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Philip Prospero, Prince of Asturias

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Philip Prospero
Prince of Asturias; Archduke of Austria; Infante of Spain
1659 portrait by Velázquez.
House House of Habsburg
Father Philip IV of Spain
Mother Mariana of Austria
Born (1657-11-28)28 November 1657
Madrid, Spain
Died 1 November 1661(1661-11-01) (aged 3)
Madrid, Spain
Burial El Escorial
Religion Roman Catholicism

Philip Prospero, Prince of Asturias (Spanish: Felipe Próspero José Francisco Domingo Ignacio Antonio Buenaventura Diego Miguel Luis Alfonso Isidro Ramón Víctor, English: Philip Prosper Joseph Francis Dominic Igancio Anthony Buenaventura Diego Michael Louis Alphonse Isidor Ramon Victor, German: Philipp Prosper Joseph Franz Dominic Ignacio Anton Buenaventura Diego Michael Ludwig Alfons Isidor Ramon Viktor; November 28, 1657 – November 1, 1661) was the first male child of the marriage between Philip IV of Spain and Mariana of Austria to survive infancy. Spain had had no heir since the death of Prince Balthasar Carlos, the son of Philip and his first queen, Isabella, eleven years before, and the question of a successor to Philip, as Spain's strength continued to ebb, had become a matter of fervent and anxious prayer.

Contents

Birth

After Balthasar Charles's early demise, Philip was left with his daughter Maria Theresa as heiress presumptive. In early 1657, astrologers assured Philip that another child was to be born to him and it would be a boy who would live. A strict and devout Roman Catholic, Philip ate nothing but eggs on the first day of the Vigil of the Presentation of the Virgin, in hopes of his wife really delivering a male child.[1] Indeed, on November 28 of the same year, at 11:30 in the morning,[2] Mariana of Austria delivered a son. She soon fell sick of the birthing fever, but nobody seemed to mind, they were all rejoicing upon the birth of a male heir.[3] Barrionuevo, a chronicler of the time, wrote of this rejoicing:[3][4]

On the day of the birth, not a bench nor a table was left unbroken in the palace, nor a single pastry-cook's nor tavern that was not sacked. Tomorrow [December 6] they say that his Majesty will go on horseback to the Atocha to give thanks to the Mother of God... They say the prince is a pretty little chap, and that the King wishes him to be baptized at once, before the extreme cold comes on... There are to be masquerades, bull-fights and cane-tourneys as soon as the Queen stands up to see them, as well as plays with machinery invented by an engineer, a servant of the Nuncio, to be represented at the theatre of Retiro, and the saloon of the palace... The municipality, following the lead of the Councils, have gone to congratulate the King,... and no gentleman, great or small, has failed to do the like.

Baptism

Following Roman Catholic custom, the infant was called only "the prince" until his baptism. Astrologers predicted nothing but greatness for his future, while Philip was still unsure that he had not thanked God enough for this immense joy. In a letter to his friend Sor María de Ágreda, he wrote that "the newborn babe is doing well", but also made a reference to the bitter memory of his eldest son's demise.[4] On and on December 6, 1657, Philip rode into the decorated streets of Madrid, where the preparations for the prince's baptism were almost ready: dances, masques and music greeted the King.[5]

The baptism took place exactly one week later, on December 13, performed by the Archbishop of Toledo. The Holy Water was brought from the Jordan River by some friars who had recently returned from Jordan. The same Barrionuevo wrote that "the Prince screamed lustily when he was baptized, and, attracted by the loud, resonant voice, the King, who was looking through the jalousies, exclaimed, 'Ah! that does sound well; the house smells of a man now'".[6][7] The christening cost Philip 600,000 ducats.[8] However, due to generations of inbreeding (his mother was his father's niece), Philip Prospero was severely epileptic. The inbreeding was so widespread in his case that all of his eight great-grandparents were descendants of Joanna of Castile and Archduke Philip of Austria.[9]

Heir apparent to the throne

Philip Prosper's birth was greeted with much joy not only because of the child's gender, but also because it put to an end to various dynastic quarrels that would come to be after his daughters' marriages (as Philip had no son, his daughters' husbands would most probably fight over which one would succeed to the Spanish throne). Thus, in 1658, Philip Prospero was sworn in as heir of his father and Prince of Asturias. Nevertheless, he did not enjoy good health and constantly had to carry an amulet with him, amulet which is present in Velázquez's painting of him.[10]

By 1659 the prime ministers of France and Spain had been negotiating an end to their countries' hostilities for two years; now that Spain had a male heir, she could agree to consolidate the peace by marrying the king's eldest child Maria Theresa to the French king Louis XIV. The outcome of the negotiations was the Treaty of the Pyrenees, which established France as the world's new dominant power.

