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  1. Maximilian Joseph Eugene Auguste Napoleon de Beauharnais, 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg, Prince Romanowsky (2 October 1817 – 1 November 1852) was the husband of Grand Duchess Maria Nikolayevna of Russia and first cousin of Emperors Napoleon III of the French and Francis Joseph I of Austria.

  2. Maximiliano de Beauharnais (en francés, Maximilian de Beauharnais; Múnich, 2 de octubre de 1817 - San Petersburgo, 1 de noviembre de 1852) fue el tercer duque de Leuchtenberg, tercer príncipe de Venecia, príncipe de Francia, príncipe heredero del Reino de Italia y pretendiente al Gran Ducado de Fráncfort. Su esposa fue la gran duquesa ...

  3. Duke of Leuchtenberg was a title created twice by the monarchs of Bavaria for their relatives. The first creation was awarded by Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria to his son Maximilian Philipp Hieronymus, upon whose death without children the lands passed back to his nephew Elector Maximilian II. [1] .

  4. Maximiliano de Beauharnais fue el tercer duque de Leuchtenberg, tercer príncipe de Venecia, príncipe de Francia, príncipe heredero del Reino de Italia y pretendiente al Gran Ducado de Fráncfort.

    • Family
    • Early Career
    • Later Life
    • Marriage and Issue
    • Roles and Titles
    • Battle Record
    • Heraldry
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    Eugène Rose de Beauharnais was born in Paris on 3 September 1781 as the son of Viscount Alexandre de Beauharnais and Joséphine Tascher de la Pagerie, both born in the French colony of Martinique. His father served as a general during the early Revolutionary Wars. After losing the Siege of Mainz (1793) he was imprisoned and executed by guillotine on...

    Eugène joined the French Revolutionary Army soon after his father's death, initially serving as an orderly to General Lazare Hoche during the War in the Vendée. However, within a year his mother Joséphine had arranged his return to Paris, after she remarried to Napoleon Bonaparte. After joining the 1st Hussar Regiment as an assistant sub-lieutenant...

    After the fall of the Kingdom of Italy, Eugène retired to Munich in June 1814 at the behest of his father-in-law. He soon returned to Paris on the death of his mother, where he was honourably received by Louis XVIII and Alexander I of Russia. He immediately renounced his political activity and returned to his wife's family in Bavaria. Accordingly, ...

    On 14 January 1806, two days after his adoption by Napoleon, Eugène married Princess Augusta Amalia Ludovika Georgia of Bavaria (1788–1851), eldest daughter of Napoleon's ally, King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria. Although a diplomatic marriage, this union would turn out to be a happy one. On 14 November 1817, his father-in-law made him Duke of Leu...

    On 20 December 1807, he was given the title of Prince de Venise ("Prince of Venice"), a title created on 30 March 1806, when the Venetian Provincetaken from Austria in 1805 was united to Bonaparte's Kingdom of Italy. In 1810, Napoleon used his influence over Karl von Dalberg, Archbishop of Regensburg and Grand Duke of Frankfurt, to name Eugène as c...

    Monogram of Eugène de Beauharnais
    Coat of arms as French Prince
    Coat of arms as Viceroy of Italy
    Coat of arms as Duke of Leuchtenberg
    Genealogy of the Ducal Family of Leuchtenberg at the Wayback Machine(archived October 28, 2009)
    Rose, John Holland (1911). "Beauharnais, Eugène de" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 3 (11th ed.). p. 588.
  5. Maximilian Joseph Eugene Auguste Napoleon de Beauharnais, 3rd Duke of Leuchtenberg, Prince Romanowsky (2 October 1817 – 1 November 1852) was the husband of Grand Duchess Maria Nikolayevna of Russia and first cousin of Emperors Napoleon III of the French and Francis Joseph I of Austria.

  6. Maximilian Joseph Eugène Auguste Napoléon Herzog von Leuchtenberg Лейхтенбергский (Beauharnais) aka de Beauharnais, de Leuchtenberg, Богарне (2 Oct 1817 - 1 Nov 1852)