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  1. Mother. Christine Boyer. Filistine Charlotte Bonaparte Gabrielli (born Filistine Charlotte Bonaparte; 22 February 1795 – 13 May 1865) was a French Napoleonic princess and the eldest daughter of Lucien Bonaparte and Christine Boyer. She became princess Gabrielli following her marriage to Mario Gabrielli, prince of Prossedi and ...

  2. Charlotte Philistine Bonaparte, née à Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume, le et morte à Rome, le est une princesse française, fille aînée de Lucien Bonaparte et de Christine Boyer. Elle était connue sous le nom de « Lolotte », sobriquet qui lui avait été donné par Letizia Bonaparte, sa grand-mère.

  3. Charlotte, known as the Countess de Survilliers, lived with her father at his Point Breeze estate in Bordentown, New Jersey, from December 1821 to August 1824. Charlotte married her first cousin Napoléon Louis, the second son of Louis Bonaparte and Hortense de Beauharnais, on 23 July 1826. She became a widow in 1831. Artist

  4. 28 de nov. de 2019 · When Emperor Napoleon III came into power in 1852, Charlotte was included in the Imperial Family and recognised as “Princess Bonaparte” with “Highness” as a style of address. She died at the age of 70 on 6 May 1865 in Rome. 1

  5. Placido Gabrielli, Prince of Prossedi and Roccasecca, Duke of Pisterzo, was the son of Charlotte Bonaparte Gabrielli and the husband of Augusta Bonaparte Gabrielli. Between 1880 and 1885 he served as the first president of the Banco di Roma .

  6. 28 de nov. de 2019 · The Bonaparte Women – Charlotte Bonaparte Gabrielli Thursday, 28 November 2019, 6:00 Moniek Bloks 0 Charlotte Bonaparte was born at Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume on 22 February 1795 as the daughter of Lucien Bonaparte, a younger brother of Napoleon Bonaparte, and his first wife, Christine Boyer.

  7. The Napoleonic Museum in Rome preserves one of the most important albums of Charlotte, which contains drawings, watercolours, engravings, as well as works of her husband Louis Napoleon and of the many artists she met in France, Italy (in Rome and in Florence) and during her many trips abroad in Germany, Belgium, England and the United States.