Portrait

The first portrait of Philip Prospero to come down to us was painted by Velazquez in 1659, the year Philip felt he could safely agree to the terms of the treaty with France. This portrait and one of Margaret Theresa were made that year for the Emperor Leopold I, their mother's brother affianced to Margaret Theresa. In the painting the prince appears to be three or nearly three. He stands before a rich black background, the blackness of which is repeated in his eyes. His wrist limply rests over the back of a child-size chair in which lies an equally limp, contented spaniel. (These are a traditional pose and prop, though Velazquez painted his sister and, years before, his half-brother Balthasar Charles with their commanding little hands placed flat and firm, not dangling.) In Velazquez's honest depiction the baby's eyes have a faint gray-blue-brown hollowness around them. His luminous face and hands and his white muslin smock are accented by the warm red of his gown and are a brightness against the subdued, somber background colors. But the painting directly admits the little boy's precarious health: from strings criss-crossing his chest and waist hang metal bells and at least two protective lucky amulets, a cornicello and on the string across his left shoulder a black object, likely a fig-hand carved of jet. By contrast nearly thirty years earlier Velazquez painted a robust Balthasar Charles at age two or three with staff, sword, exuberant sash and plumed hat. This is not a political picture, other than that it shows that the impossible hopes of a nation are depending on a wavering little spirit, which itself is depending on luck and fate.

Death

Philip Prosper had been ill for quite some time before his November 1661 death. He suffered from epilepsy and became ill frequently, probably due to having a very defective immune system from generations of inbreeding. The King even brought the relics of Saint Diego of Alcalá to the palace in hopes of curing his heir.[11] On November 1, 1661, he died following a severe epileptic attack. Five days later, Philip's youngest son and final child, Infante Charles was born. He would ascend the throne in 1665, following Philip's death. Philip held himself indirectly responsible for his son's death, which is clear in a letter that he wrote to Sor María about Philip Prospero's death:[12]

The long illness of my son and my constant attendance at his bedside have prevented me from answering your letter, nor has my grief allowed me to do so, until today. I confess to you, Sor María, that my grief is great, as is natural after losing such a jewel as this. But in the midst of my sorrow, I have tried to offer it to God, and to submit to His divine will; believing most earnestly that He will order all things for the best, which is the most important thing. I can assure you that what grieves me even more than my loss is that I see clearly that I have angered God, and that these punishments are sent in retribution for my sins.

Ancestry

References

Notes

  1. ^ Hume 1907, p. 455.
  2. ^ Enggass & Brown 1970, p. 194.
  3. ^ a b Hume 1907, p. 456.
  4. ^ a b Hume 1907, p. 457.
  5. ^ Hume 1907, p. 458.
  6. ^ Hume 1907, p. 461.
  7. ^ Hume 1907, p. 462.
  8. ^ Stradling 2002, p. 295.
  9. ^ Inbreeding of King Charles II, full brother to Philip Prospero.
  10. ^ "CAROLVS II, HISPANIARVM ET INDIARVM REX" (January 07, 2010). "Family of the King: Prince Philip Prospero". Reign of Charles II. reinadodecarlosii.blogspot.com. http://reinadodecarlosii.blogspot.com/2010/01/la-familia-del-rey-los-hermanos-de.html. Retrieved May 05, 2012. 
  11. ^ Haliczer 2002, p. 306.
  12. ^ Hume 1907, p. 491.

Bibliography

Succession

Philip Prospero, Prince of Asturias
Born: 28 November 1657 Died: 1 November 1661
Spanish royalty
Vacant
Title last held by
Balthasar Charles
Prince of Asturias, Prince of Girona,
Prince of Viana, Duke of Montblanc,
Count of Cervera and Lord of Balaguer

1657 – 1661
Vacant
Title next held by
Charles
Preceded by
Maria Theresa
Heir to the Spanish throne
as Heir apparent

1657 – 1661
Succeeded by
Margaret Theresa

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