Would I be right to assume that the Countess d'Eu mentioned in the article of post 2000 is from the Braganza line, and therefore related to Catherine of Braganza wife of English King Charles II. ?
Just to add further information:I believe not, as Catherine of Braganza would refer to the lates 1600. While the visit mentions "Frederick Joseph Smith", referring to the recent posts we have done and that would be in the late 1800s or early 1900s. But it does show the power of England and England's money in Brazil at the time.
It would probably be "Isabel, princess of imperial Brazil", which was then married to Pedro II (Braganza line), which would put the visit in between 1864-1920, somewhere in between. It seems that the royal family in Brazil kept ties with England through Frederick Joseph's family and Smith's family, which we have discussed earlier on.
Yes! Sorry, my mistake.Little confused as the Isabel mentioned in the visit was a daughter of Pedro II ?
From. Wiki….The House of Braganza produced 15 Portuguese monarchs and all four Brazilian monarchs, numerous consorts to various European kingdoms, such as Catherine of Braganza (wife of Charles II of England who introduced tea to Britain) and Maria Isabel of Braganza (wife of Ferdinand VII of Spain who founded the El Prado Museum), as well as sometime candidates for the thrones of Poland and Greece, Infante Manuel, Count of Ourém and Pedro, Duke of Braganza, respectively, and numerous other notable figures in the histories of Europe and the Americas. The Braganzas were deposed from their thrones in Europe and the Americas at the turn of the 19th–20th centuries, when Emperor Pedro II was deposed in Brazil, in 1889, and when King Manuel II was deposed in Portugal, in 1910.
Yes! Sorry, my mistake.
She was son of D. Pedro II (Braganza line) and married to Prince Gaston, Count d'Eu, which is also referred to in the royal visit article.
Considering she was Princess at the time and that Pedro II was deposed in 1889, we can assume that the visit happened in between 1864 and 1889.
J. Bettridge & Co, were the leading 19thC, exponant's of Japaning or Paper-mashe furniture in the world, and some of their surviving works still command high prices today, "Buhl", I believe referes to inlaid brass fretwork. Makes you wonder if leaving your masters house to visit your dying mother, is grounds for instant dismissal with total loss of earnings, in a Christian country as blatant fraud. The amount of fires within Birmingham City boundery's in the 19th C seems huge, the Insurance premiums must also have been huge as well.Paul