Portrait of the Duchess of Angoulême is an 1816 portrait painting by the French artist Antoine-Jean Gros depicting Marie Thérèse of France.
[1] [2] The only surviving child of the guillotined Louis XVI she returned to France following the defeat of Napoleon.
She was married to her first cousin the Duke of Angoulême, with the couple prominent at court during the Restoration era.
As the wife of the heir to the throne she was likely to become Queen consort of France but the Bourbon dynasty were overthrown in the July Revolution of 1830.
The painting was commissioned by her uncle (and father-in-law) the future Charles X for the Chamber of Deputies.