It all depends on what we look for in a board like this one.
Personally I am interested in Royalty and genealogy and in the relations that link one Royal house to the other, how many times the House of France is related to the Bourbon of Spain or to the Savoia........not what they do in bed.......sorry!
Same here, but in this case I couldn't help raising the question, since Prince Joseph Clemens of Bavaria was a grandson of Duchess Sohpie Charlotte in Bavaria, a one-time fiancée of King Ludwig II, who WAS gay. So I couldn't help wondering if there was some kind of ironic connection between these two facts.
I have no doubt that royal (if not imperial) France is connected multiple times to Spain. If it came to that, the Spanish Bourbons are offshoots of the French Bourbons. Moreover, cadet branches of the Spanish Bourbons were formed -- first, with the duchy of Parma, later with the kingdom of Naples and the Two Sicilies.
So there would have been lots of intermarriages amongst those houses, with Portugal also figuring largely into them. And the house of Orléans did remarkably well on the royal marriage market, considering that they boasted only one king -- a usurper who eventually got deposed.
Interestingly enough, although the Habsburgs regularly intermarried with these various "Latin" Catholic dynasties, the Wittelsbachs did not. They largely intermarried with German Protestant houses -- the Habsburgs being an exception. Of course, Prince Adalbert (youngest son of King Ludwig I) eventually established the "Spanish" branch of the Bavarian royal family, by marrying Infanta Amelia. His younger son (Prince Alfons), of course, married Princess Louise of Orléans -- a great-granddaughter of King Louis-Philippe of the French.
I've managed to count 13 intermarriages between the Habsburgs and the Wittelsbachs, since circa 1800. Going further back, I'm sure there are even more examples. Can anybody name them?
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