, painted in 1791, at the age of twenty, and eight years before her wedding.
Wallace Collection. On 18 May 1798 he married
Maria Emilia Fagnani (1771-1856), known as "Mie-Mie", reputedly the illegitimate daughter of
William Douglas, 4th Duke of Queensberry, by his mistress Costanza Brusati ("the Marchesa Fagnani"), the wife of Giacomo II Fagnani, IV marchese di Gerenzano (1740-1785), an
Italian nobleman descended from the jurist Raffaele Fagnani (1552-1623), a resident of the Duchy of Milan. Queensbury was the eighth richest man in Britain and having never married, left much of his fortune to Maria, his only offspring. This wealth enabled Hertford to establish his famous art collection, now represented by the
Wallace Collection, named after his grandson
Sir Richard Wallace, 1st Baronet, the illegitimate son of the 4th Marquess. Sir Richard Wallace had a special fondness for his grandmother Mie-Mie, possibly as both suffered the stigma of illegitimacy, and in his will the 4th Marquess mentions Sir Richard's kindness to his mother. Sir Richard Wallace erected a monument to his grandmother Maria Fagnani in Sudbourne Church, in the form of the stained glass east window, depicting
Mary Magdalene, "the prostitute who washed Jesus’s feet with oil but was also the first person to witness the resurrection", seemingly "an intentional reference to Mie-Mie’s circumstances". By Maria Fagnani he had three children: • Lady Frances Maria Seymour-Conway (d. 1822); •
Richard Seymour-Conway, 4th Marquess of Hertford (1800–1870), eldest son and heir; • Lord Henry Seymour-Conway (1805–1859), founder of the Jockey Club in Paris. He inherited much of his mother's wealth, and died unmarried in Paris, having bequeathed the residue of his income, about £36,000 per annum, to Paris hospitals. He was buried in his mother's vault in the
Cemetery of Père-Lachaise, also the burial place of his nephew Sir Richard Wallace. of Francis Charles Seymour-Conway, 3rd Marquess of Hertford, Sudbourne Church, Suffolk, showing his arms, circumscribed by the
Garter, in
alliance with and impaling Fagnani:
Argent, an eagle displayed with two heads sable ==Death and succession==