In 1810, the 18-year-old Habsburg Archduchess Marie-Louise left Vienna to marry Napoleon, emperor of France. The French emperor's marriage to his first wife, Josephine de Beauharnais, had ended just a few months previously – and Napoleon intended to cement his empire by begetting a male heir. Although he had previously been diagnosed sterile by a doctor, this had been disproved when he fathered an illegitimate child by one of his sister's maids.

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Why did Napoleon marry Marie-Louise?

There could have been no more desirable marriage candidate for Josephine’s replacement than Marie-Louise. A Habsburg archduchess, her credentials were impeccable. The great-grand-daughter of formidable empress Maria Theresa and daughter of emperor Francis II of the Holy Roman Empire (aka Francis I of Austria), she was related to practically every ruling dynasty in Europe.

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