(Redirected from Charlotte Augusta)
'Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales' (
7 January 1796 –
6 November 1817) was the only child of the ill-fated marriage between
George IV (at the time
Prince of Wales) and
Caroline of Brunswick.
Early life
She was born at
Carlton House in
London, her birth being something of a miracle as George IV later claimed that he and his wife had sex no more than three times in the whole of their marriage. By the time she was a few months old, Charlotte's parents were effectively separated, and her mother's time with her was severely restricted by her father.
She grew into a headstrong and difficult teenager, and fell out with her mother when Caroline decided to go into continental exile. Following an ill-fated attempt to wed her to Prince Willem of Orange (later
William II of the Netherlands) which she broke off after he made a drunken exhibition of himself at
Ascot races, she spent much of her time restricted to Cranbourne Lodge at
Windsor, Berkshire from July
1814 to January
1816 while Prince
Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld lobbied the
Prince Regent and the
British Parliament for the right to court her.
[1]
Marriage
Charlotte married
Prince Leopold George Christian Frederick of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (to whom Parliament had granted a £50,000 per year annuity for his own life, which would survive his wife) on
May 2 1816, at
Carlton House. Contemporary accounts describe their marriage as happy and contented, and they lived at
Claremont, a wedding gift from the nation. Charlotte confided that her husband was “the perfection of a lover.”
[2]
Death
After two miscarriages in the early months of their marriage, she conceived a third time in February 1817. Although healthy at the beginning of the pregnancy, medical staff took extra precautions; medical practice at the time was
bloodletting and a strict diet, which only served to weaken Charlotte.
On the evening of
3 November, her water broke and labour commenced. After a 50-hour labour at Claremont, she delivered a stillborn 9-pound son there on
5 November 1817. The second stage of labour had lasted 24 hours.
Initially after delivery Charlotte seemed to do well, but after several hours she became restless, had difficulty breathing, and her pulse became fast and feeble. Five and half hours after the delivery she died, presumably from a concealed post-partum haemorrhage.
Two generations gone — gone in a moment! I have felt for myself, but I have also felt for the prince regent. My Charlotte is gone from the country — it has lost her. She was a good, she was an admirable woman. None could know my Charlotte as I did know her. It was my study, my duty, to know her character, but it was also my delight.
:''(Prince Leopold to Sir
Thomas Lawrence)''
The
obstetrician, Sir
Richard Croft, who had correctly diagnosed a transverse lie of the baby during
labour and failed to use a
forceps, was distraught. Three months later he shot himself. Thus this single pregnancy is known in medical history as “the triple obstetrical tragedy”.
The Princess was buried in
St. George's Chapel, Windsor with her son at her feet. Her death was mourned nationally, on a scale similar to that which followed the death of
Diana, Princess of Wales in
1997. On the other hand, in ''An Address to the People on The Death of the Princess Charlotte'' (
1817),
Percy Bysshe Shelley argued that while her death was very sad, the execution the following day of three men incited to lead the
Pentrich Rising was the greater tragedy.
Charlotte's death left the Prince of Wales without any direct heirs, and meant that her paternal grandfather
George III had no legitimate grandchildren from his twelve surviving children - and most, if not all, of his daughters were either sterile or past childbearing. The death resulted in a mad dash towards matrimony by most of her bachelor uncles (the marriage of her uncle
Prince Edward Augustus, Duke of Kent, produced the eventual heir—
Queen Victoria). Her father, even after the death of his wife, made no attempt to remarry or father any more children. Given his poor health by the time his estranged wife died in 1821, he may not have been capable of fathering further children anyway.
Prince Leopold, who would later become the first King of the
Belgians, married again with Louise-Marie of Orléans and had a daughter who was named Charlotte in honour of his first wife. Charlotte would later become
Empress Carlota of Mexico.
Titles, styles, honours and arms
Titles
★ '
7 January 1796-
2 May 1816': ''Her Royal Highness'' Princess Charlotte Augusta of Wales
★ '
2 May 1816-
6 November 1817': ''Her Royal Highness'' Princess Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Duchess in Saxony
Legacy
Regiment
In
1815 the
Royal Berkshire Regiment (amalgamated in
1994, but to be de-amalgamated and merged along with the
Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment in the Prince of Wales Division announced in
restructuring plans on
December 16,
2004) was titled the ''Princess Charlotte's of Wales Regiment'' when, on their return to England from service in Canada, the 49th (Hertfordshire) Regiment were assigned to guard the royal family in residence. Princess Charlotte, on seeing these polished men in their new uniforms, with scarlet coats and white breeches, pleaded that the regiment should be made "hers", and later the title was officially granted.
Memorial
An
obelisk to her memory stands in
Red House Park in
Great Barr,
Sandwell,
England.
The Chapel at
Windsor Castle shows her crypt, with Princess Charlotte's hand emerging from beneath a shroud.
Ancestry
References
1. [1].
2. A Famous Triple Death Tragedy, Shingleton, Hugh M, , ACOG Clinical Review, 2005
External links and references
★
The Wardrobe, the Museum of the Royal Gloucestershire, Berkshire and Wiltshire Regiment (Salisbury)
★
The Percy Bysshe Shelley Resource Page
★
Georgian Index
★ E. Littell,
"Claremont, and Princess Charlotte", p. 370, ''Living Age Vol. 66'', Littell, Son, and Company, Boston, 1860,
★ Frogmore Lodge press
[2]