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  1. Résumé. The Italian exile of James III Stuart started in 1717 at the court of Urbino. In 1719, the Teatro Alibert opened in Rome and Stuart entered the Eternal City with his consort Maria Clementina Sobieska. These royal personalities became the protectors of the theater in 1720; they were appreciated by the Catholic Roman society and had ...

  2. CONCERNING THE MARRIAGE BETWEEN MARIA CLEMENTINA SOBIESKA AND JAMES FRANCIS EDWARD STUART 1718-1720 ABSTRACT: The paper tries to consider the history of Maria Clementina Sobieska’s journey to Italy between 1718 and 1719 in connection with her wedding to James Francis Edward Stuart, the so-called ‘Old Pretender’.

  3. Maria Clementina Sobieska. by Unknown artist oil on canvas, circa 1719 24 3/4 in. x 19 3/4 in. (629 mm x 502 mm) oval Purchased, 1900 Primary Collection NPG 1262.

  4. 26 de set. de 2019 · By Dr Georgia Vullinghs. Assistant Curator, Modern and Contemporary History. In the collection of the National Museums Scotland is a set of clothing which is said to have belonged to the Stuart queen in exile, Maria Clementina Sobieska. Clementina Sobieska (1702-1735) was a Polish princess who married the Jacobite king James VIII/III in 1719.

  5. Subject: Maria Clementina was the granddaughter of King John III Sobieski. She married James Edward Francis Stuart, but the marriage was extremely unhappy. Maria Clementina left her husband and went to live in the Santa Cecilia convent in Rome. She spent time praying and died at the age of 32.

  6. Maria Clementina Sobieska (1702-35) was the third and final woman to be honoured with a monument in St Peter's Basilica. She was married to James Francis Edward Stuart, Prince of Wales, the son of James II of England, who was deposed in the Glorious Revolution of 1688.

  7. Thanks to courage and ingenuity of Irishman Charles Wogan, a diplomatic agent employed by the Stuarts, Maria Klementyna Sobieska – the youngest daughter of Jakub Ludwik, Prince of Oława, and granddaughter of Jan III – managed to escape from the Ambras castle on the Inn River in the spring of 1719.