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Ferdinand VI of Spain

Ferdinand VI, King of Spain
Spanish Royalty
House of Bourbon

Philip V
Children
   Prince Louis
   Prince Ferdinand
   Prince Charles
Louis
Ferdinand VI
Charles III
Children
   Prince Charles
Charles IV
Children
   Prince Ferdinand
   Infanta Carlota
Ferdinand VII
Children
   Princess Isabella
Isabella II
Children
   Prince Alfonso
Alfonso XII
Children
   Infanta Maria
   Prince Alfonso
Alfonso XIII
Children
   Juan, Count of Barcelona
Grandchildren
   Infanta Pilar
   Prince Juan Carlos
Juan Carlos I
Children
   Infanta Elena
   Infanta Cristina
   Felipe, Prince of Asturias

Ferdinand VI, (September 23, 1713 – August 10, 1759), king of Spain from 1746 until his death, second son of Philip V, founder of the Spanish Bourbon dynasty (as opposed to the French Bourbons), by his first marriage with Maria Louisa of Savoy, was born at Madrid on September 23 1713.

His youth was depressed. His father's second wife, Elizabeth Farnese, was a domineering woman, who had no affection except for her own children, and who looked upon her stepson as an obstacle to their fortunes. The hypochondria of his father left Elizabeth mistress of the palace. Ferdinand was married in 1729 to Maria Magdalena Barbara, daughter of John V of Portugal. The very homely looks of his wife were thought by observers to cause the prince a visible shock when he was first presented to her. Yet he became deeply attached to his wife, and proved in fact nearly as uxorious as his father.

Ferdinand was by temperament melancholy, shy and distrustful of his own abilities. When complimented on his shooting, he replied, "It would be hard if there were not something I could do." As king he followed a steady policy of neutrality in the conflict between France and England, and refused to be tempted by the offers of either into declaring war on the other. In his life he was orderly and retiring, averse from taking decisions, though not incapable of acting firmly, as when he cut short the dangerous intrigues of his able minister Ensenada by dismissing and imprisoning him. He was called Ferdinand the Learned for his refined pursuits.

Shooting and music were his only pleasures, and he was the generous patron of the famous singer Farinelli, whose voice soothed his melancholy. The death of his wife Maria Barbara, who had been devoted to him, and who carefully abstained from political intrigue, broke his heart. Between the date of her death in 1758 and his own on August 10, 1759, he fell into a state of prostration in which he would not even dress, but wandered unshaven, unwashed and in a nightgown about his park. The memoirs of the count of Fernan Nuñez give a shocking picture of his death-bed.

This entry was originally from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.

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Preceded by:
Philip V
King of Spain Succeeded by:
Charles III







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