Albertine, Baroness Staël von Holstein

Albertine de Staël Holstein, Duchess de Broglie
Portrait of Albertine and her mother c. 1805
Full name
Albertine Ida Gustavine
Born8 June 1797
Paris, French First Republic
Died22 September 1838 (aged 41)
Coppet, Vaud, Switzerland
Noble familyStaël von Holstein
Spouse(s)Victor de Broglie, Duc de Broglie
(m. 1816)
IssueLouise de Broglie
Albert de Broglie
Paul de Broglie
FatherBaron Erik Magnus Staël-Holstein
MotherGermaine de Staël

Albertine Ida Gustavine, Baroness de Staël-Holstein or simply Albertine (8 June 1797– 22 September 1838), was the daughter of Erik Magnus Staël von Holstein and Madame de Staël, the granddaughter of Jacques Necker and Suzanne Curchod, wife to Victor de Broglie (1785–1870), and mother to Albert, a French monarchist politician, and Louise, a novelist and biographer. Her biological father may have been the author Benjamin Constant.

Life

She married the Duc de Broglie in 1816. They had four children:

  1. Pauline de Broglie (1 May 1817 - 22 December 1831), who died at the age of 14.
  2. Louise Albertine de Broglie (25 May 1818 - 21 April 1882), who married Count Joseph d'Haussonville and became a writer.
  3. Jacques Victor Albert de Broglie (13 June 1821 - 19 January 1901), who succeeded his father as fourth Duc de Broglie.
  4. Auguste Théodore Paul de Broglie (June 18, 1834 – May 11, 1895), who became an abbot and a professor.

Albertine, still very much part of the de Staël circle, shared her grandfather's anglomania, and introduced her husband to the "erudite society that centred around that family."[1] Victor de Broglie Souvenirs recall their married life and the political storms that surrounded it.

Her letters were collected and edited by her son Albert and published in French and in English by Robert Baird as Transplanted flowers, or memoirs of Mrs. Rumpff, daughter of John Jacob Astor, Esq. and the Duchess de Broglie, daughter of Madame de Stael (1846).[2]

References

  1. ^ minds.wisconsin.edu/bitstream/handle/1793/.../54296019.pdf
  2. ^ "Rare Books, Bibles, and Manuscripts: Philadelphia Rare Books and Manuscripts". Archived from the original on 2006-11-21. Retrieved 2009-08-24.
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