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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: JEE-JUN |
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JOSEPHINE (MARIE ROSE JOSEPHINE TASCHER DE LA PAGERIE) (17631814) , empress of the French, was born in the island of Martinique on the 23rd of June 1763, being the eldest of three daughters of Joseph Tascher de la Pagerie, lieutenant of artillery. Her beauty and grace, though of a languid Creole style, won the affections of the young officer the vicomte de Beauharnais, and, after some family complications, she was married to him. Their married life was not wholly happy, the frivolity of Josephine occasioning her husband anxiety and jealousy. Two children, Eugene
capital . As the Revolution ran its course her husband, as an ex-noble, incurred the suspicion and hostility of the Jacobins; and his ill-success at the head of a French army on the Rhine led to his arrest and execution. Thereafter Josephine was in a position of much perplexity and some hardship, but the friendship of Barras and of Madame Tallien, to both of whom she was then much attached, brought her into notice, and she was one of the queens of Parisian society in the year 1795, when Napoleon Bonaparte's services to the French convention in scattering the malcontents of the capital (13 Vendemiaire, or October 5, 1795) brought him to the front. There is a story that she became known to Napoleon through a visit paid to him by.her son Eugene
Bonaparte's letters to Josephine during the campaign reveal the ardour of his love, while she rarely answered them. As he came to realize her shallowness and frivolity his passion cooled; but at the time when he resided at Montebello (near Milan) in 1797 he still showed great regard for her. During his absence in Egypt in 17981799, her relations to an officer, M. Charles, were most compromising; and Bonaparte on his return thought of divorcing her. Her tears and the entreaties of Eugene and Hortense availed to bring about a reconciliation; and during the period of the consulate (17991804) their relations were on the whole happy, though Napoleon's conduct now gave his consort grave cause for concern. His brothers and sisters more than once begged him to divorce Josephine, and it is known that,from the time when he became first consul
bear a son strained the relation's between Napoleon and Josephine. She complained of his infidelities and growing callousness. The end came in sight after the campaign of 1809, when Napoleon caused the announcement to be made to her that reasons of state compelled him to divorce her. Despite all her pleadings he held to his resolve. The most was made of the slight technical irregularity at the marriage ceremony of the 1st of December 1804; and the marriage was declared null and void.At her private retreat, La Malmaison, near Paris, which she had beautified with curios and rare plants and flowers
Enghien and not to embroil himself in Spanish affairs in 1808.See M. A. Le Normand, Memoires historiques et secrets de Josephine (2 vols., 1820) ; Lettres de Napoleon a Josephine (1833) ; J. A. Aubenas, Hist. de l'imperatrice Josephine (2 vols., 18581859) ; J. Turquan, L'Imperatrice Josephine (2 vols., 18951896) ; F. Masson, Josephine (3 vols., 18991902); Napoleon's Letters to Josephine (179961812), translated and edited by H. F. Hall
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