Christine Boyer
First wife of Lucien Bonaparte (1771–1800)
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Catherine Christine Eléonore Boyer (3 July 1771 – 14 May 1800) was a member of the Bonaparte family as the first wife of Lucien Bonaparte, a younger brother of Napoleon.
3 July 1771
Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume, France
Paris, France
Christine Boyer | |
|---|---|
Miniature of portrait of Christine Boyer by Jean-Baptiste Isabey. | |
| Born | Catherine Christine Eléonore Boyer 3 July 1771 Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume, France |
| Died | 14 May 1800 (aged 28) Paris, France |
| Buried | Santi Apostoli Giovanni e Andrea, Canino |
| Noble family | Bonaparte (by marriage) |
| Spouse | |
| Issue among others... |
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Life
Born in Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume, France, Boyer was the daughter of Pierre André Boyer and Rosalie Fabre.[1] Other explain that she was the sister of an innkeeper with whom Lucien had lodged in Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume.[2] Christine was illiterate, and unable to sign her own name.[3]
Lucien Bonaparte and Christine Boyer married on 4 May 1794.[4] The couple were married hastily, and without the consent of the Bonaparte family.[4] Lucien's brother Napoleon and their mother, Letizia, were displeased with the match.[citation needed]
Issue
The couple had four children, of whom two daughters had descendants.
- Filistine Charlotte (Saint-Maximin, 28 February 1795 – 1865, Rome); married first, 1815, Prince Mario Gabrielli. She married secondly, 1842, Cavaliere Settimio Centamori. She had eight children by her first husband.
- a son (1796–1796) :
- Victoire Gertrude (1797–1797) ;
- Christine Charlotte Alexandrine Égypta (Paris, 18 October 1798 – Rome, 1847); married first, 1818, Swedish Count Arvid Posse. This ended in divorce in 1824. She married secondly, 1824, Lord Dudley Stuart. She had one child, a son, by her second husband.[5][6]
Death

Boyer died in Paris, in childbirth.[2] She was buried in the Santi Apostoli Giovanni e Andrea cemetery in Canino, Lazio, Italy.[citation needed] According to other source, she fell gravely ill with a pulmonary disease and died at Château du Plessis-Chamant, near Paris, on 14 May, at age twenty-eight. She was pregnant; the unborn child died with her. She was buried in the park of Le Plessis and the devastated widower Lucien Bonaparte erected a monument of white marble to her memory.[7][6]
Bibliography
- Lucien Bonaparte à Saint-Maximin, Yacinthe Saint-German Leca