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  1. She proposed marriage to Charles, and on February 17, 1834, Charles and Marie-Louise were secretly married. The marriage was morganatic; Marie Louise was a duchess, and he was a lesser noble and military officer with no clear title aside from Captain (and, later, Count). Upon their marriage, he assumed the title of Minister of Defense.

  2. Count Charles-René de Bombelles. source: Wikipedia. Soon, Marie Louise would marry for the third time. In the summer of 1833, the Austrian court sent Count Charles-René de Bombelles to Parma to serve as head of the court. Six months later, on February 17, 1834, Bombelles and Marie Louise were married.

  3. In 1832 Marie-Louise visited the dying duke von Reichstadt in Vienna. In February 1834 she contracted a second morganatic marriage, with Charles René, comte de Bombelles (1784–1856). She died in Parma and was buried in the Capuchin church in Vienna.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Charles-René de Bombelles (6 November 1784–30 May 1856) was a French émigré nobleman, soldier, and the third husband of Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma. Marie Louise was the widow of the French emperor Napoleon, and her marriage to Charles was morganatic. Charles had served in the Austrian army during the Napoleonic Wars, and he was Grand ...

  5. Mar 2, 2024 · Following Napoleon's defeat, Marie Louise remarried Count Neipperg, leading to social rank complications and illegitimate children. Marie Louise's eventful life continued after Neipperg's death, including a marriage to Grand Chamberlain Bombelles until her own passing.

    • Ridley Scott
    • Features Editor
  6. Neipperg died in 1829. Marie Louise married Count Charles-René de Bombelles, her chamberlain, in 1834. She died in Parma in 1847.

  7. Died At Age: 56. Family: Spouse/Ex-: Adam Albert von Neipperg (m. 1821–1829), Charles-René de Bombelles (m. 1834–1847), Napoleon Bonaparte (m. 1810–1821) father: Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor. mother: Maria Theresa of Naples and Sicily. siblings: Archduchess Clementina of Austria, Maria Leopoldina of Austria.

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