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  1. Infanta Maria Anna of Spain was born in the Palace of El Escorial, near Madrid, on 18 August 1606 as the fourth child and third (but second surviving) daughter of King Philip III of Spain and his wife, Margaret of Austria, archduchess of the Inner Austrian branch of the House of Habsburg.

  2. Infanta Maria of Spain may refer to: Maria of Austria, Holy Roman Empress (1528–1603) María of Spain (1580-1583), daughter of Philip II. Infanta Maria of Spain (1603), daughter of Philip III. Maria Anna of Spain (1606–1646), daughter of Philip III. Category: Disambiguation pages.

  3. Infanta Maria Cristina of Spain, Countess Marone-Cinzano (María Cristina Teresa Alejandra María de Guadalupe María de la Concepción Ildefonsa Victoria Eugenia de Borbón y Battenberg; 12 December 1911 – 23 December 1996) was the fifth child and younger daughter of Alfonso XIII of Spain and Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg and paternal aunt ...

  4. The Infanta Maria Anna of Spain, future Queen of Hungary. Date. Ca. 1622. Technique. Oil. Support. Canvas. Dimension. Height: 169 cm; Width: 110 cm. Provenance. Royal Collection (Real Alcázar, Madrid, galería que mira al mediodía sobre el Jardín de los Emperadores, 1636, s.n.; ¿Palacio del Buen Retiro, Madrid, pieza anteluneta, 1772, nº 353?;

  5. As a marriageable infanta, marrying her was first considered a means of improving diplomatic relations with England, but those efforts failed as a result of religious incompatabilites. A few years later, she became engaged to her cousin, Ferdinand Habsburg, then king of Hungary and later Emperor of Austria.

  6. Infante of Spain (feminine infanta; Spanish: infante de España; f. infanta) is a royal title normally granted at birth to the children of reigning and past Spanish monarchs, and to the children of the heir to the Crown. Individuals holding the title of infante also enjoy the style of Royal Highness.

  7. Maximilian’s wife was the Spanish infanta Maria (b. 1528), a daughter of Emperor Charles V and Isabella of Portugal. The marriage was concluded in 1548 as the result of pressure from Spain and was intended to emphasize the political and genealogical union between the two lines.