Difference between revisions of "Charlotte of Oren"

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Upon her highly anticipated return to imperial court, courtiers described Charlotte as looking better than ever, albeit the princess was more timid than ever, and also easily startled. It is accounted by many that Emperor Philip ordered everyone, save for Charlotte, to exit the throne room after a court session. To this day, no one knows what the two siblings spoke about, but it is known that immediately after the exceedingly private discussion, Philip had it announced that Charlotte’s second son would be named in his honor and christened in the cathedral of Johannesburg, and the baby definitely was.
 
Upon her highly anticipated return to imperial court, courtiers described Charlotte as looking better than ever, albeit the princess was more timid than ever, and also easily startled. It is accounted by many that Emperor Philip ordered everyone, save for Charlotte, to exit the throne room after a court session. To this day, no one knows what the two siblings spoke about, but it is known that immediately after the exceedingly private discussion, Philip had it announced that Charlotte’s second son would be named in his honor and christened in the cathedral of Johannesburg, and the baby definitely was.
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== Fall of Oren ==
  
 
== Ancestors ==
 
== Ancestors ==

Revision as of 22:16, 8 May 2020

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Charlotte of Alstion
charlotteofalstion.jpg
Archduchess-Consort of Lorraine
Tenure: 1587 - 1594
Predecessor: Henrietta Marchand
Successor: Mary of Leone
Queen-Consort of Lotharingia
Tenure: 1593 - 1597
Predecessor: Title Created
Successor: Mary of Leone
Born: 15th of the First Seed, 1573
Died: 7th of the Grand Harvest, 1650
Spouse: John I of Lotharingia
House: Horen
Father: John III, Holy Orenian Emperor
Mother: Julia of Furnestock

Charlotte of Alstion (15th of the First Seed, 1573 - 7th of the Grand Harvest, 1650), additionally known as Charlotte Sophia Marie and monikered “Charlotte, Mother of Monarchs”, was the only daughter of Emperor John III of Oren, and later the wife of King John I of Lotharingia.

The Horen is renowned for three attainments: she was the first official Princess Imperial of Oren, she served as the first Queen-Consort of Lotharingia, and her crowning achievement was birthing three kings, two queens, and an empress. The aforementioned third accomplishment is the one that earned her her moniker.

Family and Childhood

Charlotte Sophia Horen was born on the 15th of the First Seed, 1573, in the Palace of Saint Adrian, which was at the time the residence of the imperial court of Oren. Her father and mother were Emperor John of Oren and his cousinly consort, Julia of Furnestock. She was the ruling couple’s fourth child and only daughter. It is alleged that moments after her father laid eyes on her, he was entranced by her cherubic face and named her as Oren’s first Princess Imperial on the spot.

Months before she entered the world, it was supposedly prophesied by many throughout the empire that the parents of Charlotte were somehow the pure-blooded couple that sired four sons and would rule over the whole of humanity as described in some archaic folk tale. Unfortunately for the more superstitious Orenians, John and Julia were apparently not the aforesaid mythological couple, seeing as they were instead gifted with a daughter, rather than a fourth son. It is believed that Charlotte’s parents were believed to be the participants in the aforementioned legend because John and Julia’s union was an incestuous one, seeing as they were first cousins and both donned the Horen surname, thus making them and their progeny ‘pure-blooded’.

Foolish myths aside, the imperial court was excited that they were finally gifted with a new princess, and there was a decent amount of revelry in honor of Charlotte’s birth all throughout Johannesburg.

Growing up, Charlotte and her three brothers were gifted with an usual amount of love from their regnal parents. Usually, children of Orenian monarchs would be split up and shipped off in various different directions as wards to foreign courts or pupils in some far-off overpriced academy, but John and Julia opted to keep all of their offspring close, and ended up spending a fortune on educating all of them.

Marriage

On the 10th of the Sun’s Smile, 1587, Charlotte was married to John d’Amaury, who was only the Archduke of Lorraine at the time. She was only fourteen at the time of her wedding, and was reportedly very small for her age, which severely limited her options in terms of what style of dress would compliment her pint-sized frame.

The princess eventually settled on just wearing a wedding gown in the Imperial fashion of her era. Her dress allegedly was made of lily white velvet and it had a golden lace square neckline bedecked in amethysts, long trumpet sleeves made of cloth of gold, and her underskirt and foresleeves were purple satin. Apparently, the general consensus of everyone present at the wedding was that Charlotte was the absolute epitome of a Horenic bride.

For the first few years, Charlotte and John’s union was childless, and it was rumored that John was somehow an abusive, controlling husband. Historians believe that this was whispered about at the time simply because Charlotte, for some reason, stopped going to the capital altogether after her marriage. She apparently did not even come to fetch her remaining belongings from her apartments in the imperial palace, and instead lackeys of her husband did. Such an occurrence made absolutely no sense to those at imperial court, seeing as Emperor Philip and Charlotte were extremely close, and she was arguably the favorite sibling of her monarchical brother.

Fortunately, after three long years, Charlotte proved her fertility and gifted her husband with a set of twins: Lothar and Marie-Thérèse. After the aforementioned twins, the Horen seemingly produced child after child, and gossip about possible domestic violence in Charlotte’s marriage began to subside somewhat. Although, even by the time of the birth of her third child in 1591, Charlotte supposedly still did not visit imperial court, and only came to Johannesburg after her brother, Emperor Philip, sent an official summons for his sister and her children to visit the capital, alone.

Upon her highly anticipated return to imperial court, courtiers described Charlotte as looking better than ever, albeit the princess was more timid than ever, and also easily startled. It is accounted by many that Emperor Philip ordered everyone, save for Charlotte, to exit the throne room after a court session. To this day, no one knows what the two siblings spoke about, but it is known that immediately after the exceedingly private discussion, Philip had it announced that Charlotte’s second son would be named in his honor and christened in the cathedral of Johannesburg, and the baby definitely was.

Fall of Oren

Ancestors