Lillia said:
What's the story on Josephine of Leuchtenberg?
And Louis of the Netherlands? Was she a Queen also? Who was she married to?
Josephine of Leuchtenberg, or Josefina as she was called in Sweden, was born in 1807 as the daughter of Eugene de Beauharnais and Augusta of Bavaria. Eugene was the son of Napoleon Bonaparte's first wife Josephine, and as an imperial stepson, he actually could marry princess Augusta and have principalties of his own. Augusta of Bavaria was a real princess with a good lineage. But after Napoleon's downfall, Eugene and Augusta had to move back to Bavaria, where Augusta's parents granted the family the princinpality of Leuchtenberg. When Josephine was sixteen only years old, she was made crown princess of Sweden, when she became the wife of then 24-year-old Crown prince Oscar. She was considered a very suitable wife for the young Crown prince. Even if Napoleon never was to come back to power again, he had been the emperor of France, and King Charles John and Queen Desideria, the crown prince's parents, were connected to the Bonaparte family. After all, the queen's sister Julie was married to Napoleon's brother Joseph, and the queen had herself been engaged to Napoleon before she was dumped for Josephine de Beauharnais. It's funny really, that Queen Desideria could stand having her rival's granddaughter as a daughter-in-law, but Desideria (or Desirée as she would have been prefered to be called) was such a French patriot and loved everything about France, while she hated Sweden and everything Swedish, and Josephine was almost French too, and they both kept their Catholic faith in a very Lutheran 19th century Sweden. But through her mother Augusta of Bavaria, Josephine was also an ancestor to the Swedish kings Gustav Vasa and Charles IX, and since the Bernadottes were very new royals in Sweden (Charles John and Desirée were the first king and queen of this house), having a crown princess with even the least Swedish blood was desirable. Since Josephine was so young, it was understood, that Oscar wouldn't be allowed to actually have sex with her before she turned eighteen. But after that, the crown princely couple had five children: Prince Carl, Prince Gustav, Prince Oscar, Princess Eugenie and Prince August. But Crown prince Oscar had always been fond of "having fun", and he even had two sons with actress Emily Högquist even though he was married to Crown princess Josephine. Oscar's father, King Charles XIV John, who by the way was the first of the Bernadotte kings of Sweden, was furious with his son's behavior and that he could cheat on his wife so openly. I don't know what Queen Desideria, Oscar's mother, thought about this, but she probably didn't like it either. No matter the case, these two boys became the last acknowledged illegimate royal children in Sweden. Soon after their birth, King Charles John died, and Oscar became King Oskar I, and Josephine became Queen Josefina. Both Desideria and Josefina were allowed to keep their Catholic faith, even though their husbands converted to the Lutheran state church of Sweden, and especially Josefina had to face a lot of criticism for this. Josefina died as a Queen dovager in 1876, and by then, she had seen two of her sons (Charles XV and Oscar II) as kings of Sweden.
http://img438.imageshack.us/img438/2573/1a5hn.jpg Jean Baptiste Bernadotte, king of Sweden under the name Karl XIV Johan (Charles XIV John).
http://img438.imageshack.us/img438/2136/1b3kn.jpg Desirée Clary, Queen Desideria of Sweden.
http://img438.imageshack.us/img438/894/2a1bx.jpg Oscar I, their only child, king of Sweden.
http://img438.imageshack.us/img438/1696/2b9sg.jpg Josephine of Leuchtenberg, Queen Josefina of Sweden.
Louise of the Netherlands (born in 1828) was married to King Charles XV (born in 1826), who was the eldest son of Oscar I and Josephine of Leuchtenberg. Charles, or Carl as we call him in Sweden, was very alike his father, and he clearly cheated on his wife too. Louise was considered ugly, and she couldn't really attract Charles, who only had married her because of politics. In 1851, they had a daughter, who was named Louise after her mother. Some years later, a son was born and named after his father. But the little Prince Carl died as a two-year-old, leaving Princess Louise as the couple's only child. Crown princess Louise was also found to not be able to give birth to any more babies, and she even suggested to her husband that he would divorce her. But even though Charles wasn't attracted to his wife, he had somehow grown attached to her, and he wouldn't divorce her. So Louise had to continue fighting for being the only woman in her husband's life, which I wonder if she ever managed to do. In 1858, King Oscar I died from a brain tumor, and Charles and Louise became king and queen. They had no more children, and to make it even worse for them, the king's brother Prince Oscar and his wife Sophia of Nassau rapidly had no less than four sons. This meant, that Princess Louise as a female couldn't compete with her male relatives and came further and further from inheriting the Swedish thrown. Instead, she was married to the Danish prince Frederic, and she eventually became queen of Denmark as the wife of King Frederic VIII. Queen Louise and King Charles both died in the early 1870s, and Prince Oscar and Princess Sophie, became king and queen.
http://img326.imageshack.us/img326/1182/3a9vr.jpg King Charles (Karl) XV.
http://img438.imageshack.us/img438/9059/3b5gd.jpg Louise of the Netherlands, his queen.
http://img434.imageshack.us/img434/8502/4a3rn.jpg Queen Louise with her daughter Princess Louise.
http://img438.imageshack.us/img438/1844/3c9kd.jpg King Oscar II.
http://img449.imageshack.us/img449/13/3d2tq.jpg Sophie of Nassau, his queen.