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  1. Amelia de Beauharnais (en portugués, Amélia de Beauharnais; en francés, Amélie du Beauharnais; Milán, 31 de julio de 1812 - Lisboa, 26 de enero de 1873) fue emperatriz de Brasil como la segunda esposa de Pedro I.

    • Family, Childhood and Youth
    • Marriage
    • Arrival in Brazil and Life as Empress
    • Return to Europe
    • Widowhood and Final Years
    • Exhumation
    • Descendants
    • Cultural Representations

    Amélie was the fourth child of General Eugène de Beauharnais, Duke of Leuchtenberg and his wife Princess Augusta of Bavaria. Her father was the son of Joséphine de Beauharnais and her first husband, Viscount Alexandre de Beauharnais. When Joséphine remarried, to Napoleon Bonaparte, Eugène was adopted by the latter and made viceroy of the Kingdom of...

    After the death of his first wife, the Austrian archduchess Maria Leopoldina, in December 1826, Emperor Pedro I of Brazil (and King Pedro IV of Portugal) sent the Marquis of Barbacena to Europe to find him a second wife. His task was not easy; several factors complicated the search. First, Dom Pedro had stipulated four conditions: a good family bac...

    Amélie sailed to the New World from Ostend, the Netherlands on the frigate Imperatriz, arriving in Rio de Janeiro on 15 October 1829, after a crossing that went more rapidly than planned. Tradition says that upon hearing that the ship was approaching, Dom Pedro embarked on a tugboat to meet it on the far side of the bar, and that he collapsed with ...

    After Dom Pedro I abdicated the crown, Amélie accompanied her husband back to Europe. They now held the titles of Duke and Duchess of Braganza. She was three months pregnant and suffered badly from nausea on the sea voyage. After resupplying the ship at Faial Island in the Azores, they arrived at Cherbourg, in France, on 10 June 1831. They were rec...

    The venturesome life of Dom Pedro had undermined his health; he contracted tuberculosis, and died 24 September 1834. Amélie respected the provisions of his will. He had wished that Maria Isabel de Alcântara, Countess of Iguaçu, his illegitimate daughter by the Marchioness of Santos, be given a good European education like her sister, the Duchess of...

    Between February and September 2012, researchers at the University of São Paulo in Brazil exhumed the remains of Amélie, Pedro I, and as well as those of Maria Leopoldina, Pedro's first wife. They were surprised to find that the body of Amélie had been mummified. Skin, hair and internal organs were preserved. Examinations at the Hospital das Clínic...

    With Dom Pedro I of Brazil, formerly also Pedro IV of Portugal: 1. Princess Maria Amélia of Brazil(1831–1853)

    Amélie of Leuchtenberg is the protagonist of a novel by Ivanir Calado, Imperatriz no Fim do Mundo: Memórias Dúbias de Amélia de Leuchtenberg("Empress at the End of the World: Dubious Memoirs of Amélie of Leuchtenberg," 1997), and has been played on film and television by: 1. Maria Cláudia, in the film "Independência ou Morte" ("Independence or Deat...

  2. María Amelia de Braganza [1] (París, 1 de diciembre de 1831 - Funchal, 4 de febrero de 1853) fue una princesa de Brasil, [2] [3] la única hija del matrimonio compuesto por Pedro I de Brasil y IV de Portugal y Amelia de Beauharnais. Nació en París debido a que su padre había abdicado al trono brasileño.

  3. Amelia de Beauharnais (en portugués, Amélia de Beauharnais; en francés, Amélie du Beauharnais; Milán, 31 de julio de 1812 - Lisboa, 26 de enero de 1873) fue emperatriz de Brasil como la segunda esposa de Pedro I. Amelia de Beauharnais. Emperatriz consorte de Brasil. Reinado. 2 de agosto de 1829 - 7 de abril de 1831. (1 año y 8 meses ...

  4. Luisa Amelia Estefanía de Baden (Schwetzingen, 5 de junio de 1811-Královo Pole, Moravia, 19 de julio de 1854) fue princesa de Baden y princesa consorte de Vasa. Era la hija primogénita del gran duque Carlos II de Baden y de Estefanía de Beauharnais (hija adoptiva de Napoleón Bonaparte, emperador de los franceses).

  5. Amélia de Leuchtenberg (nome de batismo francês: Amélie Auguste Eugénie Napoléone de Beauharnais; Milão, 31 de julho de 1812 – Lisboa, 26 de janeiro de 1873), foi uma princesa franco-bávara da Casa de Beauharnais, segunda esposa do Imperador Pedro I e Imperatriz Consorte do Brasil de 1829 até 1831.