Joseph Bonaparte
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Joseph-Napoléon Bonaparte, King of Naples and Sicily, King of Spain and the Indies, Comte de Survilliers (January 7, 1768 – July 28, 1844) was the elder brother of French Emperor Napoleon I, who made him King of Naples and Sicily (1806–1808) and later King of Spain. He was nominally king of Spain from June 6, 1808 to December 11, 1813, but from June 13, 1812 he was back in France.[citation needed]
Bonaparte was born as Giuseppe Buonaparte to Carlo Buonaparte and Letizia Ramolino at Corte in Corsica. As a lawyer, politician, and diplomat, he served in the Cinq-Cents and was the French ambassador to Rome. He married Julie Clary on August 1, 1794 in Cuges-les-Pins, France. They had had three daughters, Julie Joséphine Bonaparte (1796-1796), Zénaïde Laetitia Julie Bonaparte (1801-1854) and Charlotte Napoléone Bonaparte (1802-1839). He claimed the surviving two daughters as his heirs. He also sired two children with Maria Giulia, the Countess of Atri (Giulio, born 1806 and Teresa, born 1808).
The Château de Villandry had been seized by the French Revolutionary government and in the early 1800s Joseph's brother, Emperor Napoleon, acquired the château for him. In 1806, Bonaparte was given military command of Naples, and shortly afterward was made king by Napoleon. He became later after his sister's husband, Joachim Murat, was made king of Naples. The Spanish people nicknamed him Pepe Botella ("Bottle Joe") and the usual hypothesis has to do with an alleged tendency to drunkenness[citation needed]. Another theory though, points the name as a maligned confusion where when Joseph Bonaparte went outside of the castle where he resided, he looked around with a spyglass - which looked like a bottle, or was made to look like a bottle by his detractors[citation needed].
Joseph Bonaparte's supporters were called josefinos or afrancesados (frenchified). During his reign, he ended the Spanish Inquisition, partly because Napoleon was at odds with Pope Pius VII at the time. Despite such efforts to win popularity, Bonaparte's foreign birth and support, plus his membership in a Masonic lodge[citation needed], virtually guaranteed he would never be accepted as legitimate by the bulk of the Spanish people. During his rule of Spain, Venezuela declared independence (1810) from Spain, the first nation to do so. During the Peninsular War, his command of French forces in Spain proved to be only nominal, as his commanders insisted on checking with the king's younger brother before carrying out Joseph's instructions.
Bonaparte abdicated and returned to France after defeat at the Battle of Vitoria. He was seen by Bonapartists as the rightful Emperor of the French after the death of Napoleon's own son Napoleon II in 1832, although he did little to advance his claim. He lived for a time in the United States, initially in New York City and Philadelphia, where his house became the center of activity for French expatriates[1], but later moved to an estate in Bordentown, New Jersey. Joseph Bonaparte died in Florence, Italy and was buried in the Les Invalides building complex in Paris. [2]
[edit] Legacy
- Joseph Bonaparte Gulf in the Northern Territory of Australia is named for him. He is well known for the windmill.
- Lake Bonaparte, located in the town of Diana, New York, United States, is also named for him.
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/DOH/markerresults.asp?secid=31&namesearch=Joseph+Bonaparte&Submit=Search+by+Marker+Title
- ^ "Monmouth U class unearths lifestyle of the exiled and famous", Star Ledger, Sunday, June 10, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-06-10. "Bordentown hardly seems like the setting for a lavish European palace, but the sleepy Burlington County community was once fit for a king. Joseph Bonaparte, who had abandoned the throne of Spain while younger brother Napoleon was losing his grip on Europe, noshed on generous servings of oyster, chicken and wine while living on soil probably inhabited by Native American fishermen thousands of years before, a Monmouth University archeology class has found."
[edit] External links
| Joseph Bonaparte Born: 7 January 1768 Died: 28 July 1844
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| Regnal titles | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Ferdinando IV | King of Naples 1806 – 1808 | Succeeded by Gioacchino I |
| Preceded by Carlos IV | King of Spain 6 June 1808 – 11 December 1813 | Succeeded by Fernando VII |
| Titles in pretence | ||
| Preceded by Napoléon II | — TITULAR — Emperor of the French 22 July 1832 – 28 July 1844 | Succeeded by Louis Bonaparte |
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Categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since December 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements since May 2007 | Spanish monarchs | Monarchs of Naples | House of Bonaparte | Italian-French people | People from Corsica | Knights of the Golden Fleece | 1768 births | 1844 deaths

