Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jérôme-Napoléon Bonaparte (born Girolamo Buonaparte; 15 November 1784 – 24 June 1860) was the youngest brother of Napoleon I and reigned as Jerome Napoleon I (formally Hieronymus Napoleon in German), King of Westphalia, between 1807 and 1813. From 1816 onward, he bore the title of Prince of Montfort. [1] After 1848, when his nephew, Louis ...

  2. Apr 18, 2024 · Jérôme Bonaparte (born November 15, 1784, Ajaccio, Corsica—died June 24, 1860, Villegenis, France) was Napoleon I ’s youngest brother, who became king of Westphalia and marshal of France. It was through Jérôme that the Bonaparte line extended into the United States; his eldest son, Jerome, grew up in Maryland with his American mother.

    • Jesse Greenspan
    • 5 min
    • Jérôme Bonaparte (1784-1860) Jérôme Bonaparte. Jérôme, the youngest sibling of Napoleon, became the first Bonaparte to step foot in America, in 1803, the same year his brother nearly doubled the size of the United States by authorizing the Louisiana Purchase.
    • Joseph Bonaparte (1768-1844) Joseph Bonaparte. Napoleon’s eldest sibling, Joseph, went incognito following his brother’s downfall and escaped to the United States in the summer of 1815.
    • Lucien Bonaparte (1775-1840) Lucien Bonaparte. As with Jérôme, Napoleon strongly disapproved of his younger sibling Lucien’s choice of a bride. But unlike Jérôme, Lucien stuck with his wife, preferring to live with her in self-imposed exile than become a monarch like his brothers.
    • Louis Bonaparte (1778-1846) Louis Bonaparte. Like his brother Lucien, Louis went to Italy post-Waterloo and never visited the United States. Louis’ son, Louis-Napoleon, on the other hand, found himself there unintentionally.
  3. Jérôme Bonaparte 1, 2, né le 15 novembre 1784 à Ajaccio ( Corse) et mort le 24 juin 1860 au château de Vilgénis ( Essonne ), est un prince français et altesse impériale ( 1806 et 1852 ), fils de Charles-Marie Bonaparte et de Maria-Létizia Ramolino, et le plus jeune frère de Napoléon .

  4. In 1835, Queen Catherine died, followed twelve years later by her eldest son, Jerome, a colonel in the army of the king of Württemberg. Briefly engaged to her cousin, Prince Louis-Napoleon, Mathilde married prince Demidoff in 1840. The marriage solved the financial troubles of her father, but ended with a stormy separation refereed by the tsar ...

  5. People also ask

  6. Jérôme Napoléon "Bo" Bonaparte (5 July 1805 – 17 June 1870) was an American farmer, chairman of the Maryland Agricultural Society, first president of the Maryland Club, and the son of Elizabeth Patterson and Jérôme Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon I.

  7. In October 1812, Napoleon, conqueror of an empty and fire-blackened Moscow, pondered retreat. In Cassel, his youngest brother Jerome, King of Westphalia, had problems too. His three mistresses—two German and one Polish—complicated his life immensely, though his faithful Queen, Catherine of Württemberg, sedulously avoided noticing her ...

  1. People also search for