Marquise Irene of Pallavicini

Marquise Irene of Pallavicini or Countess Irene von und zu Arco-Zinneberg (2 September 1811, Algyő - 31 January 1877, Vienna) was a Hungarian-born palace lady in the court of Munich in the 19th century. She appeared in the Gallery of Beauties gathered by King Ludwig I of Bavaria in 1834.

Life
Marquise Irene of Pallavicini was born in Algyő, Kingdom of Hungary on 2 September, 1811. She was the only daughter of Marquis Eduard Pallavicini and his wife Countess Joséphine Hardegg auf Glatz. Her father subsequently elevated the position of the Pallavicini family through the purchase of Hungarian assets and was awarded Hungarian citizenship and nobility rights in 1803, as well as the Bohemian and Moravian rights and the Fideikommiss in the Austrian Hereditary Lands.

She married Count Aloys Nikolaus von Arco-Zinneberg, the Royal Bavarian Chamberlain and the son of Archduchess Maria Leopoldine of Austria-Este, and they spent much of their time on her family lands in Austria, and at Castle Anif, near Salzburg. Her marriage was childless and ended in separation, but not divorce.

Marquise Irene died in 1877 at Vienna.

Portrait
In 1834, King Ludwig I of Bavaria commissioned the court painter Joseph Karl Stieler to paint the 23 years old Marquise for his Gallery of Beauties collection in Nymphenburg Palace, Munich.

Marquise Irene is dressed in the same style as Princess Crescentia of Öttingen-Öttingen and Wallerstein, but with an unusual hair ornament and a jeweled belt buckle.