Franciszka Krasińska
Duchess Consort of Courland and Semigallia
Tenure1758-1763
Born9 March 1742
Maleszowa, Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth
Died30 April 1796 (aged 53)
Dresden, Electorate of Saxony, Holy Roman Empire
Burial
St. Marienstern Abbey, Panschwitz-Kuckau
SpouseCharles, Duke of Courland
IssueMaria Christina, Princess of Carignan
HouseKrasiński (by birth)
Wettin (by marriage)
FatherStanisław Krasiński
MotherAniela Humięcka
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Countess Franciszka Krasińska (9 March 1742 in Maleszowa – 30 April 1796 in Dresden), was a Polish noblewoman and wife of Charles of Saxony, Duke of Courland, the son of King Augustus III of Poland.

Life

She was the third of four daughters born to Polish nobles, Count Stanisław Korwin Krasiński (1717–1762), and his wife, Aniela née Humięcka.

Franciszka was born on the family's Maleszowa estate. The Krasińskis attended the royal court in Warsaw, where she would eventually meet her future husband, Charles of Saxony, Duke of Courland. Franciszka and Charles reportedly fell mutually in love when she was just 15. In 1757, they asked her family to support their plan to marry. Her father and her uncle by marriage, Prince Antoni Lubomirski, both supported their wish, especially as Charles was in line to become Duke of Courland, which happened in 1758. Her paternal aunt, Princess Zofia Lubomirska, on the other hand, took a sober attitude and commented that her brother and husband "... are convinced that his daughter will one day rule... I cannot agree with what he writes", as she did not believe in Charles's honest intentions. Besides, in her view his family would not allow such a marriage and he would have to abandon her niece.[1]

Morganatic marriage

On 25 March 1760 Franciszka Krasińska finally married Prince Charles of Saxony. Although she was of noble birth, she did not belong to a reigning or immediate dynasty, so she and Charles married in secret. As a result, she was not entitled to share his dynastic title.[2]

Her aunt Zofia now won over, demanded together with August Czartoryski, that Charles openly recognize Franciszka as his legal wife. After the death of Franciszka's compliant father in 1762, aunt Zofia's husband, Prince Antoni Lubomirski, became legal guardian of her "officially unmarried" niece and her three sisters. Zofia Lubomirska was then in a position to have more influence over Charles in the matter. In January 1764, during the Interregnum, Charles did officially recognize the marriage, and Zofia Lubomirska tried to negotiate with him to have him announce his candidacy for the Polish throne, which would have given Franciszka the chance to become queen. In the event he declined.[1]

As the young couple lived separate lives, Franciszka Krasińska, now Wettin, often stayed with her aunt and uncle. She visited Warsaw with her aunt during the Radom Confederation and accompanied her on a trip to Zofia's estate in Opole, where Franciszka was reunited with Charles in 1775. Later that year, in response to Charles's own persistence and that of other supporters at the Saxon royal court, the marriage was finally recognized, though only as a morganatic marriage - an alien concept in the Republic of Two Nations where all nobles counted as members of a single class.[3] However Franciszka's hereditary title of princess was arranged and granted by Emperor Joseph II and not by the Prussian court.[1] Franciszka and her daughter moved to Saxony to live with Charles in his castle. She was accorded an annuity by the Polish Sejm.[4]

Elsterwerda Castle where Franciszka spent her last years.

The couple had two daughters: Maria Theresia (born and died 1767) and Maria Christina (1770–1851), who went on to become grandmother to Victor Emmanuel II, crowned King of Italy in 1861. [5]

Franciszka probably died of breast cancer.

In fiction

Franciszka became the subject of an historical novel by Klementyna Hoffmanowa.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Franciszka Krasińska". The Polish Biographical Dictionary - PSB. Vol. 17. 1972.
  2. Maria Bogucka (2017). Women in Early Modern Polish Society, Against the European Background. Routledge. p. 171. ISBN 9781351871990. [accessed = 2018.11.23]
  3. Dmowski, Roman Stanisław (1917). ""Poland, Old and New"". In Duff, James (ed.). Russian Realities & Problems. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. p. 116. In the past the nobility in Poland constituted the nation itself. It ruled the country without any hindrance from any other class, the middle class being small in number and wealth, while the peasantry were subjugated into Serfdom.
  4. Anna Wildacka. A Polish Great-Grandmother of an Italian Dynasty. Wilanów Palace publications. http://www.wilanow-palac.pl/a_polish_great_grandmother_of_an_italian_dynasty.html [accessed 2018.11.23].
  5. Charles of Saxony, duke of Courland and Semigallia in: geneall.net [retrieved 21 September 2015].
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