Enciclopedia de la Literatura en México

Sixty years of solitude : the life of Empress Charlotte of Mexico

Princess Charlotte’s life went from fairy tale to hell. This is the story of that hell.

Act I. In 1862, Napoleon III established a monarchy in Mexico, south of the Rio Grande, with Maximilian of Austria and Charlotte of Belgium as its young and idealistic monarchs. Under pressure from the US, the French withdrew in 1867. The emperor Maximilian died by firing squad. And Charlotte?

Act II. The Empress was reduced to princess once again. Charlotte, King Leopold I’s dearest child and Maximilian’s lovesick wife, became the pariah of the European monarchies and spent the next sixty years of her life in madness and isolation. This book is the first to reveal what really happened to one the most famous “mad royals” in the six decades she survived after the fall of the Mexican Empire, and the true nature of her “madness”. Now, we can recover the voice of her doctors, eyewitness testimony, travelers’ logs and – above all – Charlotte’s own voice through her recently discovered diaries. Step by step, it becomes clear how the “world's saddest princess” ended up a pawn. And how, from the ruins of Maximilian’s Mexico, emerged King Leopold II’s bloody empire in the Congo.

* Esta contraportada corresponde a la edición de 2023. La Enciclopedia de la literatura en México no se hace responsable de los contenidos y puntos de vista vertidos en ella.