In
May, I went on vacation and visited the Schonbrunn Palace in Austria. Like any
palace or castle that is hundreds of years old, there are likely people
who decided to stay behind as Earth-bound ghosts. This is the first of several
blogs of ghosts I encountered there. Here's the story about The Ghost of Napoleon Room !
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Napolean Room |
THE NAPOLEON ROOM - This room has quite a
history. French Emperor Napoleon had visited the Schonbrunn Palace and
stayed there. He later offered his daughter, Maria Louise's hand in
marriage to one of the Habsburg men after he conquered the territory.
So, in 1810, Maria Louise married into the Habsburg family.
ABOUT THE NAPOLEON ROOM -
Today known as the Napoleon Room, this was previously the bedroom
shared by Franz Stephan and Maria Theresa from 1746. During the
nineteenth century it was refurbished several times, as revealed by
restoration work carried out in 2007.
FLASH FORWARD - Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo in 1850.
THE GHOST
- As I walked in the Napoleon Room, I experienced a very heavy feeling
pressing down on my chest. There was also a dull pain in my chest, as if
it were difficult to breathe.
WHO IS THE GHOST? I learned the Napoleon's son
stayed in Vienna, and this was his room. He contracted tuberculosis and
died in that very room at age 21. The bed he died on still remains in
that room today and there is a marble sculpture of him . Napoleon's son
continues to haunt the very room he stayed in during his visits, and the
room in which he died.
ABOUT NAPOLEON II-
Napoléon François Charles Joseph Bonaparte (20 March 1811 – 22 July
1832), Prince Imperial, King of Rome, known in the Austrian court as
Franz from 1814 onward, Duke of Reichstadt from 1818, was the son of
Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, and his second wife, Archduchess
Marie Louise of Austria. In 1832, he caught pneumonia and was bedridden
for several months. His poor health eventually overtook him and on 22
July 1832 Franz died of tuberculosis at Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna.[8]
He left no issue; thus the Napoleonic claim to the throne of France
passed to his cousin, Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, who later successfully
restored the empire as Napoleon III.
WEIRD FACT- Some
of Napoleon II's organs REMAIN in the Schonbrunn Palace. The rest of
his remains were transferred to Paris, but his heart and intestines
remained in Schonbrunn, which is traditional for members of the Habsburg
house. They are in Urn 42 in the "Heart Crypt" (Herzgruft) and his
viscera are in Urn 76 of the Ducal Crypt.
**THAT'S why he's here. He wants all of his remains put in the same place next to his father's remains.""