She had two sons. The first one, Louis Joseph Xavier Francois, died at the age of 8 of tuberculosis. The second one, Louis Charles, died at the age of 10 in the Temple prison of ascrofulous affection of long standing. He had been abused by his guards and guardian for several years.
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Yes, she had two sons:
She also had two daughters:
After his parents were arrested and executed, he died in prison at the age of 10.
After the execution of Louis XVI she was called widow Capet.
Probably not. He was a little odd, especially around women, but he did conceive 4 children with Marie Antoinette. He never had a mistress either male or female.
The oldest, Marie-Therese, was the only member of the royal family to survive the revolution. She was taken to Vienna. She went on to marry and died at the age of 72. Her second child, a son (the Dauphin), died when he was not yet 8. Her third child, also a son, became Dauphin after his brother's death. He died in prison when he was only ten years old. The last child, another daughter, died a little less than a month before her first birthday.
The father of Marie-Antoinette, queen consort of France, was Francis I, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire (back then: Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany, Austria, parts of Czech Republic, parts of Italy and parts of Poland). He died on the 18th of August 1765 in the Austrian palace of Innsbruck.
Louis XVI and Marie-Antionette had two daughters and two sons. Two of these died before the Revolution. The two royal children alive during the Revolution were Louis the Dauphin, heir to the Throne, and Marie-Therese. Marie-Therese and Louis were separated from their parents when they were imprisoned (both their parents were put on trial and executed). The Dauphin died in prison; it is not clear whether it was a deliberate murder or whether he simply died of illness in the unsanitary conditions of the prison. He was never put on trial. Louis was later known as "Louis XVII" despite the fact that he was never crowned as King. A number of people attempted to impersonate him in later life and claim the French throne. Marie-Therese survived the Revolution and died in 1851.