, during his time as King of Spain.
Engagement It was in Moncalieri that she met Emanuele's father,
Amadeus, Duke of Aosta (sometimes referred to as Amadeo). He was her maternal uncle and was formerly the elected king of Spain for the brief period of three years (1870–1873). Maria Letizia was considered very charming, and Amadeus was very dependent on her society when he visited Italy. In 1888, she agreed to marry him. One source attributes the marriage to the fact that Amadeus felt great love for his niece, but it states that Maria Letizia's decision was simply a "strong desire for independence on the part of the Princess because of the heaviness of the maternal yoke". In preparation for the marriage, she received a great number of notable gifts from personages such as
Empress Eugenie, the widowed wife of
Napoleon III, and Amadeus's three sons. Eugenie sent her some "great and illustrious" family jewels, and the boys gave her a necklace with seven rows of pearls that was valued at $60,000. The ceremony was performed by the
Archbishop of Turin, Cardinal
Gaetano Alimonda, who had gone to Rome to obtain their dispensation. Maria Letizia was Amadeus' second wife, as his first wife,
Maria Vittoria del Pozzo della Cisterna, had died in 1876. The large age difference made Maria Letizia only three years older than Amadeus's eldest child. It was the first marriage of a Bonaparte to a member of a reigning house of Europe since 1859. One article stated that at the time of their marriage, a Bonaparte would have had an easy chance of obtaining at least two million votes if a
plebiscite were to occur. That likelihood of a Bonaparte resurgence was most likely because there was a certain nostalgia among the French for the days of Maria Letizia's great-uncle
Napoleon I and even for the more recent rule of her uncle
Napoleon III. The couple lived in Turin and had one son,
Prince Umberto, Count of Salemi (1889–1918), who died of the Spanish flu during
World War I. Maria Letizia was widowed after less than two years of marriage when Amadeus died on 18 January 1890. ==Later life==