The famous people


The famous people are full of contradictions. On the one hand, boast of his collaborations with multiple charities and causes, on the other, are not able to waive their whims. The problem is that both sides are difficult to combine. One of the reasons that currently brings together more celebrities are fighting to preserve the environment. However, even a paradox, these celebrities are also actively involved in their destruction. An example of this ambivalence is the marriage made by the singer Sting and Trudie Styler. forbes Was the daughter of Ferdinand I, King of the Two Sicilies (1751-1825), son of Charles III of Spain, and his wife Archduchess Maria Carolina of Austria (1752-1814), favorite sister of Queen Marie Antoinette of France, which became the niece of the same. Was thus the granddaughter of Francis I of Lorraine and Maria Theresa of Habsburg I, founders of the branch of Habsburg-Lorraine dynasty.
Received a thorough education so that development and a natural Piedad repute who did win in his familiar circle nicknamed La Santa. Moving from Naples in 1798, escaped the Neapolitan royal family to Palermo. From 1800 to 1802 Maria Amalia and her mother moved to the Austrian court. In 1806, the family was traveling back to avoid the army of Massena, and during this second stage of his father in the court in Palermo, she met the exiled Louis Philippe, later Duke of Orleans, major son of Louis Philippe II, Duke of Orleans. On November 25, 1809, she married Luis Felipe in Palermo, Sicily.
Returning to France in 1814, the Duke and Duchess of Orleans, if only had been established in the Palais Royal in Paris when the Hundred Days were led into exile. Maria Amelia took refuge with her four children in England, where she spent two years in the House of Orleans, Twickenham, again in France in 1817, in Neuilly-life until 1828 was the happiest period of their existence. Neither then nor at any other time did she take any active part in politics, but it was not the indirect influence on affairs, because their traditions and their strong royalist royalist Court prevented the inclusion in the suspicion with which the views of liberal her husband were considered. Her attention was absorbed by the care and education of his large family, even after the Revolution of 1830 had done the Queen of France. During his second exile, from 1848 until the end of her life, she lived in Claremont, where his piety and charity were admired by the many English friends of the family of Orleans. Maria Amalia died in exile in Claremont in Surrey, England.

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