, ca. 1762) Princess Maria Theresa of Savoy was born at the
Royal Palace in
Turin during the reign of her grandfather
Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia. The daughter of the heir apparent
Victor Amadeus and his wife
Maria Antonia Ferdinanda of Spain, she was the couple's third daughter and fifth child of twelve children. She was raised with her sister
Princess Maria Giuseppina, who was three years her senior and whom she would join later as a member of the
Royal House of France.
Marriage Her aunts,
Maria Luisa of Savoy and
Eleonora of Savoy, were once proposed as brides for Louis Stanislas' father
Louis. Following a series of dynastic alliances, Maria Theresa was betrothed to the Count of Artois, the youngest grandson of the reigning
Louis XV of France and his popular wife, Queen Marie Leczinska. Artois had previously been intended to marry
Louise Adélaïde de Bourbon, the daughter of the
Prince of Condé. However, the union never took place as her rank was much lower than Artois who, as a male-line descendant of a
French monarch, was a
grandson of France. Her marriage was arranged as a part of a series of Franco-Savoyard dynastic marriages taking place in a time span of eight years: after the wedding between her cousin
Princess Marie Thérèse Louise of Savoy-Carignano and
Louis Alexandre, Prince of Lamballe, and the wedding between her elder sister
Marie Joséphine of Savoy and
Louis Stanislas, Count of Provence in 1771, Maria Teresa was married to the Count of Artois (future King
Charles X of France) in 1773, and her eldest brother Prince Charles Emmanuel of Savoy (the future King of Sardinia) was married to her sister-in-law
Princess Clotilde of France in 1775. Her eldest brother-in-law,
Dauphin Louis Auguste (the future
Louis XVI), was since three years prior married to
Marie Antoinette. )|left Maria Theresa married the Count in a proxy ceremony at the
Palazzina di caccia of Stupinigi before she crossed the bridge of Beauvoisin between Savoy and France, where she was turned over by her Italian retinue to her French entourage, after which her official marriage took place at the
Palace of Versailles on 16 November 1773. As her husband was the grandson of a king, the newly named Marie Thérèse held the rank of
granddaughter of France, and was commonly referred to by the simple style ''Madame la comtesse d'Artois''.
Countess of Artois , 1783. Maria Theresa was described as diminutive, somewhat ill-shaped, clumsy and with a long nose and was not regarded a beauty, but her complexion was generally admired; as a person, she was regarded as "not distinguished in any sense", but nevertheless goodhearted.
Florimond Claude, Comte de Mercy-Argenteau, who corresponded with Holy Roman Empress
Maria Theresa regarding Marie Antoinette, said that she was silent and interested in absolutely nothing. The brother of Marie Antoinette, Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor, said of her during his visit to France in 1777 that she was the only one in the royal family "to give birth to children, but is in all other aspects a complete idiot." During her first years in France, the three royal couples; the Count and Countess of Provence, the Count and Countess of Artois, the Dauphin and Dauphine, as well as her cousin, the Princess of Lamballe, who was the favorite of
Marie Antoinette, formed a circle of friends and acted in
amateur theater plays together, before an audience only consisting of the Dauphin. After this birth, Marie Antoinette was harassed by the public for not having given birth herself. The next year Maria Theresa gave birth to a daughter,
Sophie, who was known as
Mademoiselle as the most senior unmarried princess at court. She died at the age of seven in 1783. Her second son,
Charles Ferdinand, Duke of Berry, was born in 1778. Her last child, Marie Thérèse d'Artois, presumably named after her mother, died while the court was at
Choisy-le-Roi at the age of just 6 months. Prior to the meeting of the
Estates General, every member of the Royal Family was publicly mocked by libelous verses, in which Maria Theresa was claimed to have given birth to an illegitimate child.
Exile Maria Theresa left France with her spouse after the
Storming of the Bastille on 14 July 1789, which marked the beginning of the
French Revolution, and took refuge in her homeland of Savoy. She left one week after her spouse with a retinue of thirty people, and since she had her possessions sold in connection to her trip, the couple's official statement that they were to return in spring was doubted. Soon after her husband's departure, her two sons also left Savoy to serve in the Condé emigré army. Maria Theresa was described as desolate and deeply saddened after her husband and her sons had left her in Savoy, and reportedly contemplated becoming a nun. She was persuaded not to enter a convent by her sister-in-law Clothilde, who appealed to her sense of duty to her children, and Maria Theresa later expressed gratitude toward Clothilde for this. While her sister continued to Austria, Maria Therese accepted her father's invitation to return to Turin after the peace between France and Savoy in May. In December 1798, when Piemonte was annexed by France, Maria Theresa left with her lady-in-waiting for
Graz in
Austria, where she was permitted to remain and where she died in 1805. Because she died before her spouse became King of France, she remained Countess of Artois. She was buried in the Imperial Mausoleum near to
Graz Cathedral. ==Issue==