de Korn-er-Hoüet, 3 de febrero de 1869) fue la segunda hija de Félix Baciocchi y de Elisa Bonaparte, princesa de Lucca y Piombino y hermana de Napoleón Bonaparte. Fue la única hija del matrimonio que sobrevivió a la adolescencia.

  4. It is the portrait of the eldest of Napoleon's sisters, Elisa, with her daughter (significantly called Napoleona Elisa). Elisa married the Corsican nobleman Felice Baciocchi; she was...

  5. Share it. Elisa Baciocchi, née Elisa Bonaparte, was the eldest of Napoleons three sisters, who all became imperial princesses after their brother’s coronation. Elisa was born in 1777 in Ajaccio, and she married army officer Félix Baciocchi in 1797. In 1805, she became Princess of Piombino and Lucca, then Grand-Duchess of Tuscany in 1809.

  6. 18 de abr. de 2024 · Élisa Bonaparte (born Jan. 3, 1777, Ajaccio, Corsica—died Aug. 7, 1820, Sant’Andrea, near Trieste) was Napoleon I’s eldest sister to survive infancy. She was married on May 1, 1797, to Félix Baciocchi, a member of a Corsican noble family.