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Louis, Duke of Nemours
'Louis Charles Philippe Raphael, 16th duc de Nemours' (
October 25,
1814 –
June 26,
1896) was the second son of the
duke of Orleans, afterwards King
Louis-Philippe of France, and his wife
Marie Amalie of Bourbon-Sicilies.
Early life
He was born at the
Palais Royal, in
Paris. At twelve years of age he was nominated colonel of the first regiment of chasseurs, and in
1830 he became a chevalier of the
Order of the Saint Esprit and entered the ''
Chambre des Pairs''. As early as 1825 his name was mentioned as a possible candidate for the
throne of Greece, and in February 1831 he was nominated
king of the Belgians, but international considerations deterred Louis-Philippe from accepting the honour for his son, who was accompanying the French army that entered
Belgium to support the new kingdom in its separation from the
United Kingdom of the Netherlands; there he took part in the siege of
Antwerp.
He accompanied the
Algerian expedition against the town of
Constantine in the autumn of 1836, and in a second expedition (1837) he was entrusted with the command of a brigade and with the direction of the siege operations before Constantine.
General Damrémont was killed at his side on
October 12, and the place was taken by assault on the 13th.
He sailed a third time for Algeria in 1841, and served under
General Bugeaud, taking part in the expedition to revictual
Medea on
April 29, and in sharp fighting near
Miliana on the 3rd to 5th of May. In the expedition against the fortified town of
Takdempt he commanded the 1st infantry division. On his return to France he became commandant of the camp of
Compiègne. He had been employed on missions of courtesy to
England in 1835, in 1838 and in 1845, and to
Berlin and
Vienna in 1836.
On
April 26,
1840, he married at
Saint-Cloud Princess
Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Kohary. The occasion of his marriage in 1840 with Victoria was marked by a check to Louis-Philippe's government in the form of a refusal to bestow the marriage dowry proposed by
Adolphe Thiers in the
Chamber of Deputies.
The death of his elder brother,
Ferdinand, duke of Orleans, in 1842 gave him a position of greater importance as the natural
regent in the case of the accession of his nephew, the young
count of Paris. His reserve, and dislike of public functions, with a certain haughtiness of manner, however, made him unpopular. On the outbreak of the
revolution of 1848 he held the
Tuileries long enough to cover the king's retreat, but refrained from initiating active measures against the mob. He followed his sister-in-law, the
Duchess Helen Louise of Orleans, and her two sons to the chamber of deputies, but was separated from them by the rioters, and only escaped finally by disguising himself in the uniform of a national guard.
Exile
He embarked for England, where he settled with his parents at
Claremont. His chief aim during his exile, especially after his father's death, was a reconciliation between the two branches of the
house of Bourbon, as indispensable to the re-establishment of the French monarchy in any form. These wishes were frustrated on the one hand by the attitude of the
comte de Chambord, and on the other by the determination of the duchess of Orleans to maintain the pretensions of the count of Paris. Nemours was prepared to go further than the other princes of his family in accepting the principles of the
legitimists, but lengthy negotiations ended in 1857 with a letter, written by Nemours, as he subsequently explained, at the dictation of his brother,
François, prince de Joinville, in which he insisted that Chambord should express his adherence to the
tricolour flag and to the principles of constitutional government. In 1871 the Orléans princes renewed their professions of allegiance to the senior branch of their house, but they were not consulted when the count of Chambord came to Paris in 1873, and their political differences remained until his death in 1883.
Nemours had lived at
Bushy House after the death in 1866 of
Queen Marie Amélie, widow of Louis Philippe.
Return to France
In 1871 the exile imposed on the French princes was withdrawn, but he only transferred his establishment to Paris after their disabilities were also removed. In March 1872 he was restored to his rank in the army as general of division, and placed in the first section of the general staff. After his retirement from the active list he continued to act as president of the
Red Cross Society until 1881, when new decrees against the princes of the blood led to his withdrawal from Parisian society. During the presidency of
Marshal MacMahon, he had appeared from time to time at the
Elysée. He died at
Versailles on June 26, 1896, the duchess having died at Claremont on
November 10,
1857.
Children
★
Louis Philippe Marie Ferdinand Gaston, comte d'Eu (1842-1922), who married
Isabella, eldest daughter of Don
Pedro II of Brazil. His great-grandson,
Duarte Pio, Duke of Braganza is the current presumptive heir to the throne of
Portugal.
★
Ferdinand Philippe Marie, duc d'Alençon (July 12, 1844 - June 29, 1910), who married
Sophie Charlotte Augustine Duchess in Bavaria (1847-1897), sister of the empress
Elizabeth of Austria ("Sisi"), and who had been for a time engaged to
Ludwig II of Bavaria
★ Margaret (1846-1893), who married Prince
Ladislaus Czartoryski
★ Blanche (1857-1932).
References
★
★
René Bazin, ''Le Duc de Nemours'' (1907); Paul Thureau-Dangin, ''Histoire de la monarchie de France'' (4 vols., 1884, etc.).