Karoline Oettingen-Wallerstein
Quick Facts
Biography
Princess Caroline Antoinette Wilhelmine Friederike of Oëttingen-Wallerstein, later on Countess Caroline von Waldbott-Bassenheim (19 August 1824 – 14 January 1883), was a German noblewoman who was a daughter of Prince Louis of Oettingen-Wallerstein and his wife Princess Crescentia. Like her mother, she also appeared in the Gallery of Beauties gathered by King Ludwig I of Bavaria in 1843.
Life
Caroline was born in 1824 at Heiligkreuz Castle near Donauworth and was baptized in the Heilig Kreuz monastery church. The godparents were King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria and Queen Caroline. Crown Prince Ludwig of Bavaria (later King Ludwig I of Bavaria) celebrated the king's sponsorship: “I have never been so happy in my life!” They were represented by Count Joseph Fugger von Oberndorf and his daughter Maria Antonia.
Caroline was the daughter of Prince Louis of Oettingen-Wallerstein, who served as a minister under king Ludwig I on several occasions, and his wife Crescentia née Bourgin, whom the king had portraited for the Gallery of Beauties in 1833.
Caroline married Count Hugo Philipp von Waldbott-Bassenheim zu Buxheim and Heggbach in 1843. The wedding took place in the court chapel of Archbishop Carl Anselm of Munich-Freising, who also performed the wedding. After their wedding, the young couple—the bride was 19, the groom 23—were long considered the most beautiful couple in Munich.
Count Hugo was one of the richest nobles in Bavaria. Among women, Caroline was considered a “role model of a tasteful, rich toilet that is always changing with princely splendor”. An anecdote tells that in a large fashion warehouse, after a long, fruitless examination of the fabrics, the princess broke out with the painful words: "God, how difficult it is to choose when you are so beautiful!" Later, the two had a son and a daughter. Caroline died in 1889 in Munich.
Portrait
The portrait of Countess Caroline was painted for the Beauties Gallery in 1843, ten years after that of her mother. The young woman wears a low-cut white ball gown with an ermine fur over it. The shiny black hair is parted smoothly and falls in long curls down to the shoulders, a hairstyle that came from England and was widely worn in Germany in the early 1840s.